BASS Northern open/ Champlain
#1
Thread Starter
Dominant Buck
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 23,835
Likes: 10
From: On an Island in Paradise
I have been seeing lots of pros here on the water all week for practice and then the tournament. Yesterday morning there was a strong wind out of the south making some pretty decent waves. When this happens the boats that go north from the Plattsburg launch cross the main lake and run up along the Vermont shore to escape the wind. I was getting my paper and could hear the roar of approaching boats so I went down and stood on the dock. Boats were everywhere and all were racing to be first at their honey holes. Most boats were really having a difficult time dealing with the high waves and were launching out of the water and slapping down. I could see a group of 6 or 8 boats coming around the point all grouped together and trying to maintain what I figured was about half throttle due to the waves. All at once one blue Ranger boat with Cocoon as a logo cut to the right into shallow water and blasted right past the dock and went right around all the other boats. I could see it was Ish Monroe one of the elite series Bass pros. He blew right past all the competitors and I could see them all turn and watch him walk away from them and they were envious I am sure. I went over to the weigh in yesterday afternoon and ran into Ish. He is a real nice guy and when I told him what I saw he knew right away where I lived. He knew the water remained deep because he had been there in practice and could see the point and knew the water would be calm in closer to shore in the lee of the point. He had it all planned and executed it perfectly. He is one of the few elite series pros in this tournament and his experience and boat handling showed. He had his boat and tow truck parked after he weighed in and I can tell you that his setup is something to see. His fully decked out 21 foot Ranger is powered by a Yamaha 250 and he has all the electronic bells and whistles needed to be competitive. His truck is a matching blue Chevy loaded with logos and huge custom chrome wheels that match the smaller ones on his trailer. The truck has gas shocks and a lift kit like I haven’t seen in these parts. Everything about that truck was custom right down to the logo on his California license plate….Yo Ish. He was proud of that truck and indicated the only problem with it was it was hard to wash because it is so high. Good luck today Ish on the final day. You are in 16th place and I hope you make it to the top.
#2
cool deal, i have never talked to Ish, but thats a neat story, i have a friend that is currently in 26 J. Todd Tucker. what kind of bags are being brought in, green fish or brown...take care, i hope they are acting good for you...
BTW, the misses caught a 3# brownie the other day here on wilson lake, it was big fish for our tournament, we ended up in 4th sat and 4th sunday, one place out of the money both days, we missed a check sunday by less than an ounce, it was good to get a little money back but sunday on pickwick i really expected to get into some good brown fish, but here than can be very fical
BTW, the misses caught a 3# brownie the other day here on wilson lake, it was big fish for our tournament, we ended up in 4th sat and 4th sunday, one place out of the money both days, we missed a check sunday by less than an ounce, it was good to get a little money back but sunday on pickwick i really expected to get into some good brown fish, but here than can be very fical
#3
Thread Starter
Dominant Buck
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 23,835
Likes: 10
From: On an Island in Paradise
Mixed bag in most cases on green vs brown. Some years the winners have all green and most go way down to the southern end of the lake which is a 70 mile run to stay on quality largemouth. Most of the northern lake where I live has smallies with some weedy bays hiding the green fish, especially up near the Canadian border. Most of the smallies they keep are in the 3- 4 pound range with a few going to around 5 pounds. In the past, I have seen some 22-23 pound bags all smallies but usually when they get above 20 pounds there is either a mix of green and brown or all green. I think the high wind we had on days 2 and 3 really affected the totals in most cases. The smallies are deep this time of year and fishing with drop shots is difficult in the wind. The long runs to catch largemouth is also hard in the wind. A run to the Ticonderoga area which is popular can take about an hour in calm seas and over 3 if it kicks up. Down and back can take most of the tournament day and is hard on the boat and passenger.
The winner was Jason Knapp: with day one weight 17-3, day two 17-0, day three 22-0, total for 3 days 15 fish 56-3
Ish made 6th place: day one weight 19-9, day two 15-4, day three 17-10, total for 3 days 15 fish 52-7
Iaconelli made 7th place: day one weight 19-4, day two 18-4, day three 14-5, total for 3 days 15 fish 51-13
J Todd Tucker made 15 place: with day one weight 15-4, day two 17-15, day three 16-12, total for 3 days 15 fish 49-15
The winner was Jason Knapp: with day one weight 17-3, day two 17-0, day three 22-0, total for 3 days 15 fish 56-3
Ish made 6th place: day one weight 19-9, day two 15-4, day three 17-10, total for 3 days 15 fish 52-7
Iaconelli made 7th place: day one weight 19-4, day two 18-4, day three 14-5, total for 3 days 15 fish 51-13
J Todd Tucker made 15 place: with day one weight 15-4, day two 17-15, day three 16-12, total for 3 days 15 fish 49-15
Last edited by Champlain Islander; 08-23-2009 at 06:05 AM.



