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  Buckhorn Lake
Today's lake level and summer and winter pool

Historical lake levels and dam outfolw

National Weather Service Radar of East Coast

Lake stats | Lake map

Report Updated August 20, 2008
Surface Temp: 85 degrees
Bass are on bright sunny days although a few can be caught deep in the weeds. The Gays Creek area and the left mainlake bank just below Eversole Hollow are good places to start.  The action begins picking up around 10pm.  Me and my partner boated 11 fish between 10pm and 1am on 10 inch black gulp turtleback worms.  The fish were tight to wood and the bite was very light, my partner lost 2 nice fish which swam toward the boat with his bait.  The cooler nights and longer twilight hours should continue to help fishing conditions.

Report by John Begley 22576@yahoo.com.

 

 

  Carr Creek Lake  by Gabby
Discussion Boards

Today's lake level and summer and winter pool

Historical lake levels and dam outfolw

Lake info.

Radar Map

Early Spring Bass Fishing
By Gabby

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Car Creek Lake Fishing Report Updated October 1, 2008

Carr creek lake is lightly stained with a visibility of about 6 feet deep. The lake is dropping and is about two feet below summer pool. The lake has a surface temp of around 78 degrees. Crappie are still fairly deep and are best at night on minnows fished close to wood cover in 8 to 15 feet of water. Bass are picking up as the water cools down. The best action is at night on buzz baits fished close to the bank. And during the day on live minnows fished over deeper wood cover. Bluegill are every where and are good on minnows and any type of worm. I have not heard much on the walleye fishing but I would recommend fishing slow over large flats with a channel close by with a live bait rig using a night crawler or large minnow.

Report by Gabby
gabbysfishingfever@yahoo.com

 
 

     Early spring Bass fishing          


 It is finally time to get ready for spring time bass fishing. For many anglers this is the time they kick off their fishing for the year. For many it is their first trip of the year.That is why it is so imporant to be prepared . Make sure you put new line on your reels This is one thing many anglers overlook. The best brt is to stay with fairly light line at this time of year. The bass will be coming up more shallow and the lighter line will be less likely to spook them.. The new thing in line is the florocarbon fishing line. What this is basicly is a line that is invisible under the water. But is easily visible above the water. This gives the angler a advatage in that they can present a lure into shallow or clear water and not spook catchable bass. As for baits to use this time of year. There are several choices. One of the most used is the lizard.Thios is always a produtive bait to use. Most spring time bass anglers will fish a chartruse colored zoom lizard and fish it carolina rigged. This is a rig that basicly is consist of a main line tied to a barrel swivel , Then a weight placed on the main line side of the swivel , then a leader line tied to the swivel . The leader line is usually a lighter weight line then the main line. The lenth of the leader is the important part. Judge the length of it by the distance you feel the bass are holding off the bottom. Make your leader to the correct length and tie on a light weight worm style hook. Other baits to carolina rig are grubs, slugos,flukes,worms and minnow type soft baits. Cast this rig to points, sloping banks or any bank that has a steady drop to it. The bait should float up off the bottom as you retrieve it in. Also a crankbait can produce good results. Fish shad colored shallow running baits. Cast them to sunny banks and work them back with a mild erratic action. Try not to over work the bait, the bass are still getting used to the shallow water and this may spook catchable bass. A small jig with a pork or plastic trailor is always a big bass bait. Fish it in a little deeper water if all else fails. Target cover like wood or rocks. Try to fish in the warmest part of the day and on the banks that get the most sunlight. Look for warming trends with several days of steady nice weather. This is the time to be on the lake. A cold front can pass through and kill the fishing at this time of year. Try these tips and enjoy you spring bass fishing.  If you want any more info or just have a fishing question or would like to share a picture of your fishing catch with me please contact me at  gabbysfishingfever@yahoo.com
Gabbys Fishing Fever
 
                                   Fishing for prespawn bass
                                 ------------------------------
 
Now is the time of year that the lakes have reached summer pool and the waters in the shallows have reached the temps that the bass will start moving in and out of shallow areas looking for a spot to spawn. Bass fishing is broken down into three separate times of the year. First is the prespawn which is what most lakes are in now. Then you have the spawn where the bass go on the nest and lay their eggs and have their baby's called fry. During this time the male bass called a buck bass will protect the nest from fish like panfish that try to eat the eggs. You can tell the male bass they are the smaller then the female. She is the big hog bass that you see on the nest. Then you have the post spawn time this is after the bass are through with the spawn and they will scatter all over the lake to hold during the summer months. What each of these times have in common is that each one has its own pattern that the bass will use during that time period. And right now is the prespawn period. Fish in the shallow parts of the lake that receives the most sunlight during the day. These areas will warm the quickest. After you have spotted these types of areas look for bass on the nest or moving in and out of the area. If you don't see much action going on this probably means that the bass are in a holding stage holding on what is called secondary drop offs. This is places like creek or river channels or a edge of a flat where it drops off into deeper water. This types of places are known as staging or holding areas that bass will use till the water temps and the water levels are right to move in and spawn. When you are looking for drop off areas watch your fish finder and look for the area of the bottom that comes out off the flats, and look for a drop off in to deeper water. The drop may only be a few feet or several feet. This is all a bass will need to hold in this area. Once you find a area like this back off some and make long cast on light line in the 8 to12 pound test range. A Carolina rigged lizard is very hard to beat. A lot of anglers like to throw a 4 or 6 inch zoom lizard in a watermelon color. Also a shad colored crankbait is a real good bait to use. Make long cast on light line and try to make your cast parallel to the banks. What this does by making your cast parallel to the cover you will have your bait in the strike zone of the bass during most of your retrieve. This is a much higher precetage chance way of hooking up with a bass than by just tossing your lure to the target area then pulling it out into open water and away from the cover. As for cover on the drop offs look for things like weed beds, stumps or standing timber or old road beds or the end of points and rock ledges. And what you want to key in on are the edges of this cover. Bass will cruise these edges looking for a meal. Other good baits to fish in more confined target areas are worms and jigs. These are big bass baits. During low light or cloudy overcast conditions the bass will move upon the flats and feed more aggressive. Fish the same baits or try small top waters like poppers, chuggers or jerk baits or buzz baits. You can also throw a soft plastic bait like a zoom fluke or floating worm. Give some of these tips a try and good fishing. If you have any type of fishing question or story or picture to share please send it to me at gabbysfishingfever@yahoo.com



                                 Fishing for the battling bluegill

If there was ever a fish that had no fear and would fight to the very end it would be the bluegill. The bluegill might be the smallest
 fish in the lake or pond but it is by far the most aggressive fish for its size. In a lot of small ponds you will see so many bluegill that the pond will be over run by small or runt bluegill.  When this happens a pond can quickly be ruined. Some of the options to correct this is to drain the pond and restock it with better size bluegill and then use a better plan of pond managment to keep the pond in balance. The fish and wildlife folks can help you with these types of problems if you contact them. Also you can put larger game fish like bass in the pond to eat the smaller bluegill and keep the pond right. What happens when a pond is over run by smaller runt size bluegill is that there are more fish than the pond has food to support. Or there are not enough bigger fish like the bass or catfish to eat the smaller fish. But on the other hand a pond that has been took care of in the right way. Can produce some of the largest bluegills you will ever see. I have a very good friend of mine that I used to work with. His family has a good size pond that gets its water supply from the run off of very rich fertile soil. This makes for idea conditions to raise giant bluegills. I was invited to fish in this pond and I must say I caught some of the biggest bluegill I have ever caught in my life. This is what you can get out of a well managed farm pond if you do it right. A pond like this will bring enjoyment to young and old alike for several generations. Now if the big lakes are more your style of fishing then you are in luck also. Because the bluegill is found in almost every lake I know of. The bluegill is most active during the daytime hours and will feed during most of the day. I have seen times during the hottest times of summer when the bluegills would just suspend in shallow water next to cover and would not feed. When you see times like this try to find wood or rock cover in deeper cooler water.You can fish with a bobber or straight down. Try baits like minnows, nightcrawlers, red worms, crickets or meal worms. All these baits will do good. Also look for bluegill hanging out close to boat docks  or any kind of floating structure. The bluegill is a member of the panfish family or also called the sunfish. The bluegill is also known as a sun granny in some places. There is a strain of a hybred bluegill called a shell cracker bluegill. This is the largest and most aggresive member of the bluegill family. These fish are more darker colored than a regular bluegill.You can check the ky fish and wildlife internet site for locations of the best bluegill fishing in your area. If you want to contact me with any type of fishing question of for more info drop me a line at gabbysfishingfever@yahoo.com

Summer Crappie Fishing By Gabby
 

In the spring time when the crappie come up shallow they are fairly easy to catch. A lot of people really look forward  to this time of year because the crappie are aggressive and will hit a bait and you can catch a lot of numbers of crappie. But as the mild spring time air and water temps give way to the warmer summer weather their is a big change in the crappies feeding and in the depth of water at which the crappie will stay in. As the water starts to warm from the high 50's and move into the 70 and 80 degree range. Several things start to happen that effects the crappie and a lot of other fish. The bait fish head into the deeper water and they are followed by fish like the crappie and the bass. Also the shallow water that when  it was cooler had good oxygen levels now because of the very warm water temps has a very low oxygen content and this stresses the fish and they will not stay in these types of areas and will move to the deeper cooler water areas. The water has more cooler and better oxygen levels and the crappie will hold on these deeper areas till the fall and early winter weather cools the shallows down once more. A lot of fisherman think that when they hear of fish being deep they think you mean 30 or 40 feet deep. this is not always the case. Deeper can mean  going from a 5 foot deep brush pile to moving out to to edge of a point and fishing a 12 foot deep lay down tree top. In most cases the best crappie fishing done during this time of year is done by night fishing. During the day while the lake is active with speed boats and skiers and jet skies the crappie will not feed much but will hold on areas like a channel drop or on a deeper water flat edge or even on cover on the deep side of a main lake point. After the day turns to night and the lake settles down the crappie will start to move in groups into the deeper heaver cover and then scatter into the cover in a little shallower water. This is when the crappie angler needs to be on these types of areas. Look for places that has deep water wood or weed or rock cover. This where a good fish finder is very helpful, watch for signs of cover on or close to the bottom. On most fish finders a school of crappie holding on a piece of cover will look like several fish in a tight group. When you find a area like this drop your bait down so it will be directly over top of the school. If you see fish on the finder holding at 15 feet then try to keep your bait about 13 or so feet. the crappie will almost always go up to hit a bait instead of down. One reason being that the crappie has its eyes located in the top part of its head so it sees a bait better up then down. As for baits for crappie a minnow is a top bait. And so is the tube bait the small colored jigs and doll flies. The crappie can be very color selective at times so you may have to change colors of your baits during your trip to stay on the fish. You can use a floater or not while your crappie fishing. Myself I prefer to use a floater because It gives me the ability to change depth of my bait by simply moving the floater up or down the line. And crappie will change depths most of the time during the night. Also the floater lets me see the lightest of strikes that I would miss with the line straight down. And by using the floater you can get your bait into the heavy cover and back out easier than if you tried to just pull it out. When your fishing at a certain depth and the action slows the best thing I have found to do is first go a little deeper or shallow or switch baits or colors. Night time crappie fishing is one of my all time favorite ways to fish and if you give these tips a try it will be one of yours to. If you would like to contact me with a fishing question or any thing fishy contact me at gabbysfishingfever@yahoo.com
 
  Dewey Lake
Army Corps of Engineers
1-606-886-6398
Report Updated

No current report for this location. If you can provide a regular report. (Weekly or Biweekly) Please contact Peter Maloney

  Fishtrap Lake
Army Corps of Engineers
1-606-437-9426
Report Updated

No current report for this location. If you can provide a regular report. (Weekly or Biweekly) Please contact Peter Maloney

 

  Laurel River Lake
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Laurel River Lake Fishing Information / Water Temps and Dam Schedule

Fishing Information by Phone: (606) 878-9298

Report Updated

No current report for this location. If you can provide a regular report. (Weekly or Biweekly) Please contact Peter Maloney


  Paintsville Lake
Army Corps of Engineers
1-606-297-4111

Report Updated

No current report for this location. If you can provide a regular report. (Weekly or Biweekly) Please contact Peter Maloney

  Yatesville lake
Army Corps of Engineeres
1-606-686-3161

Report Updated

No current report for this location. If you can provide a regular report. (Weekly or Biweekly) Please contact Peter Maloney
 

  Grayson Lake
Army Corps of Engineers
1-606-474-7476
Report Updated

No current report for this location. If you can provide a regular report. (Weekly or Biweekly) Please contact Peter Maloney

 

  Martin's Fork Lake
Martin's Fork Fishing Information / Water Temps & Dam Schedule

Fishing Information by Phone: (606) 573-7655

 

Report Updated

No current report for this location. If you can provide a regular report. (Weekly or Biweekly) Please contact Peter Maloney

 

 

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