![]() ![]() ![]() I noticed that the stump line was in about three feet of water but there was a drop off next to the stump line that dropped quickly to six feet. This lake is loaded with stumps and the bass had been schooling around a particular area. “They eventually moved on so I moved into the area where they had been fishing. “There were a couple of other bass fishermen on the lake and they were picking up some schooling fish, nothing of any size,” Willis said. It was not until around 11:00 that his luck changed for the better. “A guy I work with has a friend who has been telling him about catching big bass on Kepler so I decided to give it a try,” said Willis.Īrriving at the lake around 7:00 Saturday morning, August 22, the lake nestled and virtually hidden in the hills of Bienville Parish, Willis spent several hours without catching a bass. There is one lake, however, that has quietly and without fanfare, been a quality bass producer since it was formed 63 years ago when Kepler Creek was impounded to form 2000 acre Kepler Creek Reservoir, locally known as Kepler Lake.īilly Willis, a 62-year-old bass angler from Ruston, has caught bass in virtually all these lakes but had not really tried for big bass on Kepler until this past weekend. ![]()
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