By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂
Thank goodness some members of the younger generation still enjoy the outdoors. If not, Joe Allen Dunn and I would have been ripe for the making of a comedy video of catfishing bloopers.
Fortunately, Dunn鈥檚 son, 19-year-old Hayden, was there to save two old dudes with bum knees from stumbling around the boat as the catfish went on a feeding frenzy. Hayden was netting fish, rebaiting and tossing jugs as fast as he could go.
Dunn and James 鈥淏ig Daddy鈥 Lawler developed what they call 鈥淯ltimate Jug Fishing鈥 for Millers Ferry on the 黑料天堂 River. Last September I made a trip to the (Dannelly) reservoir for hot-weather catfishing in deep water using sections of pool noodles as the floats with long lines to reach the fish in 20-30 feet of water.
Dunn invited me back for the spring catfishing bonanza when the fish move onto the shallows during the spawning run. This time, the lines were 3-4 feet long rather than 30. Instead of pool noodles, the floats are 20-ounce Gatorade or Powerade bottles. A 30-inch section of green nylon string is tied to the bottle. A half-ounce lead weight is added before a swivel. About 18 inches of 40- to 50-pound monofilament line is tied on before being snelled to a circle hook. Dunn said snelling the hook is important to get the circle hook to function like it should. He has also revised his recommendations on hook size. After a big catfish straightened out a 3/0 hook, he now sticks with 5/0.
鈥淵ou catch a lot of medium-sized fish, but every once in a while, you鈥檒l catch a 15- to 20- or 30-pounder,鈥 Dunn said. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e trying to fight him around to get him in, he鈥檚 going to straighten that 3/0 out. I鈥檓 just going with a heavier hook from now on, and you鈥檒l still catch the smaller fish on the bigger hook.
鈥淭he thing about the bottles is when the wind gets a little brisk, the bottles will turn and draft. They don鈥檛 catch the wind as bad, so you get a slower drift. You want a little wind for the drift, but you don鈥檛 want to be chasing your jugs all over the place.鈥
Dunn buys bicycle tire inner tubes and uses scissors to cut 1-inch bands to slip over the neck of the jugs. This allows the lines to be wrapped tight so the lead won鈥檛 be slapping the bottle during transport, and it gives a place to stick the point of the circle hook to make sure it doesn鈥檛 get dull.
The places Dunn looks to deploy the jugs are flats off the main river channel with 2陆 to 6 feet of water. After cleaning the fish, we realized why the catfish were on one particular flat. The fish stomachs were full of juvenile mussels.
鈥淭hese fish are up there feeding and getting ready to spawn,鈥 Dunn said. 鈥淭he fish will stay in the flats the whole spring and the early part of the summer. When it gets hot, the fish will move out to the river channel.鈥
Dunn prefers skipjack herring and threadfin shad for catfish bait. He uses a cast net to catch the shad and occasionally lucks up on a school of skipjacks along the river banks. Right now, he said the best way to catch skipjacks is to cast Sabiki rigs below the dam. Depending on the size, he uses a whole shad or cuts them in half. The skipjacks are cut into chunks. When he has a good bait run, Dunn has a specific way to freeze the bait for future use.
鈥淒on鈥檛 take a gallon bag and pack all you can in it and zip it up,鈥 he said. 鈥淏y the time you get them all thawed out like that, the bait gets mushy. I take a gallon bag and put enough bait in it to make one layer. I mash it flat and zip it up. The last time we put up bait, we counted how many we had in one layer, and it was about 50 baits. That鈥檚 working out real well.鈥
Back to the feeding frenzy we had last week, the blue cats (and occasional channel cat) were hungry. We baited the circle hooks and started tossing out jugs about 25 yards apart and let them drift down the flat. Within five minutes, the action was non-stop, and we worked Hayden non-stop. As soon as a fish was thrown in the live well, another jug would start bobbing.