Hennepin Canal Report – June 14

Summer is already underway, but I must catch up on one final spring stop. While the bass were not abundant on this evening bike ride, Mother Nature was putting on a quite a display via the cottonwood trees. Read on for the rest of the story.

7:42pm – Avoiding a shutout with an 11″ bass on a Senko wacky rig

Stats
Date: June 14
Location: Hennepin Canal
Time: 6:50pm-8:05pm
Totals: 2 bass, 1 bluegill
Weather: Partly cloudy/calm, 80-77F
Lures: 5” Yamasenko wacky rig (blue pearl/black hologram) – 2 bass, 1 bluegill
Top Bass: 1-10 Senko (only bass at 12” or better)

Starting lineup lure #1 – Spro frog and all it reeled in was clumps of cottonwood fuzz

Tune of the Trip
Junior’s Farm – Paul McCartney & Wings (1974)
“Said he was hoping for a fall of snow.”
Winter is the furthest thing from my mind as summer nears but the abundance of cottonwood fuzz in the air is reminiscent of that other white stuff.

7:48pm – Top Bass at 1-10 (16″) on a Senko wacky rig

Notes and Nonsense

Frog Fail – I spent the first hour of my ride working over an area with heavy aquatic vegetation and quality bank access. I would estimate that the stretch has solid weed mat coverage on fifty percent or more of the surface. Depth is shallow, even for The Canal and the water level remains low as it has for a few years. This combination screams topwater frog as many other presentations would be frustrating. However, one hour of casting my Spro frog resulted in zero strikes.

Starting lineup lure #2 – The Senko wacky rig saved the day

Senko Save – Pedaling to an adjacent section with a lock allowed me to avoid a shutout as a Senko wacky rig fooled a pair of bass (and a bluegill). Most locks feature a strong current and I typically cast the Senko upstream or across the lock and let it drift with the flow while giving it an occasional lift or pop to move it vertically in the water column.

Cottonwood fuzz that does not get through to the spool accumualates at the line guide

Bumper Crop – Cottonwood fuzz is a regular bane of anglers this time of the year as it it nearly impossible to pick off the line. However, during my previous four years of fishing The Canal I don’t recall observing a boom in fuzz production quite like this year. The stuff is everywhere as numerous cottonwoods line the banks of the old waterway. I am curious if this year’s increase is the result of a natural phenomenon termed “masting” where trees produce a large crop of seeds. It recalls a year in the 1990s while I lived on Lake Bracken and it was “raining” acorns.

The result of cottonwood clumps, a backlash that had to be cut out and the need to respool the reel

Well, it is on to summer but I’m not sure when I will get back on the water as work is keeping me busy and more than a bit wore out. In the meantime, there’s one more Trip Tunes feature in the works. Talk to you later. Troy

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