Hot summer and catfish fishing go to together




One way of catching catfish is watching a brightly colored cork bob until it disappears. That’s how Chad Ferguson catches a lot of channel. Ferguson is a Dallas-area fishing guide who works hard to keep his customers in the strike zone.

“I’m fishing with C.J.’s Catfish Punch Bait under a slip cork in shallow water, and there are still plenty of fish shallow,” says Ferguson. Punch bait is a commercial product with a strong odor to attract the fish, and the bait adheres well to a treble hook.

“We’re covering a lot of water until we catch that first fish,” said Ferguson. “When you catch one, that usually means you can load the boat. Start shallow and move deeper if you don’t find them shallow.”

One of Ferguson’s favorite lakes is Cedar Creek. His guide service information is at txcatfishguide.com or call 817-522-3804.

Catfish fishing guides Michael Littlejohn and his wife, Teri, like to use whole grain fermented wheat to bait catfish into their fishing holes. A catfish’s sense of smell rivals that of a shark. By baiting spots daily, anglers can attract fish from long distances and keep them near the baited area.

On # 6 treble hooks the Littlejohns fish with cheddar cheese punch bait. “Ninety-five percent of the time, we limit out on nice channel and blue catfish,” said Michael. He and his wife are best known for catching giant blue cats, and one of their clients set a new Lake Tawakoni record on Feb. 15, 2014. The fish, caught by Jody Jenkins of Wichita Falls, weighed 871/2 pounds.

Littlejohn said they use light tackle to make the fight more enjoyable when catching smaller, eating-sized catfish this time of year. More information is available at tawakoniguideservice.com or call 903-441-3937.

At Lake Fork, which is best known for big bass, fishing guide Stan Kuhn baits his fishing spots with range cubes (livestock feed) and uses Ernest Poletown Catfish Bait to catch the fish. Kuhn catches lots of them. In June Kuhn’s boat tallied about 1,000 catfish. Last year, he set a yearly record with over 4,700 fish.

“Summer is the best time to catch numbers of catfish,” said Kuhn. “Right now, the fish are pretty deep at Lake Fork. I’m catching them in water about 35 feet deep.” Kuhn’s website is thecatfishguide.com or call him at 903-383-2921.




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Lake Fork

Fishing Report from TPWD (Apr. 23)

GOOD. Water Stained; 63 degrees; 0.25 feet below pool. Bass fishing has been slow with some early morning catching near areas with the shad spawn using DieZel chatterbaits. Once bass move off the shore, switch to squarebill crankbaits in 3-5 feet, or Yum dingers and flukes around grass, and frogs in the grass. Report by Marc Mitchell, Lake Fork Guide Service. Black bass are post spawn and the top water bite is on! Frog patterns are working in the shallow vegetation. The crappie are moving shallow, small clousers are producing well. Large bream have moved shallow, wooly buggers are producing good fish. Channel catfish are cruising 2-4 feet biting clousers. Report by Guide Alex Guthrie, Fly Fish Fork Guide Service. The crappie fishing on Lake Fork is moving rapidly into the post spawn pattern. Fish are loading up on brush piles, ledges, underwater bridges, road beds, bridges and post spawn trees in 14-25 feet. The fish are hungry after the spawn and they will bite just about anything you out in front of them. We are having great luck with small hand tied jigs but minnows and soft plastics will also work for the next few months until water temps heat way up. Seeing a lot of small fish this year mixed in so some days you will catch and release a lot of short fish. Report by Jacky Wiggins, Jacky Wiggins Guide Service.

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