Monday, March 19, 2012

March is off to an awesome start

Hi again! Guess who is fishing in the warm weather of mid march? WE ARE!!
Sure, we are going to pay the ultimate price this summer when we have record dealy heat..but until then we are riding the early wave to fishing greatness.
Between Mike and myself we were able to string together 2 short kayaking trips this past weekend for a total of about 3.5 hours of fishing.
How'd we do? Somewhere around 53 bass.
The key? Rattle Trap style baits and Husky Jerk style baits.
The action at some points was fish after fish on consecutive casts.
Get out and fish!




One of older reports from 2007 is all that you need to read as far as how we do it and what we use.
http://customfish.blogspot.com/2007/03/early-spring-tips.html

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Fall report 2011


Well..that's a wrap folks. I think I'll end the 2011 fishing season with this as my last cast. A 23" 7lb (+-) smallmouth bass. Largest in Illinois I believe for 2011. A huge thanks to fishing partner Ken Schumacher of smalliefishing.com for the spot and the photo :)

It was a great year which included some great trips and some awesome fish. Some of the memorable ones were this 23" smallie, a 44" muskie on ONE cast while on a great trip to Pipestone Lake in NW Ontario. A great trip to Taltson Bay on Great Slave Lake in Northwest territories, Canada where 6 of us caught over 1,060 pike with 124 that went 41-48". And many more big bass from local waters both while hiking and while kayaking.
Be sure to keep up with the facebook page. We've got a ton on there. Just look up customfish graphics.
Thanks all!

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Thursday, August 18, 2011

Fishing reports..where are they?

Facebook. Look up Customfish Graphics.
That's where most of the stuff is these days.
See ya there!!

THE JIM GOLLA REPORT FOR EARLY AUGUST!!!

Just back from an Aug. 6-13 trip. Curiously, my daughter, Julie, and I caught exactly the same number of trophies (over 41") as my first trip 2 years ago, which is/was 43. I must say that Julie did most of the heavy lifting, and at times I felt primarily like a camera man. The most remarkable thing, however, might be the bulky average size of the fish. If you chose a 4-inch bracket that would encompass our most typical-sized fish, it would probably be 35-39" or 36-40". There were A LOT of Big, heavy, burly fish, and when you spot them about 100 stalks of cabbage to dig into and slice through, they can kick your ass just fine, thank you.

The trip got off to an inauspicious start, however. On our first casts, we BOTH snapped the cork handles of our rods right in half. By the end of the first hour, all 3 of Julie's rods, and 2 of mine, had done this. "WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON?" No one at camp had ever seen or heard of this happening. My third "first string" rod went on day 3. Upon investigation, there was a subtle dent across my (standard Plano) rod tube, right at that same level, so apparently the tube took a very heavy and sharp blow, and then bounced back to almost normal shape, but the damage was done. Still pretty bizarre. With the crap that the TSA (inspects my rod tube most of the time, and likes to jam stuff back in) and baggage handlers dish out, I' m not buying any more rods without lifetime warranties. By the way, if this happens to you, here is the solution: get a Clorox-type jug, cut off the top and bottom, and slit open the remaining plastic cylinder. Cut in half, that will give you enough to wrap 2 handles stoutly enough to not bend. Then secure with Duck Tape (don't leave home without it!), and you're back in business.

The massive weed bed between camp and Tower Island was the biggest fish magnet, with some off the island itself. Just little ones at Thubin. Went upriver one half day, and caught 4 over 39" (incl. a 45). Biggest of the trip was a 46", by Julie. Some in the trolling channel, too. The other boat in camp, Tim and Bryan, did as well or better than we did, mostly using big, gaudy spinnerbaits (bigger than most of the stuff I had). We had a fair amount of wind, but topwater was fun when it was calmer. I usually drifted back to the old reliable Johnson spoon, and firetiger may have been superior to plain silver or gold. Julie has a favorite spoon, and that is no mean feat to have success in those weeds with a spoon-- has to be small, light, single hook (which is sure nice for the fish and fish handlers, too), and further buoyed by a trailer.

I never put on my rain pants, sweatshirt, or hooded sweatshirt, and I only used my rain jacket (as a windbreaker only) for 2 evenings and the ride upriver. Can't complain about that (but it was pretty windy 4-5 days).

Now, OK, guys. We have a definite lack of fishing reports this year. Don't be shy. Don't be modest. Let's hear from you! Like Jamie says, "There's no shame in talking about kicking ass, in the company of others who also kick ass!" And somebody can certainly post an "angler profile" (so I won't look like a tool being the only one besides Jamie).

Tight lines and solid hooksets, Jim Golla

P.S.Best story: I hooked a 14"-er on my first cast upriver, which was promptly slashed by a BIG fish. I tell Julie to "throw that rubber thing that looks like a pike". She (Julie) does, and she (the fish) also "does", all 43 1/2 of her. Many boatside ambushes, and many "companion" fish following in hooked fish, seemingly always bigger than the one you've got on! No other species can give me the rush these guys do.

And finally, I promised I would do this: I made a big mistake going to laker's unltd on Athabasca last year. I would urge you not to make the same mistake.

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Thursday, July 07, 2011

Pipestone Lodge 2011

CLICK HERE TO MAKE YOUR FISH LOOK LIKE OURS!!!!


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Pipestone Lodge June 24-July1
Good trip again this year to Pipestone Lodge in NW Ontario.
Weather was good most of the week. Fishing was fair. We don't lie here on Customfish.com so I'll say that I've caught more in previous years. BUT..I will add this note: We could have done 50% better had we have used leeches all week. John and I just don't like to sit and watch lines for 7 days so we were throwing all the lures that you've read about in my past Pipestone Lodge reports since 2005.
The spawn was totally screwed up this year. What smallies DID spawn were in the shallows for maybe a week. They should have been in for a month. We saw some in shallow...but most off the first drops. Spawning areas had less than 5% of the beds/activity that we normally see at this time. The walleyes and muskies were exactly where they should have been as were the pike.
Perch seem to be BOOMING on Pipestone in the past couple years as are the walleyes. We didn't catch a single small walleye. They started at 17" and we topped out at 25". There were a couple over 30" caught last week as well.
Muskies on Pipestone show up here there and everywhere as usual. I mean..c'mon..we DID catch 2 muskies in 3 casts.
The problem with muskie fishing on Pipestone is that there are literally TOO MANY options and TOO MANY spots. It's not easy to fish because jumping spots is the name of the game for most. Luckily we have a milk run of 5 spots that produce on a consistent basis. We caught what we went there for as well as raised up some mid 40"-low 50" class fish. A couple of them just wouldn't turn hot but we got them to follow select lures day after day. All in all we did pretty darn good for only spending a total of about 2 hours worth of time actually fishing muskies. It helps that John is a top notch veteran muskie angler who writes for Muskie Hunter on occasion and I'm no slouch muskie-wise either:)

The accommodations were awesome as usual. The staff was exceptional. The food is top notch. And the boats are in top-of-the-line shape as always.
Our crew thanks Art, Jenny and the entire staff for yet another awesome week of great fishing, great food & drink, and great friends.

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