
Russian River
Lower River Yields Quality Largemouths
GUERNEVILLE – While smallmouth bass have drawn many anglers to fish the Russian River during the summer over the years, the lower stretch of river has been producing beautiful, chunky largemouth bass lately. King’s Sport and Tackle reported a memorable day of largemouth fishing during his latest trip:
“I took out a client, Shawn, today. It was a birthday present from his mother-in-law, the owner of the wonderful ‘Inn on the Russian River’ in Monte Rio. And it was very much like fishing with one of my buddies growing up.”
“Shawn grew up in Alaska fishing and lives in Washington. That fishing lineage scares me every single time but I had nothing to worry about. Shawn was totally happy fishing for bass, relaxing on the Russian.
“It started slow with one hookup. The morning fish bite just hasn’t happened often this summer. But in the end he reeled in around eight plus bass and lost two bigger bass, one due to a smart fish and the other due to the guide’s knot tying ability (Palomar knots rarely fail me. I still think it’s the strongest and easiest knot to tie). I was bummed.
“But Shawn’s last fish of the day, just 100 yards from his dock, ended up being 4 lbs 12 ounces, beating the previous largest bass of the season so far by one ounce!
“Good trip. Good company. I could do with a little better morning bite but overall, I call it Russian River successful!”
During a previous trip, King’s Sport and Tackle reported:
“Steve, the current record holder for biggest bass this season from a week ago, asked me to take him and his old fishing buddy Dave out on Tuesday. What a blast those two were, with a game of first fish, last fish, biggest fish, smallest fish, most species! They had me in stitches.
“Our adventure was way down river on a trip I wouldn’t do for a casual fisherman: long day, stretches of no to very little fish, sun blazing and wind which blew us around like kites at times.
“Fishing was okay, a lot of fish were caught where I least expected and some of my go-to spots were empty/nobody home. In the end Steve had 8 bass, and Dave had 6 with some fish missed.
“The biggest was over three pounds and the smallest was sucking on the tail of a D Shad. We spent some time trying for pikeminnows in a school but they wouldn’t hit; sometimes they are the most aggressive fish and sometimes they go basically dormant.”
- Dan Bacher