Fishing Stories from Ned Kehde

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Copyright 1999-2001

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Submitted by Ned Kehde - May 18, 2001

On an unseasonably warm and windy Tuesday in early May, Bob Laskey of Lawrence cured all of his piscatorial woes in one fell swoop.

Laskey is an avid bass fisherman who possesses an uncanny knack for
catching a lot of fish and an occasional big one to boot. But for the past
several years, his new vocation in the golfing business has crimped his
abilities to get afloat. Once the weather turns balmy and the golfing crowd
commences traipsing around the fairways, Laskey becomes virtually chained to
the links.

So nowadays Laskey has to get in fishing licks in late winter and early
spring before the golfers stir.

Thus, every year in late February or early March, he and Jon Kindlesparger
spend a week at Lake Fork, Texas, and neighboring largemouth bass lakes.
After his Texas foray, he and a friend chase the white bass on their
spawning runs into the upper reaches of Clinton and Perry lakes. Then there
are periodic forays to the warm waters of Coffey County and La Cygne lakes
for smallmouth and largemouth bass. And just before the grass on the
fairways turn viridian green, he pursues the acrobatic and pugnacious
smallmouth that abide in Melvern Lake.

But for the past two years, the fishing has been trying on Laskey's days
off.

Mostly it has been foul weather that wrenched Laskey's fishing.
Sometimes it was a horrid wind that kept Laskey at bay. At other times, the
fish turned either mulish or sullen by too much rain or cold weather or a
combination of both.

That was the case in Texas this winter. What's more, the bass at Fork
were recently afflicted with a virus that killed many of them

In addition, the white bass populations at Clinton and Perry have hit an
all-time low. During the springs of the 1990s, Laskey and a friend would
fish until they caught and released a 101 white bass, which normally took
about four hours. But during the springs of 2000 and 2001, Laskey and his
friend struggled to tangle with 50 white bass.

So by early May Laskey's case of bass deprivation became so severe that he
needed a quick remedy. In the lexicon of avid bass anglers, a quick remedy
is a 100 bass. So he and a friend ventured to a sure-cure: An
acre-and-a-half pond nestled between two wooded hills and the fairways of a
golf course northeast of Lawrence.

This pond is seven years old and seldom fished. Its waters are clear as
the air, partially littered with large red quartzite boulders, and brimming
with largemouth bass. Moreover, it was the ideal spot to hide from the south
wind that roared at 20 to 30 mph for hours of end.

On this outing, Laskey wielded a lightweight casting outfit, sporting an
1/8-ounce brownish-green Strike King Bitsy Bug Jig and a two-inch plastic
frog chunk. His friend worked with a spinning outfit that was adorned with
a three-inch black Berkley Power Grub affixed to a Gopher Tackle 1/l6-ounce
mushroom jighead.

They caught fish straightaway. Within 40 minutes, they tangled with 50
bass, and Laskey's left thumb quickly became raw and sore. Then during the
next few hours, his thumb became bloody and almost useless.

The bass were so ravenous that several of them were caught more than
once, and two big bass attempted to consume smaller ones that Laskey and his
friend were battling towards the shoreline.

By the time Laskey executed his last cast, 287 largemouth bass -- eight of
them broached four pounds -- had been caught and released. By the way, his
thumb remained sore for nearly a week -- a sure sign of stupendous fishing
and a tonic for any angling malaise.

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