Category Archives: Fishing

My Third Boat

This boat was purchased in July 1970 and was an 18-foot, tri hull, with 2, 60-horse motors and it had 2 internal 24-gallon gas tanks.  Loaded out, with full tanks it would cruise at 25, had an over 50-mile range and topped out at over 30.  It was a nice one for our growing family, would comfortably fish 4 and gas at the time was only 25 cents a gallon!  Fishing the boat a lot during the first summer, one memorable trip was when we loaded it up with big speckled trout see my post “[He’ll Have To Wait]” of June 9, 2011.

Moving to Arizona in January of 1971, the large computer company moved the boat and all of our gear out there and as summer drew near my friends asked me if I was going to take it down to Rocky Point to try out the fishing.  My answer was a deafening “Yes!”  The first trip down we fished and caught fish, nothing special except the fish were a different brand, not specs and reds we usually caught, but sea bass, grouper and cabrilla.  In 1973 I even won a category of a tournament with a 10-pound queen trigger fish and another time we even cruised up to within 5 yards of a 50-foot whale!

The first time out, while returning to the camp, I called the proprietor as instructed before we left. In broken English, he replied, “Beeg, wide Texas boat?” and the name stuck.  On future trips everyone called it the “Beeg Wide Texas Boat”!

This boat was a fishing boat, but while in Arizona, my friends and customers, real threatening like, made me take them water skiing,.  The lake of choice was Lake Pleasant, not 20 miles up I-17 from Phoenix now the town has encircled it see my post of May 25, 2012, “[White Bass In The Desert]”.   Most summer days were calm and many afternoons were spent at the lake, the boat was a delight to ski out of and the motors would jerk you right out of the water, even on one ski!

Then came the move to Atlanta, a promotion for me, but as they say, “I left claw marks on the floor when they drug me out!”  The boat, all 18 feet of it, was just too big to economically trailer down to Destin or Suwanne and definitely too big to trailer all the way to the Texas coast, gas, with Nixon’s embargo, was now 50 cents per gallon.  So, as with all things, this ended too and after 4 years, on a trip back to Houston, I sold the boat to a man in Bellville and never saw it again.

Slip Corks

During the late summer of 1966, on the first fishing trip out in my new, second boat was a memorable one.  We, Gary Anderson, now deceased and Vic Hayes, now lost to me, headed out to the Quarantine Station for a go at some specs.  Our tackle was basic stuff, direct drive reels, six and a half foot, popping rods, and something a little different, slip corks above our bait of choice, a live shrimp.  The slip cork was easy to rig, you just tied a knot in you line at the depth you wanted to fish and the cork, complete with a hole running the length of the stem, when cast out would slip up the line until it met the knot, and there you were, in our case fishing at a depth of 9 or 10 feet.

In the 1960’s, one of the best places to catch speckled trout, wading or from a boat was around the tip of Pelican Island, known then as the Galveston Quarantine Station, now known as Sea Wolf Park.  The park’s development, now housing a WWII submarine the USS Cavalla, that sank a Japanese aircraft carrier on one of its missions and the destroyer escort, USS Stewart, caused the complete remaking of the end of Pelican Island, but, and a big but, the huge granite stones that lined the tip of the island and extended out 50 or more yards under the water, still remained and, this spot, during the hot summer months, on an incoming tide, fishing for trout around the point, could be fabulous!

The first station was built in 1839, but in 1892 hurricanes and continued yellow fever outbreaks caused it to be moved north, across the harbor, to Pelican Island, but the great hurricane of 1900 completely destroyed the buildings.  In 1902 the State of Texas built its last station on the southeastern tip of Pelican Island and in 1919 merged with Federal, port operations.   Closing in 1950, but during its 35 years of operation, the Pelican Island Federal Quarantine Station inspected over 30,000 ships that brought an estimated 750,000 legal, immigrants to Texas!

Enough history, my new, second boat had a feature that was way ahead of its time, a live bait well, but you had to be careful that when moving out to your fishing spot, or changing, spots, a plugs were applied to the drains.  If this wasn’t done, dead shrimp was the bait of choice for the day!  We remembered on this trip.

We launched the boat at Pleasure Island Fish and Bait, motored under both sides of the Galveston Causeway, through upper west bay, passed under the Pelican Island Bridge, through the harbor with its ships from many countries and finally to the old Quarantine Station, where we anchored about 50 or 60 feet out from the rocks along the shore.  Our first casts were met with solid strikes and then the fun began, 3 big guys trying to land 3 good specs, out of a 16-foot boat.  Having caught a lot of good fish on the first cast, but never 3, this was a very unusual happening and introduced us a local dance, the West Bay Shuffle.  Circling the boat several times, then succeeding and netting the trout, we admired the 3 fish, all 4 pounders.  We ended up with 18, good ones, 2 to 4 pounds, but the tide stopped running in and the fishing shut down.

On the way back in, passing through Galveston Harbor, it dawned on me that on calm days, this boat would be great for running around the end of the jetties and fishing on the Gulf sides, then it dawned on me that 3 years ago, I had already been shown a great place out there!  Over the next 40 years, I would grow from a “jetty novice” to a “jetty pro”, but on those good days we’d always stop for a few casts around The Quarantine Station!

This old picture of the State Quarantine Station is from the John P. McGovern Historical Collection and Research Center, Houston Academy of Medicine-Texas Medical Center Library, Galveston, Texas.

Business Comes First

Many times during the summer we cleared the Galveston Jetty’s before the sun was up. This was one of those times and in the dark we had stopped by our friendly, German bait camp operator, the same one that was the star of “Invasion” on my post of July 8, 2010, picked up bait and ice, and found out from him just where the shrimp boats were anchoring up and culling. This would be a quick trip out and back, because all 3 of us, Max, Dewey and I had business to take care of back in Houston, we were all 3 top salesman with the same large computer company and business comes first, you know!

Dewey Stringer and I had conjured up this fishing trip on the spur of the moment, picking a Friday morning since we had a bad case of cabin fever, because it was too hot to work (ha-ha), we had conned another of our king chasers, Max Weber, to go along. We decided that we would leave early, before the sun came up, find some shrimpers culling their nights catch, then, load up on the kings and be back before 9:30 AM, that would fit in real good with our schedules.

Max spent the night with Dewey at his Tiki Island place and I stayed at my Bayou Vista canal home and all of us were up way before the sun, loaded up Dewey’s boat, a 23 footer with a 200 horse outboard, and headed for the Intercoastal Waterway. Hand held spotlights blazing, we planed out his boat and sped under the bridges of the Galveston Causeway, under Pelican Island Bridge, through Galveston Harbor then turned right between the jetties and on out into the gulf.

We had picked a beautiful morning for our jaunt offshore, very light wind out of the southeast, slick seas with virtually no swells and at first light, sure enough, 20 miles out, we found 3 shrimpers tied together, culling their nights catch! We pulled up beside the 3 and made the almost, obligatory trade of beer for shrimp, packed the fresh shrimp in the big cooler, then set to catching some kings.

Max was first in the water and his line had barely settled when a hungry fish gobbled it up and took off. The long run against the lightweight tackle, assured us that it was probably a king, it was and after a lively tussle was gaffed and into the cooler it went. Our lines hadn’t even settled good when both Dewey and I had big strikes, 2 more long runs and soon we had the 2 kings up alongside the boat and gaffed them too. We were 3 for 3 on kings and soon we’d have the big cooler filled up!

Dewey had a big hit and off the fish took, but it wasn’t fighting like a king. Shorter runs and a grudging, not give an inch pull on his line. It was a jackfish, jack crevelle, not edible, but what fighters! On the light tackle Dewey was struggling with the jack, the fight took over 20 minutes, for just after sun up with no wind, Dewey commented, “I’m working up a sweat”. Max said, “I’ll fix that” and with one swoop of a handy, bucket, filled it and deposited the contents over Dewey’s head and shoulders. The 84 degree water was cooling and after that, as we were fighting fish, one of us would anoint the other. Believe it or not, it was cooling and refreshing.

By 9:30 we had limited out and filled the big, cooler with kings, but before we started in, we anointed each other one more time and took off. The big, 200 had us skimming over the flat seas at a record pace, we retraced our way in and were back unloading the boat by 11:00 AM. We iced down the kings and would clean them tonight, but anyway it was a great trip, even with the heat and all 3 of us made our appointments on time!

Changing Baits

Houston was hot, hot and more hotter, humidity and all, when Richard Foster called me one evening and said we should go out to Lake Houston, rent us a boat and try and catch some bass. A little background, the next week, the summer of 1958, I would be going to ROTC summer camp and the week after that, Richard, a newly commissioned 2/Lt. would be reporting to a basic training company at Ft. Hood.

In Richard’s jeep, the next morning, before the sun was up, we pulled into the parking lot of the main bait camp at the lake. For $2.00, a princely sum then, we rented a 14-foot boat, then attached my 5-horse motor, loaded our gear and were off. Just as the sun was coming up, our first stop was at a likely looking point and dragging our artificials, we were using Bomber baits, the first bait that under the water would crawl down a slope.

Richard connected first, a 2 pounder that jumped twice and it wasn’t long until I duplicated his feat. Lake Houston, at the time a 5, year old impoundment on the San Jacinto River, northeast of Houston, was the city’s primary water supply, now this has been supplanted by Lake Livingston. Lake Houston was about 15 miles, as the crow flies, from San Jacinto Battleground, where Sam Houston and his small band of Texians whipped Santa Anna. More casts and no luck, so we moved along to another likely looking place.

This one was along a bank that we could drift down, we hadn’t thought about a trolling motor back then and changing baits to a Pico Perch, an under water bait that you could vary the retrieve and it would change depths. We were using a medium retrieve that would run the bait at about 2-3 feet and we hit the fish here. Connecting first, I landed an estimated 3 pounder and on to my stringer it went, then Richard nailed another 2 pounder. Several fish later, the action stopped.

The sun was well up, probably around 8:30, so we switched baits to yellow, Piggy Boats, this spinner bait has been around since I started bass fishing in 1950. The company was bought out by H & H Company, but is now owned by Academy, a regional sporting goods company. This change of baits worked well for us and we picked up 4 more bass.

It was getting steamy so we motored on in, cleaned the fish and headed back home toward southwest Houston. Back then, we didn’t have fish finders, trolling motors, live wells to keep the fish in, fancy baits that would run at certain depths, but we still caught fish. In fact, TV was still in its infancy, no PC’s, no cell phones, no internet, no freeways, but we still made do!

My Second Boat

Having had a lot of boats, 16 at last count, spanning 40-years, from 1965 to 2005 I could almost be called an authority on the subject. This is the story on how I moved up from a small 14 footer to my second boat, a 16 footer. The old story is true in my case, that as you grow older, “Your toys only get bigger!”

Carrying a load of firewood into my garage, I didn’t see the garage door wasn’t raised all the way. Bam, I ran into it and dropped the load of wood all over. A month later, as soon as my concussion was healed (some say it never was) we took my first boat out for a try at water skiing. The boat was game, but the 40, horse motor was insufficient to get me up on skis, my ex, being 80 pounds lighter, popped right up, but something had to be done about the boat and motor. That something happened the next weekend. Bill Priddy, one of my old West University friends, worked with me and invited us to go water skiing in Lake Houston with him and his date.

We showed up on time, but Bill and his date and Norman Shelter and his date were sitting in the boat. Wouldn’t 6 be too many, I thought as we loaded up everything? Bill’s boat, a 16-foot fiberglass, lap strake, packed a 65, horse motor and turned out to be a skiing delight. A little strained for getting me up with the crowd aboard, but nice.

It was dead calm as I finally cleared the water and began skiing, nice conditions, flat water, no wind and the thought came to me, Why am I being pulled behind this boat when not over 20 miles from here I could be fishing for trout in Trinity Bay? The thought nagged at me, but wore off as the morning wore on.

While Norman was skiing, we noticed a cloud building up over the south end of the lake and soon, pop-crak, thunder, as the lightning hit. We quickly picked up Norman, headed for the launch ramp and were all thinking, That was too close. Before we got the boat loaded, here came the rain and more lightning. Very exciting, but anyway, we were already all wet!

We decided to wait this storm out and sitting in Bill’s car he thought out loud, “I’m going to get rid of this boat and stick with bass fishing.” The boat seemed to be just what I was looking for, a bigger boat with more horsepower and within 2 weeks, I’d sold my first boat and bought Bill’s for $900.00. The price was a steal, 3 years later, when I bought my third boat, an 18-footer, I got a $1,200.00 trade in for it, even with 2 new motors and all, the cost for the new one was only $2,500.00.

Even though we used it for some water skiing, for the next 3 years, this one became my first real, fishing boat. Just learning about where to fish, when to fish, how to fish, boating safety and boat handling, I finally found my second love, fishing! Brad was getting old enough to fish with me and I had ample opportunity to take my dad, “Unkie” and Dub Middleton, each one of the older guys drilled safety into me! My younger friends Bill, Norman, Dewey Stringer and over 10 years later, Bob Baugh all were eager participants too, that is until moving to Arizona and finding about the wonders of quail hunting!

That Was Close

The summer of 1957 found me still boatless and awaiting a 6, week stint at ROTC Camp at Ft. Hood.  The fishing around Galveston Island’s East Beach Flats was still good for small to medium speckled trout, but my fishing buddy, Richard Foster and I had been hearing stories about the fabulous catches behind Earl Galceran’s camp near the old coast Guard Station at the far end of West Galveston Island.  At the time we didn’t have a boat and we couldn’t figure out how to get there.  Earl’s camp was really several thousand acres leased by the high rollers in Houston for dove, quail and duck hunting, plus it had access to some of the best trout water in the state.  No bait was used here, only Dixie Jet silver spoons, with a yellow buck tail attached, my old scared up, spoon, over 50 years old, is pictured below

Like the Rockport and Port O’Conner area today, grass grew in abundance and the holes in the grass reminded me of holes in the moss in fresh water lakes.  Still, how do we get to it?

My fishing buddy, Richard, came up with a good idea, why didn’t he and I go ask Earl Galceran, at the time already a fishing legend, if we could fish behind his place.  We could sight our lack of funds, honesty and Ralph’s newly commissioned status as reasons we could be trusted not to do any damage to his property or equipment, or, we could just go down there and act like members and wave and smile and just wade out and start fishing.  We choose the latter approach, correctly thinking, “Always beg for forgiveness and never ask for permission.”  We would plead ignorance of the private property and say we were just following the road to West Galveston Bay.

Arriving at the open gate to Earl’s place we drove to a parking area, parked, grabbed our rods and stringers and headed for the bay.  Out came Earl Galceran, we smiled and waved, he smiled and waved and went back into his trailer.  Whew!  We must have looked like members.

Reaching the edge of the bay, at our backs a light southeast wind was blowing as we looked out over trout paradise. With a slight ripple on green, clear water with grass growing and swirling right up to the surface, no hesitation as we headed right in.

There was a hard sand/shell bottom and I couldn’t believe the grass, but on my first cast, the spoon landed silently past a hole in the grass.  Beginning a rapid retrieve, whamo, a 3, pound, spec nailed the spoon and the fight was on!  When a big trout hits, you know it, a jarring, pounding, rod bending hit, not the sideways, slow hit of a big red picking up a shrimp.  Landing the trout bare handed, getting a firm grip behind its gills, I slid him on the stringer and looked over at Richard who was in the middle of a fight with a nice fish too.

“This is some place,” exclaiming as I sailed another cast past a likely looking hole in the grass, another hard hit, but the hook pulled out, no fish.  What I didn’t know then, but have since learned, the trout lurk in the grass beside the holes and ambush baitfish as they swim through the open area.

Another cast, another jarring hit, this one’s hooked solid and I was soon stringing another 3 pounder.  Several of my casts caught grass, then, whamo, another fine fish, this spec rolled around on the surface, but soon I was adding it to my stringer. Not 30 minutes of fishing, wonderful conditions, bait in the water, trout all around and Richard and I had a half dozen fine trout, solid 3 pounders.

Wait a minute my stringer was caught on something.  That something hits my leg.  That something was a shark!  “Shark,” I yelled, stepping back and looking down at my stringer, which was tied, not looped, onto a belt loop of my jeans.  Another lesson learned, “Never tie always loop.”  Two bites and the shark, a 4 foot plus black tip, clipped off the last 2 trout on my stringer, swirled around me, brushed my leg again, and came up to the surface and grabbed the last trout, all of this right by my right hand that was futilely trying to pull the fish away from the shark.

Hearing Richard laughing, I didn’t think this was funny at all being left with 3 trout heads on my stringer, heart racing and he was laughing.  Earl Galceran must have kept these sharks around as pets to feed on his “guest’s” fish.  Quickly getting out of the water, I sat on the bank for a while cooling off and by that time Richard, still laughing, came out of the water with 5 nice ones on his stringer.  He said “You ready to call it a day.”  Not replying, I just turned around and started back to the car.

In 1970 I went back to this place by boat, a big chemical plant had been built in the mid ‘60’s, on Chocolate Bayou which feeds into Lower West Galveston Bay above Earl’s old place and the grass was gone, trout fishing had changed in Lower West Bay to anchoring on reefs, fishing under the birds or drifting, very little wading.  Earl Galceran moved to a houseboat set up in the Chandleur Islands off of the Louisiana/Mississippi coasts.  From what I have heard, he took some of his sharks with him.

That summer, Richard Foster went on active duty at Ft. Hood as a Platoon Leader in a basic training company.  One of his recruits was Elvis Pressley, but that’s another story.

Great Memories

The 3/8’s ounce Mr. Champ spoon with a small sardinero attached, abruptly stopped like I was hung up on a rock or something, then it, whatever it was, took off, stripping off maybe 30 yards of 15 pound line. Finally the rod, a 6-1/2 foot popping rod and the drag took its toll, the fish stopped, took off again on a shorter run, then grudgingly came in and I slid it up on to the beach. Lying on the sand, the “it” was now a 19 inch, bonefish, maybe 2 pounds! Imaging that, a bonefish caught in St. John’s Bay, 10 miles south of Puerto Penasco, Mexico. Going to the encyclopedia, it showed me that Albula vulpes is the Florida strain of these speedsters, while the Pacific variety is Albula esuncula, basically the same fish.

Tossing the bonefish back into the water, I rebaited and cast out. It wasn’t long before I had another strike this fish didn’t take off like the bonefish, but cleared the water, shaking its head like a tarpon, it looked like a snook to me, but I’d never caught one, but as I reeled it in and up on the beach, sure enough, it was a snook. Wow, on my first 2 casts into the cut between El Golfo and St. John’s Bay, I had caught a bonefish and a snook, both firsts for me!

The fishing was great I caught another snook, probably both were a black snook. However, we loaded up on 2 to 3 pound, corvina, great fighters, a fish that resembles our Gulf Coast white trout, but this trout grows to a size of up to 30 pounds!

It wasn’t hard to get to the place, just a long sandy drive I thought, but boy, was I wrong, because on one excursion to Rocky Point, several of the locals asked me to accompany them to “The Cut”, a 200 foot wide, cut and channel leading from El Golfo into a small bay, St John’s Bay. The trip was 10 miles down the beach, not hard packed sand like along the Texas coast, but fine volcanic sand, which refused to pack. It was a 10, mile trip from Hell, 4 WD all the way. Tires deflated to 8, yes 8 pounds each! Skeletons of disabled trucks littered the beach and if you broke down, chances were the truck just stayed, rusted out and sank into the sand. It was an exciting experience to make a suspense filled trip to a remote fishing spot, hammer the fish, then come back out in the dark, engines roaring, sand flying and finally making it back to civilization in one piece.

We made a total of 4 trips to “The Cut”, all great fun and good fishing! Great memories!

Puerto Penasco

Puerto Penasco, Mexico was at the end of a 2, lane road built by the U.S. Army Engineers. During the early part of WWII, things weren’t going well for the Allies, a Japanese invasion of the west coast of the U.S. was expected and our Government needed a port on the Pacific Ocean to move materiel and troops to thwart the expected invasion, hence the nice 2, lane road to Puerto Penasco.

The upper end of El Golfo, the Gulf of California, is the final destination of the western Colorado River. The same river that roars through the Grand Canyon meekly trickles into the top end of El Golfo at San Louis, Mexico, 60 miles southeast of San Louis is Puerto Penasco, or Rocky Point, as the local Arizonans called it.

Local Arizonans, yes local Arizonans. At the time, around 200 families had established an American colony there centered around, fishing and relaxing. The beach houses were minimum standard, but sufficient for occasional use by their lessors. At the time, Gringos couldn’t own property in Mexico. The two best facilities at Rocky Point were the boat storage area, patrolled by the local police and fenced with concertina wire around the top, and the boat launching equipment.

My boat, at the time, was an 18 foot, tri hull, with 2, 60 HP outboards, with 2 internal, 24 gallon gas tanks. Loaded out it would cruise at 25 and had a range of 75 miles. We caught some very nice fish, sea bass, grouper, corvina, snook, bonefish and Queen triggerfish. I won a category of a tournament there in 1973 with a 10, pound triggerfish. Once we approached to within 20 feet of a huge whale, at a minimum, twice the length of the boat!

An unusual feature of Rocky Point were the extreme tidal fluctuations caused by its location at the top of El Golfo, which is several hundred miles long and for a large body of water, very narrow, 50 to a hundred miles wide. Tidal pressure going in and out causes wide fluctuations at Rocky Point. The Bay of Fundy, in Nova Scotia, is the only spot in the world with greater tidal fluctuation.

Several times we took part in one of the local sporting events, a vehicle mountain climbing race. The objective being to drive to the top of a local mountain in a wash, this wash was a sandy, boulder lined, strip that made it all the way to a road that ran along the top of the mountain. We tried it at different times in both of my vehicles, a 1968, 4WD Ford Bronco and a 1973, 4WD, Dodge Power Wagon, neither one made it to the top, but the Power Wagon came within 50 yards! One funny thing, both trucks just played out and wouldn’t pull through the sand, finally with great roaring and sand flying they both just stopped!

In 1973 or 74, my memory fades, robbers stopped 2 people driving back to Arizona from Rocky Point, obviously touristas, shot them and stole their belongings. About 2 weeks later, the Federales, or “Green Hornets” as they were called, posing as tourists captured and shot the attackers! For the time being this stopped all of the criminal activity coming and going to Rocky Point.

From our first boat launch to our last trip down we thoroughly enjoyed “South Of The Border, Down Mexico Way.”

Beach Party

During the late spring of 1970, the wind refused to blow, maybe in the afternoon it would gust to 12 or 15, but by nightfall it would lay, this was very unusual for the upper Texas coast! The clear, blue/green water came right up to the beach, closely followed by the pelagic species of fish, cobia, bonita, ling, little tunny and king mackerel that were caught off of both Galveston Jetties, and the bonus, the big, golden, gulf shrimp, on the incoming tides, could be seen, jumping in what masqueraded as the surf and the shrimp boats came in close, over the second sand bar and plied their trade not 50 yards off the beach!

Normally the big shrimp are found in deep water, miles out in the Gulf, but the calm conditions had them crowding the shoreline. We, Jim Buck, Norman Shelter and myself figured that we would seine them, just like seining for bait in a river.

First off, Norman had a 300-foot, net that his dad used for seining speckled trout from the surf, we considered this a despicable practice, but would use it for this shrimping occasion. Jim had a 10-foot skiff and I had a 5 HP motor and he could pull the end of the net out into the surf, past the third sand bar, where the water was over our heads. Then he would turn and pull the net back to where the pullers would take over.

We had to find some pullers quick and, luckily, our friends and their families filled the bill. Along with the explanation of our plan, we invited; Gary and Kathy, Vic and Shelly, Tony and Dee, and all their kids, and all 3 couples quickly accepted.

At 8:30 AM, the next Saturday morning, the weekend after Memorial Day, we were all on the beach, by the Jamaica Beach subdivision, complete with all of our equipment including a big, black, cooking pot, like my Grandma Bryan used to make lye soap in. We were ready!

Our planning was perfect and all went as planned, Norman and I anchored the land end of the net, Jim ferried the end out into the Gulf, turned and came back a ways, then Vic, Tony and Gary took over and pulled the net up toward the beach. All was fine until the pullers felt a big push, not a tug, but a push. Like something big trying to break through the net, Norman and I were in ankle deep water, but the pullers were waste deep, and feeling the push, they dropped the end of the net and made speed for shore.

The first thing that we could see was the wake, then the dorsal fin of a big shark, circle out of danger, our estimate was that it was well over 6 foot long. The pullers, unanimously, refused to go back into the deep water and volunteered to become the anchormen, leaving the job of finishing the pull to Norman and me. We questioned if anything would be in the net, but waded out and finished the job! The kids loved the excitement!

The shark escaped, but the net had made a sack, and, sure enough, there were 5 specs, many, crabs and over 50 pounds of huge gulf shrimp. We built a fire, filled our pot with 3/4 water and ¼ salt water, added a box or shrimp boil, pulled one claw off of each crab and threw the crabs back in the Gulf, filleted and diced 2 specks, releasing the other 3, and cleaned and headed the shrimp, put it all into the pot, along with some corn on the cob and potatoes, and waited for everything to cook.

To say the least, we drew a crowd of interested onlookers. Six of us fit the part of “beach bums”, Norman, Jim, myself, our wives and our kids were brown as natives, and our 6 guests and their kids were getting sunburned! The food was ready to eat, then it dawned on us, we had no plates or eating utensils, so off to Red’s, Seven Seas Grocery to pick some up. Of course Red and all of his hangers on wanted to come to the festivities! Why not, we had enough fresh shrimp and crab claws for all!

The party ended at midnight, and to say the least, we didn’t go fishing the next morning!

Hydrilla

In late May of 1980, having far exceeded my monthly quota and almost having achieved my yearly quota, I decided to take the afternoon off.  My objective for the afternoon was a fishing trip to one of the creeks feeding into Lake Conroe for a go at some bass.  At the time, Lake Conroe was one of the top bass lakes in the entire Country and, at the same time, I was on track to be the top salesman for the large computer company, quite a feat!

Having been given some brief instructions about getting to the spot, I drove up FM 149, a less than 1 hour trip, but now FM 149 is a freeway and 4 lanes all the way to Texas 105, still less than a hour.  Passing through Montgomery, I continued north on 149 for 2 or 3 miles, crossed the first bridge and exited the road, but there was no launch ramp, just 2 ruts leading down into the water.

Huffing and puffing my 12, foot, aluminum boat, electric motor, battery, paddle, rod and tackle box, with wet feet, unceremoniously launched it.  This is the same one that, in Georgia, I caught the 12, pound, bass out of a year earlier.  See my post “[A Really Big Bass]”, August 6, 2007.  Push polling with the paddle, finally paddling, I got the boat into deeper water, cranked up the electric motor, headed under the bridge and started casting.  My bait of choice was a dark green, Lucky 13, a proven top water plug.

Outside of the creek channel, there were a few lily pads, along with the first growth of hydrilla, a very intrusive moss much worse than the kudsu around Atlanta, but this looked like a good place to start, so I headed toward it.  Pick a spot in the moss, cast out and let the 13 sit until the rings disappeared, then twitch it and repeat if necessary.  My second cast, after the rings settled, abruptly, a nice bass came out of the water and, on the way back into the water, clamped down on the Lucky 13.  Having caught a lot of bass in the past, I’d never seen this before, a reverse blow-up!  After several jumps, I reached down and lipped it, a nice 4, pounder.  Throwing it back, I kept on casting and twitching.

Casting into another opening, letting the rings settle, twitching the plug twice, another bass, a twin of the first, exploded into the 13 and the fight was on.  Landing it and throwing it back, I continued casting for the next hour, with no luck.  Heading back towards the “launch ramp”, I figured that with the lake up this would remain a good spot through June or until the water level dropped.

Getting home, I told Randy about the spot and gave him better instructions about finding it.  He went up there the next weekend with a friend and was using a jig around the bridge pilings and caught a spinning rod and reel.  It was a nice expensive, outfit that we cleaned up and used it in salt water for the next 20 years!  We did fish this spot for the next year with some success, but strangely, with the growth of the hydrilla, the bass fishing headed “south”.

Now, for the rest of the story, Lake Conroe was once considered one of the top 5 bass fishing spots in the nation, but then, to control the hydrilla,Hydrilla verticllata, the State of Texas introduced grass carp, white amur, supposedly these fish were sterile, but they weren’t!  Within a year and a half the carp had eaten up our fishing spot.  By 1996 the carp, without any vegetation to eat, died out, vegetation rebounded and the bass fishing improved with it.  Now the State, the lake front property owners, various interested national organizations, fishing clubs and the San Jacinto River Authority are working together to control the hydrilla and other harmful plants and the fishing should improve.

And, no, I didn’t make my quest for number 1, but I came close, except for an accounting glitch, finished number 9.