
$10,000 up for grabs? Who would have thought that fishing out of a kayak could net an angler that kind of cash? The Kayak Bass Fishing Clearlake Open (August 24th & 25th) drew kayak bass anglers from across the country from as far as New Jersey, to fish one the Nation’s top bass fisheries. I made the trek up to Clearlake, a 3.5-hour drive, on Tuesday morning to begin prefishing early. After settling into my room, I headed out early on Wednesday morning to try and locate some fish. I started by heading to Redbud to hit a spot that looked promising during my research. I caught one small fish shallow on a crankbait not far from the launch and continued down the bank line. It wasn’t long before I realized I wasn’t headed towards the spot I had planned to fish, so off I went.
It took me about 40 minutes to get there and I started fishing toward the spot but got no love. Once I got to the spot, I started fishing around it and picked up another small fish on a Ned rig. A few casts later I got a bizarre and hard thump on the Ned rig, up shallow, and on the fall! The fish thrashed on the surface displacing enough water to make me sit up straight on high alert! After a long fight around a metal pole with a doubled over rod, I landed a 27.5 incher, but it wasn’t a bass. It was a jumbo catfish! On Thursday, the last day of prefishing I went to Rattlesnake Island. After hours of fishing, I couldn’t buy a bite! So I pedaled back to the launch and packed up to go check out Rodman Slough. As I crossed the bridge at Rodman, I could count over a half dozen kayakers in there. Not wanting to fish in such a crowded area, and feeling defeated from a terrible practice, I decided it would be better to head back to base.