TJ Stallings calls them "ginormous" and I can't think of a better word to describe the coppernose bluegills that inhabit the black waters of the
King Fisher Society's Richmond Mill Lake. These gills have shoulders, to say the least, and they are every bit as brutish on the line as you might expect.
I spent a ginormously fun day at the King Fisher Society with a group of friends last week. The crew included Bob Lusk of
Pond Boss, whose expertise is behind this amazing fishery, TJ Stallings of
Road Runner, Chuck Smock of
Cabela's, and longtime fishing buddies and fellow outdoor writers Keith "Catfish" Sutton and Vic Attardo.
So impressive are King Fisher's bluegills that the lake's tremendous population of 3- to 6-pound largemouths hardly gets noticed. In fact, Catfish Sutton yelled at his first 5-pounder, which he caught off the dock before we ever launched boats on the lake. "Get off of there. I'm looking for a 2-pound bream!" The truth is, though, that bass are amazingly fit, power packed and seriously fun to catch. Making a good thing even better, it's a young population, and the bass are getting bigger every year!
We caught the bulk of our bream on Road Runner's new
Natural Science Series Trout & Panfish baits. Most bass fell to the same Road Runners (thrown with bluegills in mind) or to various soft plastics. Prior obligations forced me to hit the road earlier than the rest of the crew, missing a late-afternoon photo session, dinner at the lodge and a final morning of fishing. However, my friends were kind enough to send me a camera phone photo of them enjoying their ribeyes together while I was drove into the darkness with a dollar burger in hand.
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