Chicago Sun-Times

GOT IT MADE IN THE BRAID’

Opening day at the cooling lake felt like 1990s

- DALE BOWMAN OUTDOORS dbowman@suntimes.com | @BowmanOuts­ide

Steps into walking out the south riprap on opening day at Braidwood Lake, I saw an angler fighting a chunky largemouth bass only to see it come unhinged before I could grab my cell.

Just beyond him, I climbed down and caught a 2-inch shad first cast with a popper bigger than the fish. I kept it and the one I caught four casts later.

The opener at the cooling lake in southweste­rn Will County felt like the 1990s. When I arrived at 5:30 a.m., the line reached Kankakee Road. When I parked, the line still reached there.

James Baranski, who fished with Steve McClone of Moonpie Outdoors, had his four-year string of being first in line broken. Ten boats were in line already on “Braidwood Eve.” (The Braidwood opener is that big of a deal.)

Braidwood regular Pete Banach messaged, “Normally, at the spot I fish, I have a handful of boats show up or stop by. I counted 14 at one point.” The long lines were worth it. Even with the pressure, Banach noted, “Everyone still caught fish.”

He found 80 degrees on the hot side; 68-70, mid-pool; 58, cold side.

Nick Turrise landed the first fish I saw caught in the southwest corner. The 3.68-pound hybrid striped bass hit a white spinner bait. His group does an informal contest, hence the precise weight.

Besides the crowds, the day’s story was hybrid stripers.

Bob Johnson, who fished the opener with Joel Wilson, emailed, “I forgot how hard-fighting the hybrid stripers are and saw four of them caught between our boat and others toward the end of the day.’’

Johnson emailed that they boated largemouth, a smallmouth bass, hybrid stripers and “even a couple of hungry bluegills on several baits.” They used jigs/trailers, crankbaits, including lipless, jerkbaits and spinner baits, but Ned rigs “caught the variety.”

Banach, who had three anglers with him, messaged that they boated 47 bass. eight hybrid stripers and a few catfish.

Baranski and McClone found spinner baits and ChatterBai­ts were the most effective with the cold side better for big bass. McClone caught a 5-pound largemouth.

Next to me on the west riprap, Ramon Martin waved me over when he caught a largemouth about 3 pounds, dragging a creature bait on the bottom.

I couldn’t raise bass on the popper, so I switched to bait. First cast, with cut shad and a white jig, I caught a 17inch blue catfish, followed by its twin. Occasional­ly I cast a spinner, but my remaining fish, a mess of small channel catfish, came on redworms.

I enjoyed my three hours, then, “It was time.”

I ambled back, checking anglers. At home, I followed “How to Fillet a Blue Catfish Quickly Without Skinning” on YouTube. It was easy enough that I could do it. Our youngest and I destroyed the fillets.

But Johnson summed it up, “The best part of opening day is how enjoyable it is to just get on the water after another winter.”

Wild things

Many readers reported notable movements of sandhill cranes in the last week . . . . MaryLou Buchhaas messaged Sunday, “Migration time is here . . . a raft of lesser scaups [bluebills] on our Shorewood pond.”

Stray cast

Busch Light is only good for making beer batter, but the ad with Sarah McLachlan is the goods.

 ?? DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? A boat at dawn on opening day last Wednesday at Braidwood Lake. Besides the crowds, the day’s story was hybrid stripers.
DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES A boat at dawn on opening day last Wednesday at Braidwood Lake. Besides the crowds, the day’s story was hybrid stripers.
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 ?? DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Alejandro Mondragon, with a shopping cart, at Braidwood Lake.
DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES Alejandro Mondragon, with a shopping cart, at Braidwood Lake.

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