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The beautiful thing about fishing
is you can almost always find a good spot. Lake Cumberland fishing
is the way to go in Kentucky.
The stripped bass is a fish
that lives most of the year in the ocean, but in the spring moves
into fresh water rivers to spawn. As an experiment, many years
ago, some of these fish were stocked into inland lakes. The experiment
was quite a success. Locked into the lakes and safe from the
natural predators of the ocean waters, the stripped bass flourished
and many grew into monster fish far surpassing the normal size
of their spawning ocean going cousins.
One such lake where the stripped
bass have flourished is Lake Cumberland in Southern Kentucky.
This monster manmade lake spans 63,000 acres and has 1,255 miles
of shoreline. It is 101 miles long and 1 mile wide at its widest
point. The average depth is 90 feet. That is plenty of water
to grow some pretty big stripped bass. There is enough water
contained in Lake Cumberland to cover the entire state of Kentucky
with almost three inches of water.
Lake Cumberland fishing is
just one of the things that draws almost 4 million vacationers
per year to Southern Kentucky. There are two State Parks that
encompass the lake and many towns close to its banks that cater
to vacationers and fishermen alike. Although stripped bass are
one of the major attractions of the lake, it is by no means the
only type of fishing found there. In fact, no less than seven
different Kentucky state records have been pulled from the waters
of Lake Cumberland.
These record catches include
brown trout, lake trout, rainbow trout, sauger, sturgeon, and
walleye. The state record stripped bass weighed in at a little
over 58 pounds. Not many lakes can boast such a number of lunker
records. The fact that many fishermen around the country are
not that familiar with the fishing potential of Lake Cumberland
is one of the secrets of its success. Although not exactly a
secret spot, it has not been subject to the tremendous fishing
pressure of other lakes. This is a very good thing, too.
It is the stripped bass fishing
at Lake Cumberland that makes it such an interesting story. It
is an example of a man made body of water stocked with a non-native
fish to produce a fishing experience that rivals anything Mother
Nature put together on her own. Lake Cumberland was created by
the putting a dam across the Cumberland River. The reason for
doing this was flood control and hydroelectric power. They didn't
do it to create one of the best fishing experiences in the United
States. Most fishermen do not care what their reasons were. They
are just happy it was done.
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