Hometown News For Orange County, Texas
Capt. Dickie Colburn
For the Record
Catching fish is not simply a matter of being in the right place at the
right time. Just ask Orange angler, Eddie Hudson!
Not only is a little luck required, but more importantly, it is a matter
of having your lure or bait at the right place at the right time.Last
week Hudson did just that and officially owning the new Toledo Bend lake
record for spotted bass is now little more than a formality.
“I had fished virtually every lure in the box at every depth and hadn’t
gotten the first strike when I opted to give a spinnerbait a shot,” said
Hudson.“The strike wasn’t anything special,” he added, “and I just
flipped her over the side without even looking for the net.”
Enter his first acknowledgement of a little luck. As soon as she hit the
bottom of the boat she flopped one time and the spinnerbait fell out of
her mouth. “She was just barely skin hooked so I was lucky to even land
her!” Unaware of the significance of what was now lying on the floor of
his boat he would never have given it a second thought had she fallen
back into the lake.
Pleased, but not overly impressed with her size, he still elected to put
her in the livewell and let the kids share in releasing her the following day.
Yet another bit of luck!
“She was not only the only bass I caught, but the only bite I got,” said
Hudson. Before locking everything down that evening, he snapped a few
photos to post on a report he would share on Facebook. “I had scarcely
hit the “send” button when my sight started lighting up.”
After two hundred plus hits proclaiming his bass to not only be a spot,
but possibly a new record, he sent a picture to an area Game Warden. When
the response came back “no doubt” Hudson and his fish hit the road in
search of certified scales. After much driving around, his bass was
officially weighed and certified in nearby Fairmont.
As it would turn out, all of the folks that were so excited about his
catch were right. His new record, which is now little more than a
formality, pushed the needle to 4.5-pounds. His huge spot eclipsed the
existing record, caught in 2009, by nearly a pound.
A little luck played a role in Hudson’s memorable feat, but it was far
from being the determining factor. He could have easily given up earlier
in the day or tied on the wrong spinnerbait or lowered his troll motor
on the wrong shoreline.In addition, he took the time to share his catch
with folks he didn’t even know as well as his own grandkids.
Eddie Hudson deserved to catch that bass!
Amazingly enough, on the same day, Connie Allen may well have caught and
later eaten a record white perch that she duped with a minnow in
twenty-eight feet of water. “I never caught a bass, that big,” she
stated.“I don’t know if it was a black or white crappie,” but it weighed
over three pounds on our scales.”
Allen said she was fishing right in the middle of a cove east of the
Arnold’s Bay area. “It was so foggy we couldn’t see the bank so we didn’t
go very far.” Unlike Hudson’s afternoon, they boxed nineteen other keepers.
On the local scene, I talked with Trey Smith earlier this week and he
said that the bass bite had slowed down for him, but wouldn’t blame it
on the rain and dirty water. “We have seen all of this before,” he
pointed out, “but we will get it figured out,” I don’t doubt that!
At the same time, the redfish continue to warrant burning any gas in
saltwater. The saltwater is not very salty, unfortunately and it has kept
the trout pinned down to very small areas. Jason Lott and a friend did
have fourteen trout up to five pounds that they caught wading 3 to 4 feet
of water Saturday night.
The numbers game has also improved a little on the south end of the
lake, but size is a problem. Regardless of size, the improved bite is
encouraging.
We have fished some very dirty water lately, but had little trouble
catching redfish. They have been mixed in size, but are hitting the same
baits for us. Square bill crankbaits and quarter ounce spinnerbaits have
worked best. A GULP trailer on the spinnerbait is hard to beat, but we
have done well with a red shad Sea Shad as well.
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