
As I loaded my brand new 2018 Hobie Pro Angler 12, I was stoked to get on the water to test its mojo for the first time. We launched with overcast skies and no wind into glassy water at 7AM in Capel Cove. The plan was to paddle about 30 minutes to our first spot and test the reaction bite in 10 to 15 foot deep water in hopes of finding some bass that had moved up from the depths to feed.
After an hour with no action, we moved to my next spot off a main lake point with nice structure and brush piles. I was sitting in about 10 ft of water casting into out 20-25 feet, when BAM!, I landed a nice 2.5lb largemouth on a drop shot. Not a bad way to break in the new yak.
A few casts later, I shook the tip a few times with a slow drag and felt the line slowly coming my way. I reeled up and hooked another one that came unpinned as the bass broke the surface. Now I knew we found a solid pattern. Within a short period, we landed several more off the deep point.
The fish were holding in 20-25ft water and responding to a painfully slow presentation. After watching the bass relate to bottom structure on my electronics for a good hour, I decided to switch over to a green/brown jig tipped with a strike king rage craw as a trailer. Within a few casts slow dragging the bottom, I got hammered, and I mean hammered. It's rare that I get hit that hard on a jig bite. That fish turned out to be the biggest of the day at just over 3.5lbs.
As the day went on, the bite slowed down. We managed to land 9 in total for about 10 pounds. As we talked to others heading back to the ramp, it sounded like it was generally a tough bite overall. Water temps remained in the 55-56 degree range with only about a foot of visibility. All of