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Grain

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Discussion starter · #1 ·
This time I decided to visit a section of the river I know to hold a school of smallmouth and try to get to them. 1 pm launch time is probably less than ideal, but it is was it is. I got a strike on a fluke and hooked up something almost immediately, long before I reached the spot, but the fish shook it off halfway to the yak. However, I saw a bass follow the lure back to the boat and threw a dark sleeper in front of him. He ignored it, but a 20" pike materialized out of nowhere and picked it up. I spent next few hours on 1/8th mile stretch of the river trying to catch a smallie. They completely ignored al bottom contact lures, and topwater, would follow some moving lures, I've had some hits and misses, probably from smaller fish, but in the end I paddled away empty-handed. Looked like they were more curious than hungry. May be it's was too hot, or they are pressured - it's a kayak only spot, but I think it's well-known. Or may be I just did not offer them the right lure.
I then paddled to a different stretch of the river and spent some time casting to the structure. Caught a few fish, including the aforementioned weird bass with malformed spine and headed home, tired and reasonably satisfied, and so ready for a cold beer.

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I applaud you for your ability to fish the Des Plaines River. I stopped off at the Columbia Woods park off of Willow Springs road. The river was massive, like 40 yards wide it appeared. The bank was layered with 6inches of mud. Current strong and fast. In other words, how do you fish this beast of a river????
 
Discussion starter · #7 ·
I applaud you for your ability to fish the Des Plaines River. I stopped off at the Columbia Woods park off of Willow Springs road. The river was massive, like 40 yards wide it appeared. The bank was layered with 6inches of mud. Current strong and fast. In other words, how do you fish this beast of a river????
I live about 30 miles upstream as the crow flies, probably 50-60 milies as the river flows. DPR is much more narrow and tame up here. That is not to say that it is always navigable - right now it's about perfect, but a series of heavy rains may make it swell by feet literally overnight and turn it into a churning monster. Then you have to sit it out for a week or two or three.
 
Yeah up in Lake County I can see the bottom when I pass over at 60 or 176. Even when all that rain came through I feel it only swelled for a day or two and now it's back to gin clear and shallow.
 
One of the reasons they dammed the DPR way back was to slow it down so it wouldn't run dry during the summer. Dry rivers aren't good for recreation. I've seen photos of the DPR in pre-dam days & you could step over it.

With the dams gone the river drains faster so rain water doesn't stick around like it used to. However, more water makes it to the river because so much of its flood plain is paved over.

I'm sure Aux could tell us more...
 
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