By Silas Gray
sports@joplinglobe.com
Brad Cardwell is a friend of mine from Carthage who likes to fish.
Several weeks ago, we had picked a Saturday that we both had free and decided that we’d either go fishing at some private ponds that he has leased or float Shoal Creek.
Brad’s passion is creek and river fishing. He’s truly at home with a paddle in his hand while working his way along an Ozark stream in one of his canoes. We watched the water level and clarity of the creek, hoping that both would reach acceptable levels before that Saturday arrived.
We talked the night before our trip, and, unfortunately, all our recent rains had kept the creek too high for good boat control. We were happy that we’d made a backup plan as we headed toward the ponds.
We were meeting early, and the fog was so thick that it was almost a drizzle as I made my way over to Brad’s house. He was loaded and ready with his canoe trailer attached when I pulled up. I transferred my gear, and we were soon on our way toward the acreage containing the two ponds that we’d be fishing that day.
We followed a narrow lane that passed through row after row of tall stalks of corn whose ears were bursting through the shucks, apparently ready for harvest. The first pond we fished was the smaller of the two. Brad backed the trailer down to the water’s edge where it was easy to slide the canoe into the water.
Brad began to paddle, working the boat along the pond’s weedy shoreline. I tied a medium-sized popping bug using straight 12-pound monofilament for a leader to my five-weight fly rod and began casting around the sparse brush and into open spots that had formed in the weeds.
On the third cast, just as it was landing, the lure was snatched up by a feisty half-pound largemouth. Paddling on, we caught several more bass that were practically the same size as the first, missing more than we landed.
By the time we’d made a single trip around the pond, it was ten in the morning. Since the largest bass we’d caught so far weighed less than a pound, we decided that it was time to try the larger pond.
The second impoundment was surrounded with trees, offering the bass plenty of shade in which they could hide and wait to ambush passing prey.
The action on the second pond started off quickly with Brad and me both missing nice fish right away. Both fish appeared much larger than the ones we had caught earlier.
We began landing bass, and, except for an occasional three-quarter-pound fish, they were all pretty nice. At one point, as I was hauling another bass on board, we both laughed as one of us said, “Just another two-pounder.”
I’m not sure how many bass we caught and released that day. We spent hours working plastic worms, poppers, jitterbugs and buzzbaits using both fly rods and conventional tackle in, around and through the thick willow trees making casts into small pockets of water where, many times, a bass would be waiting. We wouldn’t always land the fish, but the hunt was a lot of the fun.
The action began to slow in the early afternoon. Finally, with the clouds gone and the sun bearing down and our stomachs grumbling, we returned the canoe to its trailer and called it a day.
When I catch myself almost complaining about catching yet another two-pound bass, I know that it’s been a very successful fishing day.
Sports
Nothing wrong with catching 2-pounders
- Sports
-
-
Kickapoo girls race past Joplin
Annie Armstrong poured in 21 points to lead the Kickapoo girls to a 65-28 victory over Joplin on Thursday night in an Ozark Conference basketball game at Missouri Southern’s Young Gymnasium.
-
Cheever is ultimate blue-collar snowboarder
As a World Cup snowboardcross racer, Jonathan Cheever has taken his share of spills over the years.
-
District wrestling tournaments begin tonight
Neosho’s wrestling lineup will have a different look when the Class 3 district wrestling tournament begins at 6 p.m. today at Carthage.
-
Late board work carries Lions past Pittsburg State
Pittsburg State displayed its offensive rebounding muscle during Wednesday night’s game at Missouri Southern.
-
Pitching holds key for softball Lions
Pitching is the main question Missouri Southern must answer as the Lions open their softball season today in Abilene, Texas.
-
Quapaw completes 12-0 run through Lucky '7' Conference
Quapaw High School girls basketball coach Rod Graves expected the 2011-12 Wildcats to compile another successful season.
They haven’t been a disappointment. -
Hillsdale women stop OCC
Visiting Hillsdale Free Will Baptist handed Ozark Christian a 68-47 loss in women’s college basketball on Thursday night.
-
Tomlin, Steelers welcome Haley as new coordinator
Throughout the 16 minutes that followed him glowingly introducing former Kansas City Chiefs coach Todd Haley as his new offensive coordinator, Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin stood proudly in the corner of the second-floor media room at the team’s facility.
-
Rangers, Cruz strike $16M, 2-year deal
Two-time defending AL champion Texas has avoided arbitration with another of its core players, agreeing Thursday to a $16 million, two-year contract with AL championship series MVP Nelson Cruz.
-
Auburn’s Ward adapts game after injury at Texas
Auburn’s Varez Ward can’t take to the air quite like he used to. The onetime Texas starter is still trying to regain strength and explosiveness more than two years after rupturing his right quadriceps tendon while dunking during pre-game warmups.
- More Sports Headlines
-






