John Cachel

Male

near Chicago, Illinois

United States

Profile Information:

What type of animal is a bluegill?
I wish! ....Dream to own a pond with monster bluegills!
What state are you from? This can help us get together for fishing trips!
Illinois

Comment Wall:

  • Bruce Condello

    Welcome, John!

    Thanks for joining Big Bluegill!

    We hope that you'll really like the photos, videos and discussion. I see you've joined in already. Good job.

    Let us know what you like or don't like about the site.

    Bruce
  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    I also like to fish deep for big Gills in clear waters....check out my blog on Deep water spoon presentation.
  • Bruce Condello

    Have you tried to click on the little "photo" icon that's in the top of the box? That should prompt a window to popup with your computer's pictures. Then you just double click on the picture of choice. Let me know if this doesn't work.
  • Bruce Condello

    Yes, I've read about the second biggest bluegill. Fascinating story!!

    I even sent a request to the author to use the story on this website, but have not gotten a return email..

    Maybe I'll try again.
  • SteveGibson

    John, I have no idea. I've never caught a bluegill with red eyes. Perhaps it's another member of the panfish family?
  • BlueGill Godzilla ><((º>

    Sorry to say that I have no pictures of the large Bluegill. I was fishing at Ketona Lakes by Birmingham Alabama in 1958 with my uncle and some of his fishing buddies. The good old boys from Alabama fished for fun and table food. I baited with a red worm on some very light test line and threw the line into the very clear water. I was using a cane pole and a quill for a bobber. This was the type of fishing that was done in this part of the country. The group that I was with caught many good size Bluegills that day but mine was the biggest. No one had a camera with them, so on the way from the lake we stopped at a local gas station to buy some gas. They sold groceries and had a meat scale and my Uncle Bob ask the attendant if they could weigh my fish. I assume that the scale was close to being accurate, the Gill weighed at 2 pounds and 9 ounces. Uncle Bob brought all of the fish home that day and cleaned them so that my Aunt Mae could cook them for our supper. I will never forget that summer in Birmingham Alabama that I spent with my Uncle Bob and Aunt Mae. I still have the memories of that great summer as a young boy learning how to fish and spending quality time with loved ones.
  • IceWarriorGill

    Hi John, thanks for the kind comments about my Pumpkinseed mount!! They really put up a fight no matter what their size!!!
  • Dave Bausano

    John - I was just reading a discussion you replied to regarding personal best fish, and i was wondering where in Southern Illinois your son caught his redear? If it is a secret honey hole, don't feel obligated to tell me. I'm mostly just curious.

    Most of my family, and my wife's entire family, are spread throughout the area, so we make it up there a couple of times a year.
  • Dave Bausano

    That's a big redear for that area. I drive through Staunton on Route 4 every time I get back to visit my Grandma. She lives in Carlinville. Whenever we stay with her, we fish a small private lake that we are members of near Beaver Dam State Park called Lake Rinaker. It has a good population of bluegill that are pretty good sized but no monsters. Used to catch quite a few redear as well, but the lake does get hit pretty hard.

    I agree with about the farm ponds - they can be quite productive. My father-in-law is a farmer in Jerseyville and he' got a number of small ponds that he does pretty good at.

    Do you make it down there very often?
  • Jim Gronaw

    Hey John...that is so cool that you have that 1983 issue of In Fisherman about the pond gills! Wow! My son was only 3 yrs old at the time. Thanks for rminding me how timeless and pure bluegill fishing really is.
  • Jim Gronaw

    Hey John...we didn't get any bluegill there on this trip, they tend to be shallower than the perch. Have gotten some very fine gills there in the past from 10 to 11 1/2 inches.
  • Dale Fortin

    what kind of fosils did you find?
  • John Sheehan

    Nice Fish Photos John ! Dig your Kayak!
  • Jim Gronaw

    Hey John...thank you for the kind words!
  • Bob Lusk

    Hey John,
    Thanks, buddy! We are having lots of fun with Richmond Mill. Doing some basic fisheries management and some outside the box thinking and now we are beginning to see the results.