DIY – Hobie Kayak Mods – Camo Paint for Accessories

New video talking Hobie Kayak Mods, particularly painting your Hobie H Crate and tackle bin to match a camo Pro Angler kayak.

Also includes info on painting Hobie Kayak accessories for a Hobie 360 Pro Angler kayak. Use painting tips for any accessory for your Hobie kayak mods. Used Rustoleum 2X primer spray paint – Army Green, Hunt Club Green, Espresso, Charcoal Gray and Key Lime.

Table Rock 2.0 Tournament Recap / Classic Countdown / Heavy Hitters

The fishing-friendly waters of Table Rock welcomed back NSKA for Table Rock 2.0 for 2021 and it was a wild ride.

As many NSKA tournament anglers know, this was the sixth event that involved rain or thunderstorms this year…and this one was a doozy. As Forrest Gump said, “We been through every kind of rain there is. Little bitty stingin’ rain and big ol’ fat rain, rain that flew in sideways. And sometimes rain even seemed to come straight up from underneath.”

On Saturday a dead calm sunny morning turned into stormaggeddon in the afternoon. In fishing one thing is true, when the weather changes the fishing changes and it was going to help someone catch ’em late.

Tournament Results

As 53 anglers took to the water expectations for catching fish were high. Table Rock put out good numbers in the May event (1.0) and there was some optimism it would be a bit easer than Beaver Lake. Overall a very strong 73% of anglers turned in a limit and with 338 fish caught for a 6.5 average per angler the Rock was on fire again.

Levi Schneider took 1st place in his first NSKA event with 88.00″ on the day (after a 1″ deduction!), followed by Jason Kincy with 84.00″ squeaking by Josh King in a tie-breaker who finished 3rd with 84.00″ on the day. Levi also won Big Bass with a 20.00″ Table Rock tank.

The Table Rock top ten:

  1. Levi Schneider
  2. Jason Kincy
  3. Josh King
  4. Tyler Zengerle
  5. Ryan Paskiewicz
  6. Josh Landreth
  7. Jason Adams
  8. Dwain Batey
  9. Justin Writght
  10. Jason Coleman

Check out the full results on TourneyX.


Please hit subscribe on YouTube if you like the recaps, will keep me going!

Angler Roundtable

Top finishers of the event break down the day in the roundtable discussion. A lot of fish were caught that day by Levi, Jason, Josh and Tyler.

What part of Table Rock did you go to and why?

Levi – After having a horrible practice at the Kings River I looked elsewhere. I found a random ramp just north of Emerald Beach that looked really good with a mix or brush piles, docks, and main lake bluff walls with rock. With multiple main lake points, secondary points, and a couple of coves so I had plenty of options no matter where the fish went.

Jason – Put in at Beavertown because I’d pre-fished a couple of spots on Table Rock and just couldn’t get things going so tried something different for the tournament. Rock Creek and Big M was where I wanted to fish because they are so good.

Josh – I wanted to go to the same spot I did in the first Table Rock tournament, but with the water being down 4’ I didn’t think it would be as good. I got on the internet, looked at some maps and found a spot that wasn’t too far of a drive and had several main points. I ended up fishing Owl Creek arm.

Tyler – I chose to fish at Shell Knob because I figured most of the crowd would be at the Kings River ramp or around Big M area. After doing map study, I noticed that there weren’t a lot of bluff walls, but rather shallower water which best suits my fishing style. I chose to fish behind the island (Lost Hill) and that’s where almost all my fish came from.

Key baits or techniques used to catch keepers?

Levi – I caught ’em early with a Rapala X Rap in a gaudy orange chartreuse color although those fish flopped off the board before I could snap a picture of them. After that all of my fish came of a CJs custom 1/2 oz PB&J football jig with either a green and purple Strike King Rage Craw or a Googan baits Krackin craw.

Jason – I got to power fish all day…pleased to say I didn’t touch a spinning rod one time! Heddon zara spook, War Eagle buzzbait, ZMan chatterbait, Booyah Covert spinnerbait and Slowtown football jig were all contributors.

Josh – I started with a buzzbait and landed one keeper pretty early. I switched to a wacky worm and turned out a small limit. I then put on a 1/2oz football jig, caught several and culled up four fish.

Tyler – All of the fish in my final five came off of a Jewel Finesse jig in PB&J with a Gambler Lures craw in orange/green pumpkin for the trailer. I did catch a few on a shaky head and Ned rig, but nothing of significant size.

Anything notable about catching your biggest fish?

Levi – My biggest fish came off the same main lake point I caught my 5th fish of the day to fill my limit. After I fished the cove by the point with little luck I decided to back out to the point mainly cause the clouds had came back and that’s when I had noticed my biggest bites would happen and sure enough after a few casts and a couple of hops the 20” largie ate my jig and if you saw my picture of him he was a little messed up.

Jason – I’d found a specific pattern by about 10:00 and was running it, catching a fish almost every time I’d find a certain thing. My 19.25″ kicker was cool because I saw it flash a second before it thwanked my bait and the fight was on. Sadly, shortly after this I lost my chance to catch Levi when another biggie pulled off after doing the exact same thing.

Josh – Absolutely, it was in the last five minutes of the game. It was literally going to be my last cast and I was almost back to my vehicle. I’ve never worked so fast and so hard at reeling, catching, unhooking and photographing a fish as I did for that one. I was very nervous it wouldn’t upload before 3:00pm.

Tyler – My biggest catch was 18.50”. I caught him going back through the same stretch of water I already fished about 45 minutes before the hurricane came through. I threw between some chunk rock and wood and pulled him out. He went airborne, and as soon as I had him in the net, the jig popped out. One second later, she probably wouldn’t have been in my final five.

What is one tip on getting good photos you can give new anglers?

Levi – A couple of things are recommend are take your measuring board with you anytime you go fishing and practice taking picture with every single fish you catch. Also if you’re a visual learner like I am, I mostly learned how to from watching many Greg Blanchard videos which is why when I started tournament fishing it was like second nature. Also measure in the lowest part of your kayak to reduce the chance of your fish from flopping out of the kayak.

Jason – Like Levi said, take your board and take photos when not in a tournament. Also like what Josh said about a routine and having everything in its place so you have to think less when in the moment. I’m very superstitious about this and have to put everything back exactly where it goes before starting to fish again, haha.

Josh – What is one tip on getting good photos you can give new anglers? I’m still learning myself and I still make several mistakes, but for me the key is having everything ready and always in the same place and doing the process the same way. Having that muscle memory helps when I have those rushed or excited moments.

Tyler – I recommend practicing at home. I went in the garage, sat in my kayak and moved my board around and figured out the best orientation that is most comfortable for me. After taking a few pics, I found a way that I don’t have to worry about my identifier being cutoff and that my whole board will fit in the picture. I’ve also reached out to other people with the same boat as me and looked at the way they did it. Yes, I know there are more variables when you’re out on the water, but having a plan in place before you hit the water is important. You can tweak some things when you’re actually measuring a fish. Snap a couple pics and always review them before submitting. It’s not fun getting an 18”+ fish DQ’d…I would know.

Classic Standings & AOY Race

Well the season is about over but there are a LOT of anglers in the hunt for a Classic berth. Right now I’d say there are 10-12 spots up for grabs depending on how everyone does in the final event on Beaver Lake. Lots of movement coming for sure.

In the AOY race, Dwain Batey has a chokehold on first that I believe nobody can overcome based on the numbers. (but I’m no mathematician) There is a slight chance for a few…Kyle Long and Tyler Zengerle in particular to catch up if they dominate the last event and the Classic and Dwain stumbles in the Classic. We will see what we see.

Take a moment to check out Dwain’s article about his day on Table Rock, and subscribe to his blog – it is a great read.

Heavy Hitters Not Over?

Was looking pretty early like Kyle Long had his own chokehold on Heavy Hitters, but like last year things tighten up down the stretch. Although he has a good lead, there are some threats to the crown in this last event.

If Kyle does not upgrade…Tyler, Ryan and Jason all have an outside shot at stealing it in the last event. Tyler would need a 21.75″ to win, Ryan needs a 21.75″ to win, and Jason needs a 21.50″ to win. These are not likely on Beaver Lake, but possible!

2021 NSKA Beaver North Recap / Heavy Hitters / AOY

Beaver Lake has been pretty respectable in recent events, giving up lots of bass and a few limits. As summertime comes around it really starts to test anglers in finding decent fish. Leading up to this event pre-fishing was pretty tough, but someone usually finds a way. Shout out to Las Fajitas for sponsoring this event. I’ve eaten there for years and every time it’s the same thing – beef fajita tacos. yum.

Tournament Results

Summertime, vacations and such kept the total number of anglers a bit down on this one, with 43 hitting the water. Out of the 43, a solid 70% turned in a limit, although many of them were in the small category. It seemed that Prairie Creek was the place to be on this one, many of the top 10 caught their fish at PC. Kyle Long took the win with 88.50″ followed by Clay Johnson with 82.75″. Anytime you break 80 in the summer on Beaver is a very good day! Dwain Batey took third with 78.50″ and then the curve dropped down to where 74.25″ put you at 10th place. Check out TourneyX for the rest of the standings.

Dwain Batey caught a solid 20″ largemouth for Big Bass on this event.

Big Bass by Dwain Batey on Beaver Lake North. Source: TourneyX

Angler Roundtable

The top three bass catching dudes of the event shared how they did it in this roundtable. Kyle Long, Clay Johnson and Dwain Batey break it down:

Where did you go and why?

Kyle – I went to Prairie Creek. I pre-fished a couple other places with no real luck so I decided, why not go to the place that’s likely to be the most stained and that “should” have the best population of quality fish in the lake. I was nervous though because I’ve also blanked in there this time of year so I had a backup spot prepared.

Clay – I put in at Prairie Creek. Prairie Creek is not as clear as other parts of the lake and I have more confidence in dirtier water. I knew I could go there and throw a jig all day and get a limit and possibly a good limit.

Dwain – I chose Prairie Creek because it’s my favorite area up North, I only caught a small limit in my bracket match and lost fishing there, and that was all of the pre-fishing I had. I just felt like going in blind that area was my best shot.

Weather changed that week and got cooler and rainy. How does changing weather impact how you fish?

Kyle – Honestly I don’t pay that much attention to what the weather has been doing if it’s in the middle of a season. Early spring and late fall trends I’ll watch it close, but I really pay the most attention on what it’s doing that specific day. If there’s weather in the area, I’ll watch it close and go somewhere that I like to fish close to the launch and I always make sure I’m not in a dangerous wind. The best part about iffy weather though is it holds back the wake boats which means you can fish areas later in the morning that are generally not fishable then. Short answer…I pay a ton of attention to it on the actual day of competition and adjust accordingly.

Clay – I figured the weather change would push them to deeper water. I was sitting in 40ft of water throwing up on the bank and slowly working a jig back to me. I lost several fish but was fortunate to be able to get some good fish to the boat!

Dwain – I really didn’t change for that, the water was high already, so I had an idea of what I would do no matter what the conditions were.

What were your key baits for the day?

Kyle – Shaky head. Caught a few on a couple other baits but four of my five in my final bag were on the shaky head.

Clay – My key bait was a 1/2 ounce football jig.

Dwain – I threw a Taylor Man’s Finesse Jig, a Fluke, and a Taylor Man’s Swing Head with a Yum Spine Craw.

What do you do mentally or physically when you haven’t gotten a bite in a couple of hours during a tournament to adjust?

Kyle – I like to start dissecting what I’ve been doing and why it hasn’t been working. Usually at a macro level and work my way down. My first question is usually…Is it what I’m doing, or is it where I’m at? Then I start fine tuning those questions. If it’s what I’m doing, I probably go to depth/bank type first, types of cover or structure second, then maybe lure third in order of how to change my approach. That said, I change baits often if I haven’t caught anything recently, but a full on reset after hours of nothing will cause me to get out the confidence baits and keep them in my hand and figure out where to throw them to get bit. But if I feel like it’s where I’m at, I’m not afraid to pull the plug on an area and move. Sometimes during the drive it’s like a reset and I can clear my head and start over. But I never give up.

Clay – Last year in the tournaments I would always get discouraged and basically give up if I haven’t gotten a bite in 2 or more hours. I learned a lot from that not to ever give up! You never know when that next cast could be a good one!

Dwain – I had several hours multiple times where I didn’t get a bite, starting off with early that morning, I didn’t get a topwater bite, and it took me a while to find my first fish. Then I had a long stretch after that where I couldn’t find the second fish. I just keep covering water and looking for a good stretch, changing baits some, but still junk fishing, throwing several things as I come to different kinds of banks or cover that requires each bait I have tied on.


Video recap of my day on Beaver North – Not at Prairie Creek, sadly.

AOY Race

Six events in the books and the AOY race is clearing up a bit. There are still some contenders for the top spot with zeroes who can make up ground. Dwain is going to be very hard to catch for the overall AOY, and the top 25 is still going to change a lot before the end. Here’s the Top 25 as of today:

Heavy Hitters Update

The Heavy Hitters race continued in the same direction it has all year with Kyle Long maintaining his lead. As I know from last year though, he’s in a tough spot now where it is hard to cull, while others will gain ground each event. Still think this could be a semi-close finish.

Using the best five, he has 96.5″ total, followed by Tyler Zengerle, Terrill Standifer, Ryan Paskiewicz and Devon Esry.

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Next Up: Table Rock 2.0

2021 NSKA Pumpback Recap / Heavy Hitters / AOY Race

On a steamy Saturday in early June, the NSKA crew crossed the border into Oklahoma to take on Pumpback (a.k.a. Chimney Rock Lake) for the second year in a row. Pumpback is an interesting place and really seems to be an engineering marvel. Whatever it is, the fish are big and feisty on this lake! Shout out to Ginger Rice & Noodle Bar for sponsoring the event!

Caught this 21 which went 6.9lbs the week before the event. Of course. Source: Kayakfishingfocus.com

Pumpback Results

Of all the places NSKA fishes tournaments, I believe the most unpredictable results and chance for anyone to land a giant is highest at Pumpback. It was great to see some varied names on the leaderboard for this one. Overall, it was a feast or famine day with a skimpy 204 fish caught by the 50 anglers. Of the 50 anglers registered, only 24 (48%) turned in a limit, while seven (14%) didn’t turn in a keeper. Those are pretty tough numbers overall compared to most May/June events. I’ve wondered if the fact they really didn’t drop the water much plus the weather made it tougher than usual.

Ryan Paskiewicz didn’t have any trouble finding the fish, finishing first with 89.25″ in total. Josh King cranked his way late in the day to a 86.25″ total for second, followed by Kyle Long also with 86.25″ (those tiebreakers are heart breakers…). Justin Phillips took fourth with 85.50″ on the day.

Here were your top 10 anglers from Pumpback:

  1. Ryan Paskiewicz 89.25″
  2. Josh King 86.25″
  3. Kyle Long 86.25″
  4. Justin Phillips 85.50″
  5. Clay Johnson 84.50″
  6. Dwain Batey 84.50″
  7. Devon Esry 84.25″
  8. Jacob Webber 83.75″ (I always think, Jacob Wheeler!?!)
  9. Nathan Henthorn 83.50″
  10. Josh Howard 83.00″

Big Bass was won by Justin Brewer with a 20.75″ Smallmouth bass caught on a popper.

Justin Brewer’s 20.75″ Smallmouth took big bass on Pumpback. Source: TourneyX

One note, we had a little post-event judging discussion on a couple of photos. Advice to everyone involved…watch your photos. Take time with them. Taking the picture and submitting is a part of the sport. Staying well within the guidelines avoids any possible deductions or questions around a submission!

Angler Roundtable

The top anglers for the event share how they did it in this roundtable conversation. Ryan, Josh, Kyle and Justin break it down:

What was your overall plan for the day and did it work out as planned?

Ryan – My initial plan was to head to the back of the long arm where I missed a really big fish in practice, but as I started my commute that morning I wasn’t paying attention to my map and went around the wrong point and ended up headed to a totally different part of the lake. LOL! At that point I just committed to the area for an hour or more and when it only produced two small fish I changed my plan and left. I headed to a stretch where I had caught a few in pre-fishing. I love throwing a jig but it was evident that was not going to be the deal. After cranking and trying a few other things, I made myself commit to throwing a fluke for 2 long stretches of bank. I didn’t have a ton of confidence in the fluke personally but noticed the shad spawn was happening and it made sense to throw it. After 30-40 casts I connected with a 17-incher. This made it easier to stick with. A few casts later I hooked a 20.25-incher. From then on I mostly targeted the middle 1/3 of coves and had success.

Josh – Going into Pumpback I only had two other appearances and they didn’t turn out very well. (Dec 2020 29” and Jun 2020 65”). My plan was to fish a different area than the last time, which had been the same areas and to throw what I know and like for this time of year. That plan failed miserably. The first two hours I didn’t catch a fish. Hooked into three, but they all spit the hook. Feeling discouraged I decided to have a little fun and troll for a striper, since I was crossing the main lake to another area. It worked. I hooked into a nice hybrid and he took me for a ride. First striper/hybrid in a kayak. So I was excited…now back to the bass. I finally landed my first bass at 8:45. It took until 12:59 to get a limit. It was a decent limit of 78.00″. It wasn’t a top 10, but I was happy! Ten minutes later I caught my PB Smallie on a crankbait and jumped to 83.75”. Now I felt it was a top 10 limit and started to develop a pattern so I started grinding and found two more culls.

Kyle – My plan was to throw a fluke early and often and the go back over the areas where I caught some with a shaky head or a jig as the water started falling. But best I could tell, the water never really started falling that much and I was able to get bit on the fluke all day. I tried other stuff plenty but couldn’t get bit on anything else.

Justin – My plan was pretty simple.  Get away from everyone and head to the backs and work out from there.  The execution was a bit more complex.  I was betting the farm I’d get a good topwater bite but I wasn’t sure what might trigger the best reaction, so I tied on a multitude of topwater baits.  With all the different rods laying out I remember thinking, “Good grief.  I haven’t made a cast yet and it already looks like I’m lost.”  For the afternoon I was going to try to gauge the mood of the fish and attempt to figure it out from there. 

Key baits you caught them on and anything noteworthy?

Ryan – The weightless fluke as mentioned. I picked up some ultra cheap Walmart flukes and later went and bought a few more packs! I fished them pretty slow and most strikes came on the fluke sinking down about two feet. In the afternoon I think the fish pulled off and I should have fished it further out a bit more.

Josh – I found that fishing deep points with a Crankbait and steep windblown banks with a weightless wacky senko was the pattern for me.

Kyle – As I said the fluke was the only bait I caught fish on but I did notice that around 9:00 my bite kinda died. Around 11:00 I was just kinda watching my fluke as I was fishing it out deeper and slower and got bit. Then I tried the slower deeper retrieve again and got bit again. From then on I caught plenty by switching up my retrieve by fishing it further out and letting it fall deeper.

Justin – Once I got to my starting area I worked through every single topwater bait to no avail until lastly I picked up a homemade buzzbait.  I immediately caught 2 including one that was 19.25”.  I kept it in my hand the rest of the morning which gave me a limit by 8:30 a.m. while also pulling in another over 19”.  As fate often dictates I lost the buzzbait and tied on another one of the same color that was store bought.  Either the fish liked my homemade one a lot better or this bite was waning.  The only interest this buzzbait was generating were total misses (I’ve since made more buzzbaits including backups).  At this point I tried working a jerkbait off points.  No dice.  Then I tried throwing a 3XD crankbait and I caught one that didn’t cull.  This fish clued me into thinking they may not be actively chasing anymore because he barely caught the rear treble hook.  So, I tied on a green pumpkin stick bait and culled twice giving me my daily total. 

Most annoying trash fish at Pumpback, hybrids, drum, or catfish?

Ryan – I caught one hybrid and I did think it was a tank Smallie for a minute. I don’t really find them annoying all that much. Those suckers fight and I enjoy that despite the moment when you realize it won’t help…

Josh – Luckily no trash fish were accidentally caught. I was a bit nervous that my Smallie was a drum at first by the way it acted.

Kyle – I have actually never caught a trash fish on Pumpback. I’m not sorry about that.

Justin – The most annoying fish is, without doubt, a hybrid.  They fool me into thinking I’ve got a black bass on.  Then the disappointment is real once I get them to the yak.

What’s your PB bass, where did you catch it and on what lure?

Ryan – I have 2 22.75”. One on Lake Atkins and one on the asterisk lake, Swepco. Both caught on a Carolina rig. My personal best Smallie is 19.5” with a jig on Beaver Lake. I want to break into that 20” Smallie club really bad.

Josh – I have a hard time with PB. I haven’t weighed many and my longest is like 20.75”. But I think my PB by weight was around a six pounder caught on a private pond with a chatterbait. Last year. Still searching for that 20” and up in a tourney. My longest, a 20.75″ came during practice on Lake Ouachita for the State Championship. Cranking a squarebill right up against the bank.

Kyle – My PB is shrouded in controversy, lol. I caught a 24.25”on a jig on Lake Fork back during the original Tournament of Champions but it was a “mouth open” tourney. However, I do have a pic of that fish touching 25” but for some reason I submitted it at 24.25” with the mouth slightly open. This cost me big bass and a power pole. The only other fish I’ve ever caught that could rival it was an 8-13 I caught behind my house on Swepco and I only got the weight…not the length. So I’m gonna stick with 24.25” since that was what was accepted in that event for length and 8-13 for weight.

Justin – My PB was caught at Lake Windsor in Bella Vista.  It was a spring day with muddy water.  I was throwing a fire-tiger jerkbait in 4’ of water.  She came out, choked it and jumped.  A guy who was watching from his docks starts screaming, “That’s a 10 pounder!  That’s a 10 pounder!”.  Once I got her in we weighed it on the guys dock.  Sadly it wasn’t 10 pounds but it was a beauty of an 8 pounder.                

AOY Race Update

Well, well, the AOY race is taking shape, sorta. Honestly it is a mess and we can’t tell much right now. We have some really good anglers that have a zero which they will drop later on. We have some really good anglers with a low score they will drop later on. We have some who have some medium scores who will struggle to stay in the race. As of today, the Top 25 looks like this. YOU DO NOT WANT TO MISS THE CLASSIC. Keep grinding, tons of people are still in contention to qualify. Word on the street is this year is going to be next level in regard to trophies and swag bags for the Top 25!

As of today, the Top 25 looks like this:

Right now looking at the board, lots of anglers can compete for AOY but it appears that Dwain, Devon, Michael and Roy are in the best spots. Brewer is a dark horse to watch with two 98s.

Heavy Hitters Update

Heavy Hitters is also looking like an interesting race. Kyle Long is maintaining his lead but Devon and Terrill did good things on Pumpback to improve their position.

This time of the season it is important to look at DROPS instead of biggest fish. Who can improve things the most with big fish in the last three events?

Don’t sleep on Paskiewicz or Zengerle. They could steal it at the end.

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2021 Beaver South Recap / Heavy Hitters / AOY Race

Water levels in May on Beaver Lake have been following a familiar pattern in 2021, carrying on a year over year over year tradition. High water along with a week of rain for the four straight time prior to an NSKA event made for daily changing water conditions. If you look at the past three years on Beaver Lake in May, you should prepare to fish in high water – which is a good thing on the Dead Sea.

Beaver Lake in May means water levels between 1,126 and 1,129. Source: uslakes.info

The past two tournaments I’ve had to work really hard to understand what’s going on with the lakes. After a terrible start to the year I needed to ensure a decent finish. This meant a lot of driving around of Beaver Lake the week prior to the event, and the weekend prior I hit two of my go-to areas on Beaver Lake South with horrifically bad pre-fishing results. This told me I needed to do something else…that the river area felt like it was dead for the most part and the action would be down lake toward the Hwy 12 bridge. The results I think showed this to be mostly true at the top.

Beaver Lake South Tournament Results

We had a really strong field for this one, including some top anglers who came in from NSKA Central and RVKA. Love the fact they came up! May is a great month to fish Beaver Lake because of the elevated water levels, still some spawning or fry guarders present, and with some color in the water – it gives an angler a better chance of getting them shallow. Of the 53, a really strong 70% turned in a limit for the day, and I suspect that everyone who got on the water turned in at least one keeper.

I was fortunate to catch enough to take the win with 87.75″, followed by Christa Hibbs with 84.25″, and then Justin Brewer with 82.75″ for third place. Big Bass was a good battle, where Christa and Justin both caught a 21.75″ and Christa won the tiebreaker to take the prize. (Justin beat me in a tiebreaker for third place on Table Rock, so he’ll be OK. Ha!)

Here is your top ten from Beaver Lake South:

  1. Jason Kincy – 87.75
  2. Christa Hibbs – 84.25 (RVKA)
  3. Justin Brewer – 82.75
  4. Jeriamy Vann – 81.00
  5. Chris Jones – 79.75 (RVKA)
  6. Garrett Morgan – 76.00 (NSKA Central)
  7. Josh Goforth – 75.75
  8. Roy Roberts – 75.50
  9. Michael Burgess – 75.25
  10. Jeff Malott – 75.00
Christa Hibbs’ 21.75″ Big Bass had a gigantic head and a skinny body! Source: TourneyX

Angler Roundtable

So how’d the top finishers for the event do it and what are their thoughts on Beaver Lake? I joined Christa Hibbs, Justin Brewer and Jeriamy Vann in this recap discussion. Here’s the scoop:

What part of the lake did you fish and why?

Jason – After doing a lot of looking around, I decided that dirty water was going to be the key to a chance to win. Monte Ne gets really dirty when it rains hard in Rogers, and I’ve fished it quite a bit because it is the closest part of the lake to my house. Took a chance and it paid off.

Christa – I fished the Horseshoe Bend area for the event. I decided on this area because in the past it’s always fished well for me and held good fish each time I’ve fished it.

Justin – I put in at the War Eagle Marina and fished pockets on the main channel swing. That was my pattern at Table Rock so I tried to duplicate it at Beaver. Only difference was that I didn’t get the dirty water I was hoping for.

Jeriamy – I went just south of the HWY 12 bridge Saturday. Really wanted to fish a stretch that I had never fished before and this area looked really nice on the maps that I had studied all week.

Describe how you caught your biggest bass of the day, and what on?

Jason – After catching several keepers early on a spinnerbait, the bite started to slow as the rain cleared off. Wanted to keep throwing a moving bait so chose a white chatterbait. On a long cast that landed right next to a bush, it immediately got heavy and could tell that she was wrapped up in a bush so I just tried to keep some pressure on and she eventually came out. Second 20″ fish that morning, only the second time that’s happened to me in a tournament. Was very lucky.

Christa – My biggest bass of the day was the 21.75 that came around 7 am. I’d missed a bunch of fish just swatting at the buzzbait that morning, so I decided to put a trailer hook on. Three casts later, that big one hit it. Once in the net I noticed it was only hooked by that trailer hook. I luckily adjusted just at the right time.

Justin – My biggest bass came on a wacky rigged Yum Dinger. I pretty much kept it in my hand all day with the hope that eventually I would come across a big female or some decent males still on beds. It took me all day but I eventually found the big female and then a bonus male with her.

Jeriamy – I caught a 19.25″ which was my biggest of the day on a Santone Rattling Jig Black, Blue and Purple with a (CRAWL) trailer. I eased up real quiet to some floating debris and submerged trees in the back of a pocket and had just enough room to make a pitch across to the bank and work the bait along big root ball. I twitched the jig a few times and she came out from under the wood and crushed it.

Was seeing 20 / 20 on tournament Saturday. Source: kayakfishingfocus.com

Beaver Lake showed out a bit on Saturday, what are your thoughts on the lake as a fishery?

Jason – My grandfather, dad and his brothers fished Beaver Lake from when it was formed, and took me there when I was a kid so I will always have soft spot for this lake because of that. It’s a tough place at times but I really like the challenge of a changing lake rather than when people can just hit their honey holes. I joke about it being the Dead Sea, but it’s all in fun, you can catch’em there! For NWA it is our premier fishery and a beautiful place that we are lucky to have nearby.

Christa – I’ve always enjoyed fishing Beaver Lake. It may not always kick out the 20+ inch fish like a lot of other lakes, but I’ve had some awesome fun fishing days out there. In this tournament it produced some nice ones. I think with the heat of the summer not quite here yet, the higher water level, and cloud cover we had on tournament day helped keep those big ones out roaming and more vulnerable. Congratulations to all the top finishers!

Justin – I know many people call it the Dead Sea but other than a couple of trips I’ve always enjoyed the lake. Especially if I can find some dirtier water it’s always put up good limits for me.

Jeriamy – I’m pretty biased about Beaver lake. It’s my favorite with Lake Ouachita being a close second. I was a little surprised at the number of fish caught Saturday, but then I realized that I shouldn’t be with all the sticks in this NSKA group.


Video recap of my day on Beaver Lake, including baits my best five were caught on:


Heavy Hitters Standings

The Heavy Hitters pool is starting to take shape as we’re now four events in. As a reminder, anglers take their top fish from five events, so there’s a long way to go. This week was a real plus for me and Jeriamy getting some big ones on the board to make up some ground. Kyle Long still leads and is in a good spot, with Roy Roberts and Josh Howard on his tail. Again, don’t sleep on those with 20s on the board like James Haeberle, Tyler Zengerle and Cole Sikes. They are still in great shape.

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NSKA Classic / AOY Race

The top 25 finishers in AOY will make the end of season Classic Championship. It’s too early to tell much, but let’s take a look at who’s “in” as of today. Keep in mind it’s the top six events with two drops, so a lot is going to change. Everyone has a chance to get in at this point. For overall AOY – Dwain, Michael and Roy are still in the best position, but any angler with two scores above 95 is likely still a threat to close the gap.


Next Up – Pumpback

We’ll do a preview for Pumpback next week – it’s a really weird and cool little lake (More formally known as Chimney Rock Lake). If you haven’t been there, be sure to mark your calendar for June 5 to experience this pool of giant smallmouth and largemouth bass.

NSKA Table Rock Recap / Heavy Hitters Update

The latest battle on the water for NSKA NWA took place on a section of Table Rock Lake, from the Shell Knob area up into the Kings and White River arms. It was a great opportunity for anglers to try out some new water and to catch a lot of fish on a great fishery.

Bass on Table Rock were biting for the NSKA gang.

A week and a half before the event there was significant rain and flooding which were going to affect the water for tournament day. Although Table Rock was a complete muddy mess a week out, when Beaver Lake and Table Rock both were running water through their respective dams, it really flushed a lot of the mud and debris down lake. This resulted in evolving conditions leading up to the event, meaning anglers had to find the water they were most comfortable with.

Table Rock Tournament Results

There were 53 anglers entered in the event and they accounted for a lot of fish caught. A strong 87% of anglers turned in a limit, about 20% higher than the average event. Timing worked out well for the event with bass in all phases of spawn in the lake, meaning there were many good fish to be had.

Michael Burgess won Big Bass with this 20″ Largemouth

Dwain Batey took 1st place with 89.75″, Michael Burgess was second with 88.25″ and Justin Brewer third with 85.50″ on the day. Brewer beat me out on a tiebreaker putting me in 4th on the day, also with an 85.50″ total. Big Bass was also won by Michael Burgess with a 20″ largemouth.

Here are the top 10 finishers:

  1. Dwain Batey 89.75″
  2. Michael Burgess 88.25″
  3. Justin Brewer 85.50″
  4. Jason Kincy 85.50″
  5. Carson McBride 85.00″
  6. Kyle Long 84.50″
  7. Devon Esry 84.00″
  8. Justin Phillips 84.00″
  9. Josh Landreth 82.75″
  10. Jason Coleman 82.25″

The complete tournament results are available on TourneyX.

Video recap and highlights from my day on Table Rock with 85.5″

Table Rock Angler Recaps

Here are some thoughts and insight from the top five anglers from the NSKA NWA Table Rock event. Dwain Batey, Michael Burgess, Justin Brewer, myself and Carson McBride share how things went down on the water and some other thoughts.

In general what area did you go and why?

Dwain – I fished the Kings River hoping it would have more color in the water than the White River did.

Michael – I fished on the white river side. I didn’t have time to practice so I just went to the same area as my previous tournament for MOYAK.

Justin – I chose to put in at Viola. I figured that section would still be the dirties water and dirty water is my strength.

Jason – Fished a creek arm around the Big M section of the White River area. Had fished there previously in the Moyak event and the water looked like the color I wanted to fish.

Carson – I fished the Kings River arm, mainly because I wanted to get as far away from Beaver Town as I could because I don’t like fishing that area

Overall what was the key bite for your day’s success, any specific baits you want to call out?

Dwain – I found fish in debris mats which had shad spawning on them. I used a Big Bite Baits BFE with a Trokar TK130 flipping hook and a 3/8 oz weight Texas rigged to punch into those mats.

Michael – My day started off slow with no bites in my first 1.5 hrs. I connected my first fish on a jig in the bushes but it was a small one. I continued to try to repeat the pattern but only came up with three small fish. I switched to the other side which was shallower and picked up a spinner bait. Within 10 casts I had caught three, one being a 18″ fish. It dialed me into what I needed to throw and where to fish.

Justin – I started early with a spinnerbait and flipping a big creature bait to catch my small limit. I threw a wacky rigged dinger and got bit twice which keyed me in to my main pattern of flipping a Texas rigged black and blue Yum Dinger with the smallest weight I could get away with and still penetrate the and the trash on the bank.

Jason – Unlike a lot of others, seems like my fish came on more variety of baits. Early on caught them on a War Eagle buzzbait and late morning got my 18″ and a 17″ on a Booyah Covert spinnerbait. As the day wore on still caught several on the spinnerbait but did some late culls on skipping a football jig with a YUM Spine Craw at bushes and sawdust areas.

Carson – My key bait was a half ounce flipping jig with a Rage Menace trailer, I was flipping it around isolated buck brush and bushes and punching through the debris mats, and any time I came to a spot where someone’s yard was flooded, a white spinnerbait with gold willow leaf blades always produced a bite.

First NSKA on Table Rock, how did you feel about it and do you like events outside of Arkansas, why?

Dwain – I always like to fish new bodies of water, or be forced into fishing areas of familiar lakes that I’ve never been to, so I always like when we have diversity of venues.

Michael – I enjoyed fishing Table Rock, it’s a fantastic fishery with some big fish. I’m not much of a fan fishing small lakes, it just seems to easy and I want a challenge.

Justin – I feel like I have done pretty good at Table Rock events in the past so I was excited about this event. I like venturing out to different states and different waters. It helps you as an angler to travel and figure out different bodies of water.

Jason – I’d never fished Table Rock before the Moyak tournament a couple of weeks ago and now have fished it a few times. It’s a great lake and clearly has a better fish population than what we encounter on Beaver Lake. Hope we go back next year.

Carson – I liked having and NSKA event on table rock I just wish we could’ve went all over the entire lake.

If you could only have one rod / reel / line setup to fish with, what would it be and why?

Dwain – I would have to go with a 7′ 2” medium heavy baitcaster with an 8.3:1 reel, I am not brand loyal just anything that will get the job done. I picked this because it would cover a variety of different baits/techniques.

Michael – My main set up I would take would be my jig set up with 15# Invizx line. I personally love fishing a jig but I can also easily switch to a Texas rig or any bottom bumping bait.

Justin – I would have to go with a baitcast setup. 7:5:1 reel and 7’ medium heavy rod and 15 pound fluorocarbon line. That will cover with just about anything. Jig, cranking, spinnerbait and even a wacky rig.

Jason – My most flexible setup is a medium heavy jig / Texas rig rod with a Shimano Curado 7:4:1 reel with 12 lb floro. With this I can fish a jig, Texas rig, spinnerbait, fluke, or about any single hook style bait.

Carson – If I could only have one rod reel setup to fish with it would be a 7 foot 3 heavy fast with a jackhammer chatterbait, that’s about my all time favorite setup to throw when I can get away with it

Heavy Hitters Update

Three weeks into Heavy Hitters and Kyle Long is in the driver’s seat for now, with Josh Howard, Cole Sikes and Brian Lookadoo right behind him.

With five events left, everyone is still in it since it is the best five fish total. Things are going to tighten up and shake up quite a bit. Keep your eye on Tyler Zengerle and James Haeberle who both have a 20 in their list, they will close the gap quickly in coming events.

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Next Up – Beaver Lake South, May 22

The next tournament for NSKA will be the Ozark Kayak Beaver Lake South event, which depending on the water level could be a smash-fest or a dink-fest. Get signed up now on TourneyX for this battle royale on the Dead Sea. The highlight of the day will be the post-tourney weigh-in at Las Fajitas in Lowell. See you there!

King of the String Recap / Video / Heavy Hitters

Whew boy! That was quite the shootout for the recent NSKA NWA King of the String tournament. As the old saying goes, you gotta beat the King to be the King. Who came close? Who came out on top? How did the King stay on top? Read on…

Well the pre-tournament predictions by many were too low, by a lot, for the most part. Here on KFF I predicted the winner would have 25-27 fish total (not far off) with a total of 335″ in length (not close). The real shocker was how far down the standings people were with fish totals that would have been top 10 last year! In retrospect, those of us bemoaning the tough fishing were just sucking, apparently the fish were there to be caught.

Tyler Zengerle’s best five was a huge total of 90+” and deserves a shout-out. Maybe it was good karma for his smiley face on the identifier?

KOS Results

There were 62 anglers registered for the event, who accounted for 541 bass, an average of 8.7 fish per angler, up almost one BPA from last year. Tenth place in 2021 caught 20/253.75″ compared to 16/210 in 2020, and 20th place in 2021 was 12/167″ compared to 10/138.25″ in 2020. Performance was up in 2021 over 2020.

Roy Roberts has ended any debate (if any existed) on who is the King of the String with his third straight win of this event. That’s insane, unbelievable, and phenomenal. He’s definitely set the mark as his 2021 total was 28/373″ while his 2020 win total was 28/375.75″. Wow! Talk about consistency. That’s the number. You want to win next time, beat 28 fish and break 380″ and that might get you there.

Josh Howard took 2nd place with 27/358.25″ while Craig Wood took 3rd place with a 23/304.50″ total. Kyle Long took Big Bass with a 20.50″ hog with a magical spinnerbait landing. The rest of the Top 10 were: Dwain Batey, Cole Sikes, Devon Esry, Michael Burgess, Tyler Zengerle, Jason Coleman and Jason Adams.

My day on the water could have used some improvement, making some adjustments after a really bad start to salvage a few fish. Overall though it was my standard MLF performance, plus an early morning call to wake up my wife, lol. Here’s the video should you want to watch the recap:

Angler Roundtable

As usual, one of the awesome things about kayak fishing is how we are willing to share our experiences. The top anglers shared a lot of great details about their day and how they caught them. Lots of great stuff in here from Roy Roberts and Josh Howard!

What area of the lake did you go to and why?

Roy – I fished the clear water on the north end of the lake. I knew the water would be warmer up in the rivers and fish would be more committed to the spawn so I was a little nervous about my decision. However, in this format I wanted to fish my strengths and stick to the area of the lake I am most comfortable. I didn’t get a chance to practice so I just closely watched the conditions leading up and had a pretty good feeling where the fish would be. Another reason I chose this area was the strong population of all three species of bass. Being able to quickly change techniques and target different groups of fish was a key to get consistent bites all day.

Josh – I went up the river arm. Honestly, I wrestled with that decision all week. Based on history, research and the MLF format, I originally I had narrowed it down to 2 areas around the mid-lake area. The day before the tournament, I completely changed my game plan.

Craig – I chose Natural Walk as my spot for the tourney because it has several creeks coming in and there are a lot of spawning areas as well. One creek/cove gave me ten fish and the motivation to carry on.

Did you change anything or what was your mindset to try to catch numbers?

Roy – My game plan was to power fish shallow for the early bite on some steeper banks. This part went well…I had 10 fish by 8:30 on a crankbait / jerkbait / swimbait just covering water. That bite tapered off and I was working some pockets out of the wind with little success. The cold front had pushed the fish down to 18-20 foot range and they were holding tight to the bottom. Because of the wind I couldn’t use my normal finesse techniques to target these fish so I tied on a Carolina rig with a heavy sinker and a Zoom Centipede. The wind was brutal but bites were consistent. Because of the wind I had trouble feeling the bites and lost several nice fish. I just kept my head down and fished this pattern as efficiently as I could for the rest of the day.

Josh – My approach was to keep moving and cover water. I usually tend to target a small area and then work to get all I can out of that spot, but for this event I felt I needed to cover as much water as possible and keep my bait in front of new fish. Every time I felt myself slowing down or spending too much time in one area, I had to remind myself to keep moving.

Craig – I thought I would throw a spinnerbait and pick up fish, but just 15 minutes in I lost confidence in it, so I started pitching a jig and it produced bites. The storm may have caused them to hold them a little tighter to their spots and the jig gets in tight to those small strike zones.

We have a lot of new anglers this year, any advice for them in tournaments?

Roy – Man there are so many cliches and everybody has their opinion. It’s exciting to see new anglers getting involved and asking good questions. If I had to say one piece of advice I would just say be yourself. Understand what your good at and use that during competition. The hardest thing in bass fishing is chasing dock talk or someone else’s fish. I think people put too much pressure on “practice”. Me included. Just go out have fun, try new things, and learn the lake. Apply what you learn, block out some of the noise, and have fun. I’ve probably read as many articles and watched as many videos as anybody, but the knowledge I have gained firsthand far outweighs anything else.

Josh – Fish your strengths and control the controllable. Identify your strengths or the way you prefer to fish and then seek water that fits your style. I’m not saying “don’t try new baits or be reluctant to adapt to conditions”. I changed my area and plan the day before the tournament because I did not have 100% confidence in it. Win or lose, I want to spend the day fishing the way I want to fish. Control the controllable. This Club is absolutely stacked full of hammers it’s critical to me that I minimize wasted time. A couple minutes here or there can really add up throughout the day and I need every minute, every cast I can get. Organization, maintenance, ATTITUDE are all things that can cost you fish.

Craig – My advice is be patient. Its taken years for me to recognize subtle changes in a bass’s willingness to bite.

What’s your boat/kayak setup/type?

Roy – I have a Hobie PA12 with the 180 drive. I love this kayak. I got it about this time last year and it was a gigantic upgrade for me. I don’t have any fancy motors or electronics but it gets the job done!

Josh – I fish an Old Town Predator PDL. I’ve had it for 2 years now and love it. It’s been very reliable and gives me the confidence to fish any water or weather condition I encounter. Last year I installed a Power Pole Micro Anchor and I cannot say enough about it. Other than my pedal drive, my Power Pole is my #1-can’t fish without accessory.

Craig – I fish out of a Hobie Pro Angler 12 and it gives me the ability to carry a lot of gear and be comfortable in all conditions. I will always fish from a Pro Angler. Also the addition of great sidescan imaging has helped immensely. Congratulations to Roy, the shear amount of fish he caught and upload successfully was incredible.

Kyle Long’s Big Bass was caught on a spinnerbait. I was curious how Kyle’s fish count record keeping would change for MLF. looks like he was marking them off!

Heavy Hitters Update

Oh we have a horserace here in the Heavy Hitters pool. (Still time to enter…) Kyle Long is off to a great start, with two solid bass to get things going, but there are several right behind him. Right now those with at least one 20 are a threat. The good news is nobody is out of it yet, we’re taking the top five best fish, so anyone can make a run!

Table Rock is next up, an interesting curveball to the schedule. Should be some huge totals caught there during the ongoing spawn. Get ready to roll!

NSKA NWA King of the String Preview – Dinkapalooza

The King of the String is back! This MLF-style catch all you can tournament event is back for 2021 is without a doubt my least favorite and most dreaded event. Not because it isn’t a cool concept, it really is! It’s because I STINK at this format. But should be a fun time for everyone else on the water!

I’m a big fan of the MLF television show where they do the ‘every fish counts format’ and like it much better than the super confusing MLF tournament trail series. (I mean, you need a flowchart to track which day is what…) Catching as many fish as you can is fun and lessens the dependency on size of bass which puts more anglers in play to compete. My problem is in these tourneys I can’t seem to catch fish. In the two past NSKA King of the String (KOS) events, I have a combined TOTAL of 7 fish. Seven! That’s not even good enough for 25th place in the last KOS event. yikes.

Wofford’s Big Bass from 2020 KOS event. Pic for attention.

Predicting 2021 Based on Past Results

Everyone enjoys trying to project what it will take to win or finish in the top 10 for these events. Often, KFF gets pretty close by looking at past data. This one is a bit tougher because we only have two data sets and neither was from this body of water specifically, nor this time of year.

One thing I do know, for someone to win, they are going to have to dethrone Roy Roberts who has twice now been the King (of the string).

In 2017, anglers could fan out across a 60 mile radius on a July day to find whatever water would work best for them to catch as many 11″ bass as possible. The field of 46 anglers caught 326 bass, an average of 7.08 bass per angler. Roy Roberts crushed the field with 27 bass for 344.25″ on the day. Christa Hibbs was second with 25/306.25″ and Nathan Henthorn did his river magic for 24/294.50″ in bass. Of the 46 anglers, 26 of them (57%) turned in at least five fish. Cole Sikes took Big Bass with a 22.50″ Lincoln Lake giant.

Where will the winning KOS catch come from in 2021? One of these areas…or out of the map further south? Hmm..

The KOS returned in May 2020 with a vengeance. The 72 anglers accounted for 567 fish, for an average of 7.80 bass per angler. Now that’s interesting…a bit of a jump in bass per angler (BPA), but pretty darn close. This event had a smaller radius of 40 miles, but still included a lot of small water. Rains the week of ruined many of the rivers for this one, making it more lake focused. Roy Roberts did it again, breaking his mark from 2017 by posting 28 fish for 375.75″ to win. John Wofford 25/346″ took second and Jason Coleman 25/321.75″ took third. Of the 72 anglers, 41 (57%) turned in at least five fish…interesting, just like in 2017. Big Bass for the event was a nice 20.75″ catch by John Wofford.

Now, this event is on the Dead Sea (a.k.a. Beaver Lake) in April. What does that mean? From past data, it seems that we’ll have an average of eight fish per angler, and, most likely 57% of the field will catch at least five bass, and Big Bass will be in the usual range of 19-22″ in length. We’ve also seen that 10th place is about half of first place on average.

What will happen?

A few things are working against big totals for 2021. Even though Roy Roberts has been on Beaver before and won both times, and many others have done well, for many anglers Beaver Lake is just not friendly for numbers of catches. Secondly, after the ice age we went through, things seem to be just a bit behind with the fish activity. Water is heating up all over the lake, which could change things on a dime…or make them more unpredictable.

The river area is a logical choice for a good day, with the water already near or above 60, it should be where spawn is happening first. The clear water in the lower end of the lake (lower meaning nearest the dam, not geographically) is full of smallmouth and spotted bass which could be key for a KOS event, but water temps are still stuck in the low-mid 50s. Then you have the mid-lake areas which are a bit of both worlds, little warmer water, but fewer spots and smallies.

My belief is the winner will be in the 25-27 range for about 335″ in total. Which would make 10th place around 13-14 for about 168″ in total.

Heavy Hitters – Still Time to Enter!

There is still plenty of time to enter the Heavy Hitters side pot for 2021! Check out the rules and how to enter from the previous post. You only need five big fish and there are seven events left. Don’t miss out and sign up today.

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Thanks for reading and good luck! If you haven’t seen it, check out the video from Bull Shoals a couple of weeks ago. If you like, hit subscribe.

NSKA NWA Road Runner Recap / Roundtable / Heavy Hitters

The first tournament of 2021 had some familiar and some new names in the top 10 as anglers to the road, seeking out the best water they could for this event. Shogun (thanks!) was the sponsor of the Road Runner and the radius for the event was 50 miles from the Shogun restaurant in Fayetteville.

A warming trend during the week were capped off by a serious round of thunderstorms and heavy rain in the northern part of the radius on Friday night. This made for some tough decisions on where to go. Because of the storms and rain, el presidente Taylor Frizzell wisely moved the start back an hour that morning.

Road Runner Results

With the event coming early in the season combined with rainy and stormy weather, participation was a respectable 73 anglers. Overall, 35 of 73 (48%) anglers turned in a limit, while 63 of 73 (86%) turned in at least one bass. This is on par with the last two Road Runners held in March, and in fact a bit up from last year.

Once again, one lake showed up as usual in the Road Runner. Siloam City Lake produced the win again. In five of the last six NWA Road Runners, Siloam City Lake has been the winning lake – 2018, 2019, 2020 (2nd RR) and 2021. Additionally, in these same six events Siloam City Lake has put NINE anglers in the top four spots.

Sam McClish’s 20.25″ bass looks like its downed some beer and wings right before this pic. It won Sam a NSKA 20+ sticker. Dwain Batey and Cole Sikes got’em too!

Event favorite, Dwain Batey, took first place with 93.25″ and Big Bass of 21.5″ to take home some good $$. Sam McClish took 2nd place with a strong 86.50″ while Carson McBride jumped back into things with 86.25″ for third place. The rest of the Top 10 were Michael Burgess, Roy Roberts, Ian Howard, Heath Berner, Cole Sikes, Justin Wright and Michael Sandlin. See the full results on the TourneyX tournament page.

My day was a disaster, marked by poor site selection followed by poor judgment and poor execution. If you haven’t seen the video of the debacle, check it out on YouTube.

Angler Recaps

Good news for those of us who didn’t do as well, the top four anglers sat down to share their secrets for finishing in the money! Kayak anglers are a different breed and one of the awesome things about our club is the willingness to share and help others. Here’s what Dwain, Sam, Carson and Michael had to say:

1. Where did you go and why?

Dwain – I chose Siloam Springs City lake, there were a lot of good options within the radius, but having just came from fishing the Hobie event in Broken Bow I didn’t have much time to pre-fish, so picking some random place especially this time of year didn’t feel right. I was able to fish a couple hours on Tuesday and Wednesday and just checked a few baits. As soon as I would catch a fish I’d put that bait up and switch to something else. I got bit on 3 baits in practice.

Sam – I pre-fished 3 other lakes the last couple weeks, but with the shad kill I was skunked each outing. I went to Lake Atalanta for a couple hours the weekend before the tournament and caught a few 14s on a jig and chatterbait.

Carson – I went to Lake Sequoyah, I have a lot of time on the water there and feel very confident during a road runner style event.

Michael – I started off at Mills Creek on Table Rock. My research for spring time screamed this would be a good cove to fish and catch some big girls. It had a channel creek running into it. Deep banks and a feeder creek.

2. Did the big rain the night before affect your fishing area?

Dwain – Yes, but in a positive way. This time of year City Lake gets a lot of floating slime that really hampers fishing with moving baits. Well Tuesday pre-fishing it wasn’t that bad, and I caught a few fish on a crankbait, but the very next day it was so bad I couldn’t throw a crankbait at all. So the rain actually pushed some of that stuff on through with the current and let me actually fish a crankbait during the event.

Sam – With the rain I had planned for it to really help push the fish to the banks, I was wrong. I paddled around trying to figure out my next move and kept graphing fish in the 25-30ft range on steep drops.

Carson – The big rain the night before majorly affected the whole lake, with the white rivers running into it, the lake progressively got muddier throughout the day, so I tried to stay away from the mud line by fishing the very north end of the lake all day.

3. General approach that worked for you, techniques, etc,?

Dwain – I started out by demoralizing Kyle and Cole by catching 4 fish in the first 16 minutes within sight of them throwing the new Skirmish Baits AIM7 jerkbait in my Batey Shad color. You have to set the tone for the day, you know? In all seriousness, I couldn’t believe those fish were in that spot, much less eating the jerk bait on command, but it really did help me mentally the rest of the day to pull up and look like I knew they’d be there. Then that stopped working, and I didn’t catch the 5th fish for a while, finally figuring out what I mentioned above that the slime wasn’t as heavy and I could throw my crankbait. Well I caught one pretty quickly on that for my limit fish. I culled all of those early fish starting with a 17” on a ned rig at 10:33 am, and then one about every half hour up to an hour, to cull to my final total at 1:06 pm. The last 4 culls were all on the flat sided crankbait, wasn’t one of mine, didn’t even have custom paint on it. The fish were off the edges of spawning flats feeding up as they waited on “go time” which isn’t far off if these warm temperatures hold up at least for these smaller lakes anyway.

Sam – The only option I had at that point battling the crosswind was to tie on an A-Rig.

Carson – I threw a jig all day long around lay downs and rock and that is what I threw all day long basically, never even had a ned rig tied on.

Michael – After 5 hours and only 1 good fish to show for it that creek wasn’t producing for me. When I arrived at my 2nd location the rain pretty much blew out every spot I fished the week before. I found a bank wall with the same setup and started to throw a jig. My 3rd cast and I got bumped, was the only thing I needed to know I was in the right area and throwing the right color. I also caught them early on a jerkbait and on a craw colored crankbait.

4. What was your key fish and anything special about the catch?

Dwain – After my jerk bait bite stopped working, I picked up the ned and caught a17” fish that was in my final bag, but that didn’t produce anything else, and I had just stopped running that down a full bank to give it a legitimate shot to work, and when I pulled off that bank I picked up the flat sided crankbait and hurled it out in a slightly deeper spot where fish have been known to stage and caught the 21.50″ which gave me confidence to keep throwing that flat side. From there I caught one almost an hour later that was a good cull, then about 30 minutes later again with a good cull, then another hour and my final cull all on that same flat sided bait. The main key was just believing that they’d show up as the day went on, and having the confidence to wait them out.

Carson – I had 2 key fish actually, very late in the day I decided to do something big, I have a spot I can go to and normally feel good about catching a good one or two but wasn’t confident because of the rain, I said screw it and made the move anyways, that’s where I caught a 19.75″ and a 17.75″ in the last hour of the whole thing, bumped me from 74 inches to 86.25″ total.

Sam – I’d like to say my key fish was catching my 20.25″ but it had to be the first fish I caught that was a 16” it helped confirm (1) Those were definitely bass at 30ft and (2) they were hungry. That bite was hot from 10:15 ’till about 12:30. I caught about 11 fish in that timeframe doing that. I didn’t get a single bite before then or after that.

Michael – Highlights of my day was watching a coyote swim across the cove chasing a deer and getting checked by the game warden for the first time ever.

Dwain Batey’s Big Bass, I like how the top fins are at full attention!

Heavy Hitters Update

Well, I’m off to a bad start on this one. Need to get a good fish in the Road Runner to get things going. Here are the current standings, with Cole and Brian and Jason off to a great start! Who will be crowned this year’s Heavy Hitter? Still time to enter since you have 7 events left and only need best 5, check out the rules and how to sign up.

Next Up – MLF on Beaver Lake

How many “Beaver Lake Specials” can you catch? Those 12-inchers can win this one for you if there are enough of them. Get ready and see you on the water.

2021 Heavy Hitters Pool – Roster and Rules

Welcome to the 2021 NSKA Heavy Hitters – a tournament season long Big Bass showdown combining your best five bass from the 2021 NSKA NWA tournament season.

GET SIGNED UP NOWOnly takes a few moments with Paypal.

Get ready to catch some of these in 2021!

Heard a story about someone who didn’t enter last year who might have won…but I didn’t do the math. hehe Don’t be that angler, get signed up!

How to join the Roster of Competitors to WIN Bragging Rights and $$

  1. Enter the Heavy Hitter competition by sending your entry of $10 to commissioner Roy Roberts. The sooner you enter, the sooner you can start counting your big fish. Visit the Heavy Hitters PayPal pool site to register and pay your entry. Sign up at any point in the season, but you MUST sign up before counting a bass from an NSKA NWA event. Don’t miss out on the Roadrunner, which always has some tanks caught.
  2. Your name goes on the Roster of competitors below once registered. Results and rankings will be kept and displayed on Kayakfishingfocus.com all season long.
  3. Compete in NSKA NWA regular season AOY events and catch some big bass. Your biggest fish from each regular season event can count toward your limit. There are EIGHT eligible events and you take the best fish from five of them to create your largest limit.
  4. Winner takes all the $$, the glory and the title of NSKA NWA Heavy Hitter Champion.

2021 NWA NSKA Heavy Hitters

Roy Roberts

Cole Sikes

Jason Kincy

Terril Lawton

Ryan Paskiewicz

Jonathan Swann

Josh Howard

Nathan Henthorn

Vince Minnick

Chris Needham

Josh Meyers

James Haberle

Jeriamy Vann

Taylor Frizzell

Jason Coleman

Brian Lookadoo

Baron Meek

Trevor Snider

Kyle Long

Devon Esry

Danny Dutton



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