"I don't know who told you that crock", I responded. "Let me look
at my log book and I'll get back to you."
The title comment and the response were Internet traffic items on
a fishing site discussion page that I frequent. One thing I have found
in all my years, both as a fisherman and as an outdoor writer, is
that rumors beget rumors. Someone made a trek to the famous Brevard
County, Florida, fishing Mecca and couldn't find the bass. So, the
obvious excuse was that "there are no fish left there".
Wrong!! I say there, boy -- WRONG!!!
I live 30 minutes (even less, if my fishing habit hasn't had a 'fix'
in 48 hours) from the Farm 13/Stick Marsh complex in east Central
Florida. And, in 1990, I was one of the first to fish it at the invitation
of its Florida Game and Freshwater Fish Commission Project Officer,
Fred Cross. Conservatively my wife, friends, special parties and I
spend 100-150 days on it. I have studied aerial photos of the area
before and after it was flooded. Plus, I made the first map of the
impoundment in late 1990. I KNOW the water well.
While the Farm 13/Stick Marsh complex has undergone many physical
water management engineering changes, the fish have been basically
unaffected. I will be the first to admit that the catch rates are
down from the hey-day years of 1990-1995. But, that decline has NOTHING
to do with a decline in the numbers of fish. It has to do strictly
with the anglers' abilities to adapt and adjust to the changing habitat.
LOGBOOK FACTS:
In 1995, my boat had more than 4000 bass come over
the side , averaging some 38 per trip out. And, the vast majority
of those excursions were under 4 hours and were comprised of 2 people.
The years prior to 1995 had generally the same statistics.
Years 1996-1998 reflected gradual declines, with 1998 records
indicating approximately 2500 bass being taken.
To date, June 1999, the catch rate for the year has been approximately
24 fish per trip, based on 2 people and 4-5 hours out.
During the first 5 months of 1999, we have taken 35 bass over
5 pounds, 15 over 6 pounds, 2 over 8, a 10 pound lunker and a 15.2
pound giant (see accompanying photo of 20 May 99).
Our catches are made using artificial lures.
The BEST bass fishing is when the weather is the HOTTEST.
So, you see, Virginia, the Farm 13/Stick Marsh really
DOES still exist. And, it exists, not just in the hearts of anglers,
but in the proof that its great fishing still abounds.
The problem, my dear, is the fishermen still think of
the bygone days of easy fishing. They remember how great it was when
there was very little grass for the baitfish to hide in and for the
big predators to key to. They remember when the hydrilla and coontail
moss populations were so sparse that the bass stacked on the few grass
beds like the proverbial cordwood. They remember when the big schools
of 2-3 pound speckled perch gathered in the 20-foot water of the divider
canal before the spawn because there was a lack of good cover on the
Farm 13 side of the impoundment.
Yes, those days are gone.
The King is dead. Long live the King.
BUT, the new King is still one of the best fisheries to
be found anywhere. The Farm 13/Stick Marsh bass catches can still average
2 ½-3 pounds per fish. The knowledgeable angler can still reasonably
expect to catch 50 fish per day. The trophy bass are still there in
large numbers. In fact, I believe the fishing is actually getting better.
Obviously, in an impoundment as small as the Farm 13/Stick
Marsh complex, I cannot divulge exact locations for fishing success.
That would put 50 bass boats and 3 canoes on each hole. What I will
do, however, is try and explain what the angler needs to look for and
the adjustments he/she needs to consider.
The impoundment, being near Florida's East Coast, is very
prone to coastal winds. While most anglers scorn wind as a nemesis,
wind is actually one of the angler's best friends. Used properly, the
wind makes 100-bass days very possible.
Wind makes waves. BUT, wind also produces moving water
- induced currents, if you will. The Farm 13/Stick Marsh is now inundated
with lots of dense beds of vegetation. That vegetation provides impediments
to those water currents, resulting in a 'funneling' or 'channeling'
of the flow. ANY mass in the area of moving water is an obstruction
to that flow and the water will break around the obstruction. Moving
water diverted from its natural path also creates eddies in the vicinity
of the obstruction. Fish LOVE moving water; especially where it flows
through narrow passages or along such features as old submerged canals.
Fish LOVE eddies because they are good energy-efficient holding areas.
Moving water carries plankton and other small aquatic life, which are
the food staples of the small fishes. Small fish gather on the flow
to feed. Bigger predators gather on the flow to feed of the small fish.
There are also a few active water-level control gates
that feed into the Farm 13 side, as well as one near the boat ramp area.
Moving water does not have to be wind-related.
'Nuff said on moving water.
There is a big difference between 'structure' and 'cover'.
Structure is a reference point for fish, for holding and/or for movement
paths. Cover is a concealment item, both for predators and prey. There
is a LOT of cover in the Farm 13/Stick Marsh. But, there is precious
little structure. When you find both together, things get right for
schools of bass.
There are 5 predominate structure features in the Farm
13/Stick Marsh:
Submerged canals
The submerged levees adjacent to those canals
Small drainage ditches that connected to the major canals
A few isolated piles of dirt or other debris (possibly the
remains of a burned shed or a pump house, etc.)
Old roads used by the farm equipment to work the fields that
once made up Farm 13
If you understand how to evaluate and approach structure
for locating bass, you need no more from me on that subject.
The 'cover' in the complex can be a real pain at times
and a real blessing others. During the dry season and the accompanying
lower water levels, the grass becomes the lure-fouling monster of the
Ages.
BUT, when the rains comes, and the water rises --- tie
yourself to the boat seat, Gerty, them fishes are fixin' to get with
the program!!.
Picture this situation: the water rises and gets 6-12
inches OVER the vegetation growing in an area of heavy timber remains
or along a submerged structure feature. Now, think 'jerkbait, weightless
worm, shallow spinnerbait, buzzbait, topwater lure, BIG bass ---. Think
real hard.
Now, a word on artificial lures.
A fish is basically dumb as a rock. He/she will try and
eat most anything that moves and will then fit in his/her mouth. So,
the choice of lure is NOT driven by brand name, color, or most characteristics
presented by advertising hype and fisherman hearsay.
Lure choice, whether for Farm 13/Stick Marsh use or any
other locale, is dictated by 3 factors:
Depth (you must reach the fish properly); and,
Adaptability to the cover/structure present (it won't be hung
or fouled all the time)
Speed
We can't toss a deep crank plug into the middle of a surface
grass bed and a floating worm may generally be useless over 20 feet
of water in the bisecting canal. Sometimes the slow, subtle presentation
of a slowing sinking jerkbait works much, much better than the fast,
noisy retrieve of a TinkerToy-type buzzbait. Just because you and I
'like' a certain lure, or caught fish on it over on Lake Kissimmee last
week, has absolutely no bearing on whether it is the lure of choice
for the Farm 13/Stick Marsh.
Here are the lures we use successfully. I am listing some
brands and models for depth or style reference only. ANY lures, which
duplicate these lure types in depth and adaptability to cover, are acceptable.
Topwater:
½ and ¼ oz Rippler buzzbaits, dark color; 3/8 oz spinnerbaits, single
#5 Colorado silver blade; Jitterbug; Pop-R; Spittin' Image; Zara Spook
Subsurface:
Sluggo jerkbait; 6 inch worm with 3/0 hook and no weight, fished as
a slow fall lure in grass; Bang-O-Lure; suspending Rapala
Bottom Bumpers:
Texas-rig worm, 4 inch straight-tail worm, dark color, with 1/0 hook
and 1/8 slip sinker; Carolina-rig worm, 4 inch straight-tail worm,
dark color, with 1/0 hook and ½ oz sinker; 3 inch Mann's StingRay
grub, smoke or dark color
Crank plugs (depth zone coverage from
6 inches to 12 feet):
½ to 1 oz RAT-L-TRAP; 3-inch Fat Free Shad; 2 ½ inch Fat Free Shad;
Swimmin' Image; Rebel Wee R; 6 inch swimming worm rig (corkscrew action)
We sincerely hope this helps, not only in fishing the
Farm 13/Stick Marsh, but also in other areas the reader may visit. Remember,
there are 4 primary 'rules' of fishing:
1. CATCHING fish is EASY; FINDING them is the hard
2. Dry lure catch darn FEW fish
3. The harder you fishes, seem how the 'luckier' you gets
4. Mamma always said 'PLEASE, BE SAFE'
Good luck and good fishing!!!!