Chicago Sun-Times

’MOUTH-WATERING DAY ON KANKAKEE

Matt Mullady and I go with the flow

- DALE BOWMAN dbowman@suntimes.com | @BowmanOuts­ide

KANKAKEE, Ill. — Some days are meant to sit in a boat, discussing life and family, spotting a bald eagle, listening to Baltimore orioles and watching the Kankakee River flow. And fishing.

I had that Thursday with Matt Mullady.

My first smallmouth bass came within a couple of casts in dense fog.

“When that sun comes out, the party is over,” Mullady said.

Instead, unbelievab­ly, at all five pools, I caught smallmouth on topwater, including the best (18½ inches) just before noon in full sun.

After leaving Bird Park, at the first pool, Mullady switched my SkitterPop to a bigger Chug Bug. I noticed he didn’t use a Palomar knot but a doubleimpr­oved clinch knot.

“That way I don’t have to put all those hooks through,” he explained.

After my first cast, Mullady suggested an adjustment.

“As Leo Pachner told me, ‘Never be afraid to chug and pause. It’s not a rip and twist; it’s a subtle chug,’ ’’ Mullady said.

Hall of Famer Pachner was notable for fishing products, including the Minnow Saver Hook.

We fished each pool until the fish quit chasing. I’ll fish topwaters until I can’t. Mullady experiment­ed more, using a ThunderSti­ck, Chug Bug, fluke, homemade topwater and hand-tied white streamer.

At our second pool, he said, “I turn off the outboard when I approach these pools, then use my trolling motor and put down the anchor quietly. These fish will spook.”

Even after the fog burned off, fish remained active.

When one spectacula­rly missed, Mullady said, “If you slowed that down to slow-mo, you would see that it whacked at it with its tail, like dolphins do mullet to stun them.”

When Mullady moved us to full sun, I caught my biggest smallmouth of the day. Even better was Mullady backhandin­g a cast with his fly rod under shoreline branches, then boating a good smallmouth.

“My day is made,” he said. “I put it in there where I wanted, and I was rewarded. And on my own fly.”

His artistic side — lure-making, fly-tying and now nature artwork — struck me.

“I’ve gotten into art, especially since the pandemic,” he said. “As a kid, on rainy days, I had a sketch pad for something to do. It has helped me in my painting business, too.” It was time.

We hit one more spot and caught two to total 14 on the morning.

Mullady no longer guides, but he may be reached at (815) 932-6507.

Stray cast

Johnny Cueto pitching is like a buck steelhead navigating high rapids.

 ?? DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Matt Mullady works a smallmouth bass, caught on his hand-tied white streamer, to his boat on the Kankakee River.
DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES Matt Mullady works a smallmouth bass, caught on his hand-tied white streamer, to his boat on the Kankakee River.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States