RECORD BUSTERS – January/February 2022

TEXAS FRESHWATER by Matt Williams – January/February 2022
December 28, 2021
TEXAS WHITETAILS by Larry Weishuhn – January/February 2022
December 28, 2021

Five Lakes That Could Set a New Bass Record

JANUARY 24, 2022 marks the 30th anniversary of Texas’s state record bass. Many TF&G readers weren’t even born when the 18.18-pound largemouth gobbled up the live shiner Barry St. Clair of Athens was dabbling for crappie near the Lake Fork dam on that fateful winter day in 1992, but that’s beside the point.

The focus here is it is high time that Texas’s most coveted freshwater fishing record find a new owner. Nothing against St. Clair. Records are made to be broken, and this one has been gathering dust way too long. 

In random order, here are my picks for the lakes most likely to kick out Texas’ next state record:

O.H. Ivie

O.H. Ivie had the hot hand for Legacy Lunkers last year with 12 entries, including six 13 pounders, four 14 pounders, a 15 pounder and a 16.40 pounder. The 16 pounder ranks as the No. 16 heaviest Texas bass of all-time and the biggest fish reported statewide since 1999. One fat crappie or channel cat in its belly and that fish would have been knocking at the state record’s door.

Ivie’s bass fishery has a strong Florida-strain influence. The fish are currently enjoying some great habitat and abundant forage, which are three key ingredients to creating and sustaining a trophy fishery. It’s spooky to think what might happen there if the lake catches some water and stays in good shape over the next few years.

Lake Fork

It isn’t the big bass factory it once was, but only a fool would rule out “Mother Fork” as a state record contender.

The lake maintains a heavy Florida-strain influence, thanks to heavy annual stockings. The fish continue to thrive despite aging habitat and heavy fishing pressure, due in part to a restrictive 16- to 24-inch slot limit.

The lake has produced seven of the state’s Top 10 bass, 30 of the Top 50 and 264 Toyota Legacy ShareLunkers since 1986. Its most recent Top 50 entry was a 15.48 pounder in March 2018. Fork produced a pair Legacy ShareLunkers in 2021, including a 15.27 pounder last March that was subsequently released back into the lake.

Naconiche

First opened to fishing in September 2012, 692-acre Naconiche has been managed for trophy bass from the get-go with heavy stockings of Florida-strain largemouths. This includes hundreds of hatchery brood fish retirees (some close to seven pounds) and thousands of Toyota ShareLunker offspring. The lake has a 16-inch maximum length limit to protect big ones, a bounty of forage to keep them plump and a jungle of great habitat where they can thrive.

Naconiche produced a lake record 14.16 pounder in July 2016. Surprisingly, it has yielded only one Legacy Lunker, a 13.06 pounder in 2017. Fisheries biologists are predicting a big bass explosion in the near future as more year classes come of age and reach trophy size. With the genetics that are finning around out there, look out.

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Alan Henry

Too much big bass history here to count Alan Henry out. The 2,900-acre West Texas gem is tied with Sam Rayburn as the state’s third leading producer of Legacy Lunkers (29) behind O.H. Ivie (41) and Lake Fork (264). It was the state’s hottest lake for whoppers in 2005-06 with 18 Legacy Lunkers, including the current lake record of 15 pounds. ’Henry’s most recent bruisers came in 2020 when it produced a pair of Legacy class fish for the same angler less than a month apart, the heaviest weighing 14.36 pounds.

Sam Rayburn

Well-known as one of the country’s top tournament lakes, Sam Rayburn is a massive reservoir with a strong Florida bass influence, abundant forage base and historically great habitat. With more than 114,000 surface acres to roam, one can’t help but ponder thoughts of giants finning around out there that have never seen a lure.

Plenty of fat girls have been reeled in, including a May 1997 lake record of 16.80 pounds and 29 Legacy Lunkers ranging from 13 pounds to 14.32. Additionally, there was a 14.94 pounder that died in February 2020, soon after being weighed on certified scales.

Several tournament anglers have lived big bass nirvana on ‘Rayburn in recent times, including a trio of single day tournament catches topping the 40-pound mark on five fish. The most remarkable belongs to Danny Iles and Brian Shook, who weighed in 49.31 during a Texas Team Trail event in February 2020. It may be the heaviest limit of bass ever documented in an organized team tournament on U.S. public waters.

DIGITAL BONUS

2022 ShareLunker Season


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—story by MATT WILLIAMS

 

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