Great White Buffalo

Posted By on May 31, 2009

Strange events on yesterday’s trip to the flats.

First of all, the lake is recovering nicely from the May rains. At this writing it is 9″ high (@ 633.23′ above sea level – normal pool is 632.5) and the Corps has maintained a steady release of 373 cfs from the dam since May 21st. Water clarity is improving daily and is now back to where it should be for this time of year.

The carp are finishing their post-spawn feeding frenzy and settling into a “normal” summer routine. We’re wading the outside edges of shoreline vegetation to target fish tailing in calf-to-knee deep water. Large numbers of smaller carp can be seen along the flooded shorelines but they are impossible to cast to without hanging up. We probably saw 200 fish yesterday and had shots at about 50 (that we actually eating and not cruising). The “deep” version of the CoyoteCarp was the fly of the day – it could get down quickly in the 18″ or so of water but still not land with too much SPLAT.

Smallmouth buffalo are all over the outer edges of the flats and we had several good opportunities. The more I target these fish, the more they live up to the analogy of the permit of the freshwater flats. They’re SPOOKY, tough to hook, and when (or if) they eat is totally up to them. If the carp has a strike zone the size of a volleyball, then the buff has one the size of a golf ball! That fly has to be RIGHT in front of their face (actually a little under their face given the shape of their Hoover mouth). The fish pictured went just over 13.5 lbs.
Now for the “strangeness.” The picture of the scale on my dear, old, trusty boga is the last image of it in my possession. I knew this was a LARGE fish – worthy of some kind of state or maybe IGFA record so I dug out the boga, weighed and measured the fish, and had a few pics snapped. At one point I had the boga in one hand (attached to fish) and held the fish with my other hand under its belly. One big FLOP and all those 13.5 pounds went on the lanyard which was around my wrist. The jaws must have pierced the skin because when the fish hit the water, he was still attached to the boga but the boga was not attached to ME! By the time I realized what had happened, the buff was swimming off the flat. I noticed that he stopped and tailed (as if rubbing something off his face). We searched for some time with no luck and clouded the water so I’m going back soon to search again. If you happen to catch a large buff with a 15# boga grip hanging off its head, please send it back – I’ll reward your efforts with a box of flies!
July is almost booked but I still have several days open in June – call or email to reserve a date (940)391-9480

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Comments

2 Responses to “Great White Buffalo”

  1. jonathan says:

    Thats a big buffalo, all the ones i have seen sem to have a greyish cast to them.

  2. Joel says:

    There are actually two species of buffalo in Ray Roberts, the smallmouth (pictured) and the black buffalo. You’re right – they have a pale, greyish cast to them and the THICKEST coat of slime you’ve ever seen!
    The blacks seem to prefer more rocky areas with clearer water. Both are a great challenge on the fly and make carp look down right EASY!

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North Texas Fly Fishing Adventures with Joel Hays

Imagine wading through ten inches of clear water,trying to be as quiet as possible. Fifty feet ahead is a pod of large fish "tailing" on the flat. You strip out fly line, make the cast, and pull your fly in front of the lead fish. After agonizing seconds the fish spots the fly, rushes forward for a quick grab, and feels the hook. The silence is broken as the fish accelerates across the flat, quickly exposing backing on your screaming reel. Sounds like a great day on the coast, or even an exotic bonefish flat, right? Actually it's a great description of the usual day my clients have fishing for Carp on the flats of Lake Ray Roberts where many clients are blown away by the water clarity and the actual ability to sight cast along miles of flats. Big spooky fish in shallow water. They fight and tail like Redfish and can sometimes rival Bonefish in nervousness. This is an EXCELLENT WAY to hone your flats fishing skills and test your "eyes" where it's more about stalking the fish than simply stumbling upon them. You will be a better flats angler!