Gulls Dependable Fish Finders At Beaver Lake

STAFF PHOTO FLIP PUTTHOFF This 35-inch striped bass hit a top-water lure Dec. 19 where gulls were feeding on threadfin shad.
STAFF PHOTO FLIP PUTTHOFF This 35-inch striped bass hit a top-water lure Dec. 19 where gulls were feeding on threadfin shad.

To find the fish, look above the water, not below.

Seagulls are nature's fish locator when it comes to catching fish at Beaver Lake and other big Ozark reservoirs where schools of threadfin shad dwell. All game fish eat threadfin shad. So do gulls. Where fishermen see gulls swirling over the water, that's the place to fish.

At A Glance

Know The Limit

The combined daily limit of striped bass and hybrid striped bass at Beaver Lake is three. Striped bass must be at least 20 inches or longer to keep.

There is no daily limit or size limit on white bass at Beaver Lake or its tributaries.

Source: Arkansas Game & Fish Commission

These minnow-sized baitfish travel the lake's open water in big schools. When gulls start feeding on shad from above, chances are good that hungry striped bass, white bass or black bass are feeding below and eager to bite.

A fishing trip on a drizzly Dec. 19 proved it.

Word from the fishing grapevine is that striper fishing has been going strong on the south half of Beaver Lake for weeks. Trolling has been the way to catch them. Live bait such as shad or brood minnows work best, but lures work, too.

Off we motored down the lake from the Arkansas 12 bridge ramp heading south. It was a chilly ride to an area north of Horseshoe Bend Park where we shut down the outboard. Beaver Lake was smooth as tile with mist and fog on this Edgar Allan Poe kind of day.

We started trolling with two rods. Each had a lure that resembled threadfin shad tied to the line.

The trolling motor's hum could barely be heard as we moved at a crawl toward Horseshoe Bend. The depth finder screen showed the occasional school of shad, indicating the baitfish were 10 to 40 feet deep. A hefty white bass was the first fish to bite, but it was our only catch in an hour of trolling.

We knew the action was about to change when we took a gander east to the mouth of Blackburn Creek. A flock of gulls, 50 or more, dive-bombed the water, splashing and plucking shad off the surface.

We fired up the outboard and headed to the gulls. Birds banked close to the boat while we grabbed our fishing rods. This time we lowered jigging spoons vertically over the side of the boat. The lures didn't sink far before fish nailed them. Right away we swung two big white bass aboard that weighed 3 pounds each, two of the largest whites we'd seen at Beaver Lake.

Our catching fever hit the red line when we saw huge fish come splashing to the surface to gorge on shad. These were no white bass. Some swirls were the size of truck tires and could only come from striped bass, big striped bass.

We weren't expecting surface action, and frantically tied on a Red Fin top-water lure. A long, minnow-shaped Red Fin can be cast a country mile and makes an irresistible wake on the surface when it's retrieved.

It took a couple casts, but a 10-pound striper hammered the Red Fin. More stripers surfaced all around while we did our best not to lose the fish we had on the line. Finally, the striper was in the boat and unhooked.

Now a pod of stripers seemed to have herded a bunch of shad close to shore. The commotion was unbelievable where these big stripers fed in water 3 feet deep, like lions after a herd of wildebeest. We vibrated with fishing excitement, but managed to launch the Red Fin toward the ruckus.

A striper chased the lure but missed, then came back for seconds. A hard hook-set and this striper wasn't getting away.

Just getting the 10-pounder aboard was the stuff of sore arms. Now we had a real fight. This was a big striper that dug for the bottom, stripping yards of 10-pound line off the bait-cast reel. The striper nearly pulled all the line off the reel before we gained some back. The big fish was getting closer.

We got a good-sized landing net under the fish and groaned bringing it aboard. There on the boat floor the striper thumped in the net while we pulled a measuring tape out of the tackle box. Thirty-five inches long. That'll make anyone's fishing day.

You can bet the house we'll be watching the sky as much as the water next time we're on safari for stripers at Beaver Lake.

Outdoors on 01/01/2015

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