TopCat Canyon Lake Challenge
Large Mouth Bass
March - August, 2010
Certificate of Recognition and
$25 Canyon Tackle Box Gift Certificate
will be awarded to any angler who catches a Large Mouth Bass on rod and
reel that weighs 8 pounds or more by the girth x length weight formula
below.
No take home - catch and release only.
The rules are simple.
1. Catch a large mouth bass on Canyon Lake.
2. Photograph the fish at the catch site.
3. Using a cloth tape measure, measure and photograph
a: the length
b: the girth (around the largest part of the belly)
To check the weight, multiply
girth x girth x length and divide
by 800. This
will give you a close-enough-for-TopCat weight.
4. Photograph the release of the fish back into Canyon Lake.
5. Send photos and information to
Ray@TopCatFishing.Net
Include the following with your entry:
Name, Address, Phone, Catch Location, Date of Catch,
Witness
Names and Phone #, Measurements, Type of bait or lure
One entry per address, phone number, and/or email
address.
TopCat reserves the right to disqualify any entry that fails to
furnish any required information or photographs or any entry that is
deemed to have been caught at a location other than Canyon Lake or
any entry that is not released back into Canyon Lake or any entry
that was caught by any method other than rod and reel. Topcat also
reserves the right to end this challenge at any time.

|
The Herald Zeitung column that led to the
Challenge
Anglin' with Austin
March 4, 2010
Ray Austin
Welcome to another week of Anglin’ with Austin. I
hope everyone is enjoying the beautiful weather we’re having this week.
Van
Dam is the man. Kevin Van Dam just pulled the win at another Bass Master
Classic. Advanced fishing technologies combined with record setting
numbers of anglers has created new challenges in fishing tournaments.
Winning a tournament is the ultimate challenge and Van Dam has just won
another Classic. His check for the day? Half a million dollars. His
career earnings? Over four million dollars. His Bass Master Angler of
the Year awards? Five! Makes me want to put glitter all over my boat and
start chunking lures again.
In
the Bass Champs tournament this past weekend at Falcon the winning team
brought in a five-fish total of 41.9 pounds. Imagine the nerves at the
weigh in of the tournament when the 2nd,
3rd,
and 4th
place teams all finished above 40 pounds for five fish. Four spots,
twenty grand to the winner and five grand to second place and just .34
OUNCES between the two places…ouch! I think I’d be the guy at the back
of the line that keeps asking to reweigh my fish.
This
past full-moon weekend three more share lunkers were added to the Toyota
Share Lunker program. The three fish were hauled in on the same day on
three different lakes.
The
first toad of the day came off of Lake Austin and weighed in at 13.1
pounds. The second fish of the day came from one of my favorite road
trips, Lake Amistad. The Amistad lunker weighed in at 13.02 pounds,
barely clearing the 13 pound mark and entry into the program. The third
monster of the day was hauled in at O.H. Ivie, near San Angelo, and
weighed in at 13.03 pounds. According to reports, the Amistad fish beat
my state record largemouth bass by .25 inches in length, measuring 27.5
inches.
All
three fish were reported as healthy when they were picked up and made
the long trip from their home lakes to the Freshwater Fisheries Center
in Athens. Hopefully, they will create more Share Lunker offspring to be
spread amongst the qualifying lakes. If you look through the Texas Parks
and Wildlife stocking reports for the lakes you will see that several
lakes have been stocked with the share lunker offspring over the past
few years.
Since
October 2009, twelve of the 13-pound-plus largemouth bass have been
turned in to the 2010 Toyota Share Lunker program. Given the number of
anglers chasing largemouth bass this is just a drop in the bucket.
In my opinion, another category of awards
should be available for the lakes that are a little harder to fish and
not blessed with the ability to grow these lunkers in large numbers. Our
own Canyon Lake is a good example. It does carry some nice largemouth
bass but an angler has to be determined, smart, or just plain lucky to
land anything over eight pounds. I’d like to encourage anyone that
catches one of these to do CP&R – catch, photo and release. I’ll even
put my money where my mouth is.
Between now and August, I’m offering a
TopCat-Canyon Lake Largemouth Bass Award to anyone who catches a
verifiable largemouth bass that weighs more than eight pounds. Those
that qualify will receive an unofficial but official-looking certificate
of achievement and (drum roll please) $25 gift certificate from Canyon
Tackle Box. Please visit my website
www.TopCatFishing.Net
for the fine print details and entry information.
Canyon
Lake will never be able to match the records set at the Forks, Amistads
and Ivies of the state but I’d like to recognize the effort and
dedication that goes into catching an equivalent eight pounder. Make
sure you have a cloth tape measure in your tackle box because you never
know when that monster will tie on.
  
TopCat Accepts

|