A Family Tradition: Caddo Lake & Big Bass
This is Passport to Texas
For thirty-nine year old Keith Burns, fishing isn’t just a hobby, it’s a family tradition. His grandfather and father both grew up fishing on Caddo Lake in East Texas.
Now it’s our turn to take our kids, or nephews or whatever down there and start fishing.
Burns fishes every free chance he gets. But fishing hasn’t been so good on Caddo Lake for several years because of the invasive giant salvinia plant.
You just kind of had to fish where there was open water. You couldn’t really fish some of your favorite places because of the invasive aquatic life that was in there. I hate that stuff.
Then, flooding and a cold winter killed off some of the giant salvinia, allowing Burns to really fish again. In fact, Burns didn’t just fish. This past March he caught a lake record 16.17-pound sharelunker bass.
I can’t tell you what it meant for me to do that. With the history our family has on that lake, it just meant the world to me.
Burns says he now wants giant salvinia to get off his lakes, and he wants everyone to help make that a reality.
We’ve got to take five minutes and check our trailers and make sure we don’t have any hitchhikers we are taking to another lake and depositing there.
That’s some good advice from a great fisherman.
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That’s our show… we had research and writing help from Gretchen Mahan…the Sport Fish and Wildlife Restoration program supports our series… For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.