Special: THE
FISHING ISSUE
Field & Stream Magazine
Issue: April 1999

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FRANKLIN NC --For about
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The occasional run of
fast water is frisky without being dangerous.
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fairly
accessible as it follows State Route 28 north from Franklin.
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stream
mitigation coordinator. '"The Little T is probably one of the better
[smallmouth] streams we have. But most of
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and
operator of the Great mokey Mountain Fish Camp and Safaris.
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Anselmo says the secret to
hooking into a Little Tennessee smallmouth is a simple one. Take an
ultralight spinning rig and spool it with 4- or 6-pound line. Stuff a
handful of crawfish imitators into your vest, crawl into a canoe, and
head downstream.
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out. Cast slightly upstream and work the lure down and through the slack water. Use a fairly slow retrieve but don't hesitate to try different speeds. "I love to fish right behind a shoal," said Anselmo. “And I like to hit those swirls behind the rocks. The smallmouths lie in there and wait for food to wash by. Wherever you have a little swirl, try to make a cast there."
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Lure
selection is simple. Anselmo rarely strays from the Rebel Wee-Crawfish
with a green back and orange belly. "I probably fish with that 90
percent of the time," he said. --gary garth |