Cedar Creek, week of October 25th

Fishing on Cedar Creek has really been hit or miss for me these last few weeks, as summer tried to hang on. Morning water surface temps had been a little below 80 degrees, but with temps in or near the 90’s every day, last week was the first time this fall that surface temps stayed below 80 in the afternoon. Finally, with this week’s two cold fronts, the surface temp yesterday was 73 degrees in the morning, and only rose to 75 degrees. That’s finally more like fall temperatures. Crappie fishing has picked up, and I had been catching some crappie in less than 10 feet of water regularly. When that happens in the fall, crappie fishing is going to be good for a while, on days when the wind allows it.

But bass fishing has remained tougher. I’m finally seeing some better fish, but the numbers aren’t there at all, except for a couple of days when I caught a lot of small bass. But there are plenty of other fish to be caught. On Tuesday a week ago, I caught 9 bass, 7 crappie, 14 channel cats, 3 white bass, and 2 drum. All were caught on either a Ned rig or a crappie jig, a reminder that almost any kind of fish will hit these two baits. One of the bass weighed 4.16 pounds, and a couple of others were over 3 pounds.

Last Thursday was tougher for bass. I managed just 4 bass, but 10 crappie, 9 catfish, including a 12 pound blue cat, 5 white bass, and one drum. It’s enough catching that I’m having lots of fun on my trips, but I sure would like to see more nice bass. The bass I’m catching are very shallow, but not there in the numbers that are likely when the water cools down more. On the lower lake Tuesday, I caught 9 bass. Yesterday on mid lake, I once again only caught 4 bass, but one of them weighed 6.02 pounds. I’d sure like to be catching more bass, but I won’t complain too much about a tough day when that tough day includes a 6 pounder. And I caught 15 crappie yesterday, most of them really nice ones. All of those were 13 feet deep, in deeper water. I didn’t catch any crappie in shallower water. With the lake now almost three feet low, my shallower crappie spots may have become too shallow. Rain is forecast for today and tomorrow. It would be nice to see enough to raise the lake a bit. We’ll see.

A beautiful, healthy 6.02 pound bass I caught at Cedar Creek yesterday.

A number of yesterday’s crappie were really nice ones, like this one.

Cedar Creek, September 16th

I got out yesterday on Cedar Creek. By mid August, the crappie fishing that had been so good this summer on Cedar Creek quickly faded. I’ve been getting out on the lake once a week for some crappie fishing since then, but it’s been tough, with catches of just 10 to 12 crappie per trip, so I haven’t been writing up anything for my blog. We had a short cool spell right at the beginning of September, but it quickly warmed back up to the point of having 90’s temperatures again in the afternoons. And the fishing stayed pretty much the same.

But it changed a bit yesterday. The crappie still haven’t left the deeper water they’ve been in, but they are holding more shallow now. 11 feet was the magic depth for them yesterday. I caught 22 keepers, all at that depth. That makes me think the fall move a lot of them make to shallower water will happen soon. As has been the case all summer, my smaller 1/24th oz jigs were what the crappie wanted yesterday. I spent an hour at the beginning of the day checking for a bass bite, but caught nothing.

I caught more nice size crappie yesterday than I have been catching the last few trips.

Besides crappie, fishing a jig around Cedar Creek bridges catches lots of other fish too, including this nice blue cat I caught yesterday.

As well as two of these hybrid stripers.

I’m going to make a second trip this week, tomorrow. I’m going the check out the lower lake. I haven’t been there in a while now, and even though the bass bite probably won’t be happening there either, and the fact that I don’t have warm water crappie spots that are as good as what I have mid lake, I’m still going to spend the day there. If I don’t catch anything worthy of a report here, I’ll just wait until the next good trip to post.

Cedar Creek, week of August 16th

The super hot summer crappie bite continued this week. On Tuesday, a hot day with light winds all day long, I caught 57 keeper crappie. I’m pretty certain that this is the most crappie I’ve ever caught in the middle of summer. Lots of the fish were small keepers, but like has been the case lately, there were a few really nice crappie too. I went fishing again Thursday. There was a pretty stiff wind early Thursday, and Wednesday morning’s storms had muddied the water at bit at my favorite spot, and the bite was quite a bit tougher than Tuesday, especially early. Still, by 1:00 pm when the bite shut off, I had caught 21 keeper crappie. That’s still a great day of crappie fishing, to me.

Tuesday, Cedar Creek’s water level had fallen to 9 inches below normal. Wednesday’s storms raised the lake 1 inch. So the lake is in much better shape than August, last year.

One of Thursday’s nicer crappie.

Cedar Creek, August 6th

I got out on Cedar Creek yesterday for some crappie fishing again. It was a shorter than usual fishing day. I stopped and got gas for the boat on the way to the ramp, plus it was another day with afternoon temperatures in the upper 90’s, and besides that, the Texas Rangers were playing at 1:30 in the afternoon, and I decided this would be a good day to come home early and watch them. The freezer is well stocked with crappie from recent trips, so this would be strictly a catch and release day. I ended up being surprised at how many crappie I caught. Even after a longer than usual lunch break, when I headed back to the boat ramp at 1:00, I’d caught 36 keeper crappie. There were lots of small keepers, but a number of really nice size fish too. As usual with crappie in the dog days of summer, they were very finicky, and only wanted smaller crappie jigs. But with the right jig, lowered into the right place, at exactly the right depth (12 feet), they really bit well. I can’t remember ever catching this many crappie on an August day before.

A beauty from yesterday’s trip.

Cedar Creek, week of August 3rd

As the weather got hotter and hotter in June, my bass fishing got tougher and tougher, with fewer fish caught and nothing really big. By the end of the month, my catches were minimal enough that I stopped posting anything here. Now, with the dog days here, I have completely switched to crappie fishing. Crappie fishing can also get pretty tough in the hottest part of the year, but at least I can catch a few fish in the heat of the day, while staying in the shade under a bridge while doing it, so that’s what I do.

I got out both Tuesday and Thursday this week. But I certainly can’t complain about the crappie fishing being too tough. I caught 26 keeper crappie Tuesday, and another 20 on Thursday. Tuesday’s fish were all just small keepers, but I did catch a few nicer crappie on Thursday. It was 100 degrees both afternoons, but I was off the water before it got that hot both days. I did fish until 2:00 in the afternoon both days, which is later than I usually stay out when it’s this hot. But I was having a lot of fun, and it wasn’t unbearably hot in the shade of the bridges, so I just kept fishing. I caught the crappie in 13 to 26 feet of water, but they were all caught 12 feet deep. Even the slightest bit deeper or shallower would produce no fish at all. The fish were on rocks or near pilings. Some of the guides start using minnows when it gets this hot, but I stuck with my jigs like I always do, and they worked well. The water surface temperature got up to 90 degrees both days. It’s obviously much cooler 12 feet down. The lake is falling fast and is now 8 inches low. That’s a pretty good level for August 1st, much better than it was last year. I think that has a lot to do with the bite still being this good this late into summer. We’ll see how long it remains good with the lake falling this fast.

A nice size crappie from Thursday’s trip.

Miles ridden in the first half of 2025.

I took off this morning on the F-5 and did my usual ride route through Mabank with a loop on US Hwy 175. I ended up with 34 miles. After I got home, I realized that it was my first July ride this year. That means half the year is gone. So I sat down this afternoon and logged in my June mileage, and calculated my total mileage for the first half of the year. As of the end of June, I’d done 74 rides for 2,333 miles. That’s a bit ahead of last year’s mileage at this point, and about what I would expect for half the year. I haven’t had health issues that kept me off the bike much, always appreciated these days in my old age. All that mileage is solo rides from home. I haven’t done any organized rides this year.

Today’s route:

Lake Athens, week of June 28th.

I noticed last Sunday that they’ve finally stopped releasing water from Cedar Creek, and it’s finally gotten down close to normal level, so it should start slowly clearing up now. But I’ve been having so much fun at Lake Athens that I just fished it again this week. I went Monday and Wednesday. The crowds have fallen off quite a bit since the last couple of weeks. It’s enjoyable to be on the lake right now. And it’s almost down to normal level too.

I caught 10 bass Monday. The best fish of the day weighed 3.60. And on Wednesday, I caught 13 bass, the biggest weighing 4.78 pounds. I caught several other nice bass both days. All the grass beds on this lake have kept a lot of the fish shallow so far this summer, and I’m enjoying the shallow bite. There’s some schooling bass chasing shad too, so I stay ready to make a long cast, and make a jig and minnow dance near the surface when I reach near any of the schooling bass. I’m still doing a lot of experimenting with these finesse baits, and this nice bite at Lake Athens is a good place to do it.

Mondays best bass, a 3.60 pounder.

This bass from Wednesday weighed 4.78 pounds.

Lake Athens, June 19th.

I haven’t posted about my fishing trips lately. With all the flooding, Cedar Creek has become a muddy mess, and even Lake Athens has gotten tough. I hadn’t even fished Cedar Creek since the start of all this high water until Wednesday last week, when I launched at mid lake and fished for about three hours. And just like the day before at Lake Athens, thunderstorms quickly built up and ran me off the lake before I’d caught much. I fished at Cedar Creek again this Tuesday, this time on the lower lake, and even there, the water looked terrible. The clearest water I found was at the dam, and even there, water visibility was only about two feet. Bobbi had told me that morning that she’d like to cook fresh crappie for dinner, so I spent more time than I usually would on such a tough bite, trying to get a few for dinner. I ended up catching 4 bass, 4 crappie, and one channel cat. The crappie weren’t all that big, but 4 of them were enough for dinner, so Bobbi cooked fresh crappie.

I went back to Lake Athens yesterday, even though it’s gotten very crowded since June arrived, and has been tough for me. Once again, the parking lot was overflowing, and 10 or so vehicles and boat trailers were parked on the grass. On a Thursday! That’s busier than many lakes are on a summer weekend. There were pontoon boats and big play boats pulling inner tubes everywhere, more of that traffic than even fishing boats, and there were quite a few fishing boats. But I managed to catch a few fish anyway, 8 bass and 1 crappie. And just before 3:00 in the afternoon, right before I was going to leave and head home, with boats and tubers flying by everywhere, I caught a five pounder. Those tend to be a lot more scarce this time of year than they are in the spring and fall, and here I was catching one with all the craziness going on around me. It’s a reminder that sometimes all that bothers we fishermen more than it does the fish. I don’t like being in the middle of all that very much when I fish, but as long as Cedar Creek remains such a muddy mess, I’m thinking I’ll just keep going to Lake Athens. It’s above normal lake level too, and not as clear as it usually is, but better suits the finesse fishing I like to do than Cedar Creek does right now.

One of the most interesting parts of my changing to newer finesse bass fishing techniques, Ned rigs and jig-and-minnow rigs, has been the bait and jig experimentation I’ve done. In the late fall at Cedar Creek, the crawfish-looking finesse TRD’s were the best baits, but since then, and especially at Lake Athens, with all its grass beds, the jig-and-minnow baits have been the best. At one point, I posted thoughts that I needed bigger jig-and-minnow baits at Lake Athens, but since then, the opposite has been true. My best bait has been the 4″ Finesse ShadZ, on a 1/16 oz worm nose jig. This bait is a 4″ shad or minnow looking bait, but 2″ of the 4″ is a long tiny round pin tail. The bait’s profile looks much smaller than most 4″ baits. I’ve been surprised at how many crappie I’ve caught on it. But it catches big bass too. I’ve caught two 5 pounders at Lake Athens since I started fishing it last month, and one of them has been on this little Finesse ShadZ. I’m finding myself fishing this bait more and more, and finding new things to try with it. More on that later.

Yesterday’s best bass of the day, a 5.05 pounder.

Week of May 24th, Lake Athens

After I moved to Gun Barrel City in 2013, Cedar Creek became my home lake, and I pretty much just fish it all the time. The past three years, I’ve been making bass bed sight fishing trips to Lake Fork in March and April, but the rest of the year, it’s been back to Cedar Creek. But with all the flooding, Cedar Creek is staying murkier than I’ve ever seen it, and the fishing has been tough for me, so I’ve skipped posting anything the last couple of weeks. I’ve caught a few fish every trip, but not what I would expect to be catching in May. Last week, I finally decided it was time for something different, and made two trips to Lake Athens. Lake Athens is a clear lake, full of aquatic vegetation, with a good population of nice size bass. It has a restrictive limit for black bass, plus is located right next door to the biggest TP&W hatchery in the state, so gets well stocked with fingerlings, plus some brood fish that get released. Bottom line, it’s a good bass lake, with nice clear water, and only 30 minutes from home. I decided it’s time I started fishing it some.

I went fishing at Lake Athens both Tuesday and Thursday last week. I’d only made two previous trips to Lake Athens, one was crappie fishing, and the other was bed fishing in March, two years ago. Like most lakes with big grass beds, that is the predominant cover for bass fishing. I’m having to learn those grass beds, and with the lake a few inches above normal level, the edges of those grass beds are tougher to see, making learning them tougher as well, but I’m having fun learning the lake, and catching some fish along the way. I caught 7 bass Tuesday, including 5.38 and 4.10 pounders. On Thursday, I caught 9 bass, and the best two weighed 4.08 and 4.80 pounds.

I’d forgotten how much fun it is to fish grass beds. But my usual Ned rig baits seem a bit small for this lake. With finesse TRD’s, all the bites I got were from either crappie or perch. And even with the four inch Scented Jerk Shadz, I got lots of crappie and perch bites. I actually caught 4 crappie and a perch. I ended up thinking I need to add a bigger bait for this lake. So I bought some five inch Scented Jerk Shadz’s, and made heavier jigs with bigger hooks to rig them with. I’m going to try them out this week. Up to this point, every finesse plastic bait I had fished had been on the 1/16 oz Ned rig jigs, but the five inch Shadz’s will be on a 1/8 oz jig with a bigger 2/0 hook, so should probably be called “jig and minnow” rather than Ned rig. We’ll see how that rig works.

Best fish from Tuesday, 5.38 pounds.

Thursday’s best bass, 4.80 pounds.

My tail weight and finesse jig making

Most of my bass fishing these days is finesse fishing with small lures and spinning rods and reels. It suits my old man body better than what I used in my tournament days. I first tried tiny child rigs three springs ago for my Lake Fork bass bed sight fishing, and was amazed at the results. I then tried them for my dock fishing here at Cedar Creek, and they were so much better than the shaky head jigs I’d been using that I quit fishing the shaky heads altogether. The other finesse bait I’m using a lot now is the Ned rig. I just started using them this last December. I’m still learning all the ins and outs of them, but they have also been an amazing bait.

For close to 50 years now, I’ve been making a lot of the lures I fish with, from jigs, spinnerbaits, and chatterbaits, to injecting the plastics I used for crappie and bass fishing. So it was a natural for me to start making the tail weights for the tiny child rigs and the jig heads for the Ned rigs. I was also making some of the plastic baits for the tiny child rigs at first, but found the Zman Elaztech baits to be so much better that I’m no longer making my own bass plastics. Besides being so soft and buoyant that they get great action, the Elaztech collapses so completely so easily that it interferes with a hookset so much less than any plastic that you just don’t lose many fish, even using smaller hooks. When I was making some of my own plastic baits for the tiny child rigs, I ended up using EWG hooks with them, to get a better hookup rate, but they still didn’t hold fish as well as smaller hooks on the Elaztech baits, plus got torn up so much faster. Bed fishing at Lake Fork is a great way to test baits, and clearly showed the Elaztech to be better. I’m still injecting crappie plastic, but all of my tiny child rig plastics are now Elaztech. So when I started fishing Ned rigs, it was a natural to just use Elaztech baits on them too. I’m mostly using the smaller Finesse TRD’s on the Ned rigs, and the bigger Big TRD’s on the tiny child rigs.

Making tail weights for the tiny child rigs and jig heads for the Ned rigs both ended up being much more challenging than I would have thought. I visited the Texas Fishing Forum lure making sub forum under the bass section, to see what others might be doing, but was surprised to find nothing on either the jigs or tail weights there. I already knew that pretty much no one at Lake Fork was using these baits for sight fishing beds, and have enjoyed going right behind other boats and catching so many bedding bass that wouldn’t bite their bigger ugly baits, but I was certain that with all the good bass anglers on TFF, there would be some discussing these finesse baits. I was wrong. Either no one else around here is using them, or they just aren’t talking about them. I finally seem to be past the major challenges and settled in on both the tail weights and jig heads I’m making now, so thought I would post about them here.

With the tiny child rigs, I quickly found that I liked the VMC half moon weights best, and bought the Do-It mold to make them. Do-It calls that mold Worm Nose sinkers. With mushroom head weights that only had a thin wire keeper, they wanted to fall out of the baits, and tail weights that insert completely into the bait just don’t give you as much weight right on the end of the bait, so didn’t seem as good as the half moon weights, when it comes to making the bait stand up. The biggest challenge with the half moon tail weights is inserting them into the TRD. If you just try pushing them in up to the mushroom head, they simply spring back out, having not even penetrated the bait. I ended up sharpening two different size small Phillips screwdrivers to use. I wet the smaller one and push it into the end of the TRD, further than I will insert the tail weight, then do the same thing with the larger screwdriver. I leave that bigger screwdriver in the bait while I’m putting super glue on the weight and getting it ready. As soon as I remove the screwdriver, I immediately insert the tail weight. This method works very well. But it’s enough trouble that I usually glue a few into TRD’s at home, ahead of my fishing trips. But that caused its own problems. More on that below.

While I really liked these half moon tail weights, getting a homemade version of them proved tougher than I thought. For years, I’d been using a bismuth-tin alloy for all my crappie jigs, and that worked well until I changed from regular jig heads to heads with a collar. Collar jigs would break at the collar. So did the tail weights, but they also had another problem. While lead shrinks as it cools, bismuth does the opposite, it expands. So with molds than have flat edges, such as the back face of a mushroom head or some barbs on a collar, bismuth can expand enough to wedge the lure into the mold, and you can’t get it out. This was a major problem with the tail weights. I could only get about one of every five out of the mold without breaking it, and then when I fished with them, just a bass shaking its head could break them.

I hadn’t poured lead in many years, but I had an second unused Lee melting pot, so I bought lead and tried using it. Lead ended up having its own set of problems for my needs. It appeared to make great tail weights. But it turns out that salt filled baits, like the TRD’s I was using, eat lead. It’s such a chore to get a half moon weight inserted into a TRD that I always inserted some ahead of time at home. But within a few weeks, the salt in the TRD’s would have eaten the barbs right off the weight. And even before that happened, there would be so much corrosion between the weight and the TRD that the weight would just fall out. By the time I discovered that, I had already started using an alloy, 50 percent lead, 40 percent bismuth, and 10 percent tin for my crappie jigs. That worked very well for them. It’s a lot tougher than the bismuth/tin alloy, and the collars on the crappie jigs didn’t break any more. But it still didn’t work well for the tail weights. Like the bismuth, it was still really tough to remove from the mold, and still corroded, but quite a bit slower, when left in the TRD’s. It occurred to me that I had another metal I could try for the tail weights: tin.

If you price tin, you’ll find it to be outrageously expensive, at over $30 a pound. But I already had plenty. Besides using it to alloy with bismuth, I’d made reusable spit shots with it years ago. The tin worked great in the tail weight mold. It removed easily and after several weeks in the TRD’s, shows no signs of corrosion. Tin isn’t completely impervious to corrosion from salt, but it obviously happens at a much slower rate than lead. But tin is only around 60% as heavy as lead. So I weighed the lead alloy tail weights before I tried tin. The weights from the 1/16th oz cavity in the mold weighed .080 oz. I was surprised at that. 1/16th of an oz is .0625 oz, and this was lead alloy, which should have been somewhat lighter than lead. Obviously, the mold makes heavier weights than advertised. I poured 1/16 oz and 1/8 oz weights with the tin. The 1/8 oz cavity made weights which weighed .083 oz. That’s just .003 oz more than what I had been using, so I’m now using those for the Big TRD’s. The 1/16 oz cavity made weights which weighed .054 oz. I’m going to keep a few of those around too, and use them when I occasionally fish with a Finesse TRD rigged as a tiny child rig.

A Big TRD with tail weight, the tail weight I’m making for it, and the screwdrivers I use to insert it.

When I started making jigs for the Ned rigs, I tried several different ones, including the Do-It Finesse Jigs. I ended up liking the ones from the Do-It Worm Nose mold the best. These are just like the old Gopher Mushroom Head jigs preferred by many midwest finesse anglers. The only problem with this mold is that the smallest cavity makes a 3/32 oz jig, and I want a 1/16 oz jig. I decided I could solve that by just grinding enough off the nose to take it down to 1/16 oz. I started out using pure lead for these, but ran into the same problem I had with tiny jigs on bass size hooks in my shaky head jig making: a tiny lead head on a bass size hook ends up with a loose hook/keeper/spring or whatever. I next tried the lead/bismuth/tin alloy, but once again, had trouble getting the jig out of the mold. I ended up with the same solution as I did with the tail weights, namely tin.

When I tried pouring the worm nose jigs with tin, it poured perfectly, and I got a jig from the 3/32 oz cavity that weighed from .057 oz to .059 oz. That’s barely under the 1/16 oz I wanted, so these jigs are perfect. An added benefit is that I can now use powder paint to paint the jig heads. When I had tried that with the lead alloy version of these jigs, I found that the alloy melted off the hook at a lower temp than the powder paint needed. But tin melts at 449 degrees, quite a bit higher than the powder paint, so I’ve started painting these jigs now, as well as the mushroom head on the tail weights. I ended up liking the size 1 Owner 5313 hooks best. These hooks are made of a bit heavier wire than thin wire hooks, but still fit the Worm Nose mold. And they are shorter than most size 1 hooks, even shorter than the size 2 Mustad hooks I had tried. I think that helps a lot in a small bait like a Finesse TRD. Too many anglers use jigs with hooks so big that they diminish the action of the TRD’s. The size 1 Owners are strong enough to not bend easily at all, hold even bigger bass very well, but are small enough to work perfectly with these tiny finesse jigs. I’ll continue to use the lead alloy for my crappie jigs, but it’s really nice to be using something as non-toxic as tin for all my bass fishing jigs and weights. Here are some pics of what I’m making now.

A Finesse TRD with my new jig.

The finesse jigs and tail weights I’m making now.

That last jig is a hover jig, made from a Do-It Hover Jig mold. I really haven’t tested it much yet; I didn’t get the mold until the dead of winter. It inserts completely into a minnow type bait. You insert it 1/4″ to 3/8″ from the front of the bait, then coax the nose of the jig into the bait too, and add a drop of super glue to hold it. These style jigs are becoming very popular with tournament anglers to fish for suspended bass they’ve found using forward facing sonar. I don’t have FFS, but think there will be situations where these jigs suit me well. They put the weight further back in the bait, and so help keep the bait always horizontal, rather than moving nose down like most jigs do. That’s a more natural presentation for a really slow moving bait. Abd the weight being further back also causes a more erratic and more sideways movement when you twitch the bait.

The pic below shows a bait with the hover jig right below the same bait with a mushroom head jig.

I don’t know if anyone at TFF will have any interest in making these for themselves, but I’m going to put a link to this blog entry for anyone who might.