It looks like The City took over another one of my fishing
spots. This place took me five years to get permission from the homeowners to
launch my tooner on it. In exchange I would do a Mattsabasser trash haul once a
year while expressing only respect when out there. Only a small portion of the
lake was public access and that access was from shoreline only. I had heard
that The City wanted more control but there was no follow up on my part. Roll the
dice and pull the truck up on the place one weekend to discover that a lot
indeed had changed.
(Above: First fish pulled out of weed cover. This is a fish
with a side of salad picture.)
“You can’t take that boat on here.” A young poindexter
immediately barks out as I approach with boat in tow.
After some discussion I choose not to launch and made a call
to the homeowner leaving a voicemail. Eventually I did find out that boat
access has been removed even from the landowners. This is heartbreaking as it
took me so long to get that access on a privileged section of the water.
“It looks like this place is a shorebang situation from here
on out.” I scoff in sadness and remembrance of years that have passed. “That
figures.”
(Above: Respectable fin slapper. In previous years this
would be a good skunk-beater or something that kept the action going between
much larger fish. This year it was my best fish of the day.)
The ditch company isn’t paying for water shares from this
drainage and or routing water from other sources. Instead of water fluctuations
up and down, the pond loses a foot of depth every year. This and other factors
hurt the system in so many ways. The City could put water in there and make the
situation almost as good as it was but they won’t. Most of the shoreline is a
muddish-like quicksand that smells from decades of wet decomposition.
(Above: Last fish picked out of the mudhole and I had to go
in and get him costing me a pair of shoes.)
The same thing happened to another one of my favorite
fishing places when The City took over. The fishing oasis that I had worked so
hard to get access was turned over to the public in a similar fashion. Bad
things happened and in a few short years the whole place was drained. The place
was turned to mud. The only saving grace is the fact I am always looking for
new water and I still managed to C&R a few fish out of this one.
The lure of the day was a 5 inch Yamamoto twin tail grub in
watermelon flake. Every lake is different but this particular body of water has
a lot of weeds and algae that limit some of my other gear options. It also
sports a lot of frogs that the bass love to hammer. I throw this twin tail grub
weightless on the heavy stuff and might slap on a 1/8oz or 1/4oz weight in less
cover. A 2/0 extra wide gap hook or even worm style gets me a few more hooksets
than the plastic frogs with the two prong hook setup.
My name is Matt and I’m a fishaholic.
3 comments:
I can sympathize with you, Matt. Sometimes things are better just left alone.
Matt, Love the blog.
The pics in this post are a surprise to me, my buddies and I have fished this spot for years, and it breaks my heart that they are letting it dry up. In 2003 the lake was full up to the bottom of the trees on the south west shoreline. we float tubed this lake until Westminster ( the most anti float tuber city in the state..) bought it. How long have yo fished it?
Matt,
just found your blog, nice job. Thank you for not naming this spot. My buddy and I spent many a happy hour fishing this spot before westminster bought it from Thornton and promptly stoped filling it, breaks my heart, used to be a little secret spot with big fish. Hopefully Westminster re-considers and refills it and lets tubers back on it.
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