Monthly Archives: February 2023

How To Catch April Bass At Lay Lake with Brandon Rigon

     The warm days of late March and April really get the bass fisherman’s blood flowing, especially if you like hunting for bass.  Sight fishing is great right now and if you like trying to tempt a trophy bass to hit while watching her, nothing is more exciting.  But there are other options for catching bass now, too, and Lay Lake offers the best of all of them.

     Lay Lake is a 12,000 acre Coosa River reservoir about 35 miles south of Birmingham that was dammed by Alabama Power in 1914. It has many river and creek ledges with expansive flats and grass filled shallows.  Access is good and the channels are well marked.

     The Alabama Department of Natural Resources says Lay is a high quality bass fishery for both largemouth and Coosa spots with many fish of both species in the 18 inch range.  Bigger bass of both kinds are also in the lake and trophies are caught in it each year.  Tournament catches of five bass weighing 20 pounds are common and many of those limits will be all spots. 

     In the 2007 Bass Angler Information Team (BAIT) survey done by the DNR Lay placed eighth overall of the 22 lakes in the survey.  That placement was a combination of an 85 percent rate of angler success, 1.79 pound average bass weight and 5.86 pounds per angler day.  It also included an average big bass per tournament reported of 3.95 pounds and an average of 624 hours of fishing to catch a bass over five pounds.  Of bass weighed in 57 percent were spots and 43 percent largemouth.

     All those facts and numbers are interesting but really do not tell you how to catch bass on Lay right now.  But Brandon Ligon can help.  Brandon was born and raised in the Tuscaloosa area and Lay is one of his favorite lakes, especially when the bass are bedding. 

     When he graduated from high school Brandon had the chance to go to college on a baseball scholarship or fish most of the time. He chose fishing.  As a member of the Grammer Marine Fishing Team he fishes many local tournaments and trails. Last year he won the Woods and Waters Solo Trail point standings and has done well in many other tournaments on Lay Lake.

     After fishing a few tournaments with the West Alabama Bass Club Brandon started concentrating on pot tournaments.  C and H Sporting Goods in Northport supported him and helped him out with tackle and equipment and he fished more and more tournaments.  This year he is fishing the Bama BFL trail as well as many local tournaments.

     Brandon took me to Lay the first Thursday in March to show me how he catches bass there.  Although there was still snow on the shady banks from the big storm the weekend before we went and we were too early for bedding bass, we landed about ten bass in less than six hours.  Nine of them were spots and I was shocked at how hard they fought in the 50 degree water.  The first one I hooked I thought it had to be a hybrid or striper.

     Our best five bass that day would have weighed about 17 pounds and Brandon says that is not an unusual catch.  It would not have placed in most tournaments.  Now, three weeks later, Brandon would usually go for a limit early like we had then try to catch a kicker largemouth or two off the beds.  Our biggest bass was a four pound spot he caught so we really did not have the kicker you need to push your weight above the 20 pound mark to compete in tournaments.

     Sight fishing for bedding bass on Lay this time of year is Brandon’s favorite way to go after them.  He admits it can be frustrating and you have to spend many hours finding just one quality bedding bass you can catch. It takes days on the trolling motor looking in the shallows to locate enough to hope to put together a limit of them.

     On Lay Brandon says the largemouth like bedding areas with small openings that are better protected from the wind.  There are pockets everywhere that look good for bedding fish and most of them will hold some but the best area are well protected and will hold the biggest bass. The spots often bed in deeper water further out and Brandon concentrates on bedding largemouth.

     There are always some resident shallow water fish on Lay since there is so much cover and food for them.  The ones that do migrate seasonally don’t have to go far.  They might pull out to the nearest river or creek ledge but creek bass probably don’t go all the way out to the river.

     To start his hunt Brandon will pick a big creek like Cedar or Clear Creeks and look for small, protected pockets.  Finding a hard bottom back in one of them means bass should be bedding in the area.  Lay Lake bass like hard bottoms for bedding rather than the more common soft mud. You can find hard bottoms by watching the bank. Sand or pea gravel will often extend out from the visible part of the shoreline and bass will find it.

     The grass beds on the banks will also give you a clue as to what is on the bottom.  If there is a grassbed running along the bank and it suddenly has a gap it might be because the bottom changed from soft muck that the grass likes to pea gravel the bass like. Check out such gaps. Also watch for indentions in the grass beds. Often the contour of the grass will give you an idea where the bottom becomes harder.

     Brandon will ease along looking for the little things that gives the beds themselves away. Often there will be a light spot on a darker bottom where the bass have fanned away surface debris.  Sometimes he will spot a shell or a small rock that shows up because the bass have fanned the mud on the surface of the hard bottom away from it.  He also watches for the dark shape of a bass and the black tip on the tail but the bass themselves are much harder to spot, even when the water is clear.

     Another clue is to see baitfish jumping or scooting away as a bass chases them off the bed.  You might see gills flare or the white side of a bass as it turns to run baitfish off.  All these indications of beds are easier to spot if you have good sunglasses and Brandon says they are critical to spotting the fish once he finds the bed.  You need to be able to watch the fish to know what it is doing to increase your odds of catching it.

     “If you are watching a bass it is watching you,” Brandon said.  He will stay back from the bed as far as he can and still make an accurate cast or pitch to the bed.  It is important to make as small a splash as possible to not spook the fish so you have to be close enough to be accurate and quiet without being too close.

     To keep from spooking bass Brandon will wear clothing that will match the sky. Bright tournament shirts are not good.  He will also keep boat movement to a minimum, using a push pole to hold the boat in place and he stays off the trolling motor as much as possible.

     Brandon likes a bright colored lure to cast to the beds so he can see it.  He favors a Texas rigged tube but will also use a lizard or craw and will fish all of them on as light line as he can.  He likes fluorocarbon and often goes as light as eight pound test to make the bass bite.

     Brandon often finds bass bedding as deep at six to eight feet and that makes them even harder to see so that makes using a bright lure important. He likes white but will also use black if the bed is real white and clear, or another color as long as he can see it.  He tries to get it into the bed and watches the bass’s reaction. If it stays put or moves just a few feet and comes back he feels he can catch her.

     Bass that move way off the bed or don’t come back very quickly are not likely to hit.  They are not “hard” on the bed and are not ready to be caught. When they stay in a ten foot diameter circle even when spooked Brandon feels they will hit and he will spend a lot of time on them.

     “Don’t get impatient when bed fishing, and don’t expect to run out and catch the first bedding bass you find,” Brandon told me.  He likes to find seven to ten bass on the bed before a tournament and hopes to get five of them to bite, but that does not happen often.  You have to take your time to catch bedding bass. First it takes a lot of time on the water finding them then it takes a lot of  time on a bed to make them hit.

     “There are bass you can catch on the points every day of the year on Lay,” Brandon told me. If fishing for bedding bass is not to your liking you can catch them off the points.   Brandon will often start on the points and catch a limit then go to bedding bass.  All the bass we caught in March were on points.

     “Bass here don’t really relate to secondary points like they do on many lakes,” Brandon said. So rather then looking for points that hold bass as they move back to the spawning areas he is searching for points where they run in to feed.  Brandon thinks bass on Lay hold on these points but then move in pretty quickly to the bedding areas rather then making staging moves and then holding.

     Watch the temperature and when it hits 60 degrees Brandon expects the bass to be on the banks.  They move up onto the flats then to the bedding areas. The females feed on the grass points until it is time to join the bucks in very shallow water so they can be caught on points around the flats.

     Brandon likes a main river or creek point just off the flats leading to the spawning areas.  Grass is the key.  The bass have no need to leave these points even after the spawn so they may live here year round, feeding until they run in to the shallows to spawn then moving right back to feed after the spawn.

     Several baits will catch bass off the grass points. Rattle baits are always a good choice and a variety of colors will catch them. Red is always a good bet in late March and stained water calls for brighter colors.  Clearer water means natural colors like shad are better. Jerk baits also catch a lot of Lay bass this time of year.

     Make fairly long casts with your rattle bait and work it fast. Rip it loose from the grass when you hit it and expect a strike as the lure darts away. That fast movement seems to trigger hits. Seven of the bass we caught hit rattle baits around grass. Work a jerk bait with different cadences until the bass tell you what they want. Rip it free of grass for a reaction bite, too.

     Spinnerbaits also work well and can be fished fast over shallow grass or slowed down in deeper water.  Brandon likes a white and chartreuse combination with willow leaf blades and fishes it through the shallow grass and over deeper grass.

     Start at the mouth of a big creek or work main river points at the mouths of spawning pockets.  Brandon seldom hits smaller secondary points  back in the pockets or in the smaller pockets on creeks since he thinks the bass bypass these points as they move back.  Jump from point to point but slow down when you catch a bass, there are probably more there. And return to points later where you catch them.  Bass will often quit hitting when the water is stirred up but start again when things settle down.

     Sometimes Mother Nature is cruel and we have unusually late cold fronts and the water stays cool longer than normal.  As a back-up plan when this happens Brandon will look for cruising bass. The big females will still go back to the bedding areas and cruise them until things get right for spawning.

     Watch for bass moving slowly along the grass lines and try to figure out the direction they will move in and how fast they are going. Cast a floating worm or Senko ahead of them and let it sink to the bottom. Cast too close and you will spook them, too far away and they will not see it. If you hit just right you will see the bass pause and follow the bait down.

     You will often need to let the bait fall to the bottom and sit there without moving it, especially if the bass follows it down.  If they follow it down and don’t hit, jiggle it just a tiny amount.  Be ready to set the hook at any pressure. You often will not feel them hit the bait.

     Get on Lay now and try Brandon’s techniques.  Pick a big creek and study it, learning its secrets and what the bass are doing in it. Take your time and you can land 20 pound plus limits of bass.

St Croix Rods Pro Fishermen Tell You How FISHING HEATS UP IN AND AROUND FLORIDA’S MIDDLE KEYS

FISHING HEATS UP IN AND AROUND FLORIDA’S MIDDLE KEYS

from The Fishing Wire

PARK FALLS, Wis. – It may still be dead of winter, but something significant started happening over a month ago. The Earth reached its tipping point. The Northern Hemisphere has been slowly tilting back towards the sun for over five weeks now, bringing increasing daylight and warming temperatures.

Located closer to the equator than any other part of the continental United States, the Florida Keys are the first part of the country to experience this warming trend.

“You may not have noticed the changes yet where you live, but our fish here in the Keys sure have,” says Captain Tom Rowland, fishing educator, communicator, and co-host of the popular Saltwater Experience television show based out of Hawks Cay Resort on Duck Key. “Our waters begin warming in January, and by February we start to experience some of our best fishing days of the year in terms of both weather and fishing quality.”

Rowland’s co-host and constant fishing partner for the past 20 years, Captain Rich Tudor, agrees. “Both offshore and inshore species really come to life in February and March, “Tudor says. “Our big tarpon are returning, permit and bonefish are sneaking back up onto the flats, the shark fishing is off the hook, and things get really exciting and productive offshore, too.”

Offshore Adventures

Rowland says February and March can be great months to target sailfish, mahi, and other pelagic species. “It’s really a great time to be offshore,” he says. “We’ve generally got favorable winds, a lot of bait, and sailfish are available and active. You can go out and hunt them exclusively, or you can set up for them while also bottom fishing for grouper and snapper. Jigging for bigger yellowtail snapper, grouper, and rainbow runners provides a lot of action this time of year, so we’ll often get a chum slick going and fish them on anchor or on a drift. Then we’ll fish a couple live goggle eyes or pilchards off a kite for the sails.”

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Rowland says you don’t need heavy tackle for sailfish. In fact, he and Tudor use the same St. Croix 7’ and 7’3” medium and medium-light power Rift Salt rods for sailfish as they do for snapper and grouper – spinning models (RIFSS70MF and RIFSS73MLM) for the sails and conventional models (RIFSC70MF and RIFSC73MMF) for bottom fishing. “They (sailfish) tend to stay up on the surface and we’re typically only running 12-20-pound mono with 20 or 25-pound fluoro leaders and small circle hooks,” Rowland says. “These new Rift M and ML rods have plenty of power for the job and are a joy to fish with.”

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Depending on conditions, Tudor says it isn’t uncommon to run into other pelagic species while fishing offshore in February and March as well. “You might just as easily run into some schools of mahi, blackfin tuna, or big jacks,” he says. “And these versatile, medium-power Rift salt rods are the ticket for all of them.”

Tudor drills down on his rigging for mutton and yellowtail snapper. “It’s a really great late-winter program and is super simple. You pull up over a live bottom in 120 to 250 feet of water and set out two bottom rods and a couple drift rods. We’re fishing the same medium-power 7’ and 7’3” Rift Salt conventional rods with Saltist 14 and 20 reels spooled with 40-pound braid and 30-50-pound fluoro leaders. We’re usually fishing jigs above the bottom or deboned ballyhoo or live pilchards on 3/0 circle hooks with enough weight to get down. We’ll catch a bunch and keep a couple for dinner and are always ready to pitch a bait to a passing mahi, blackfin tuna or jack crevalle. It’s a ton of fun.”

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Inshore Opportunities

As good as the offshore fishing is out of the Middle Keys in February through April, Tudor and Rowland say the inshore opportunities can be just as inviting. “There’s just so many games to play depending on the conditions of the day and week,” Rowland says. “Permit and bonefish are totally in play on the right days, and we also get our biggest tarpon of the year starting to show up inshore. These are 150-200-pound fish fresh in from the open ocean and they bite well if you can find them. We’re looking for those warming days that slick off and get really nice, which makes the fish a lot easier to spot.”

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Rowland says the new 7’10” medium-heavy power, moderate-fast action Rift Salt spinning rod is the ideal tool for presenting live mullet to big, happy silver kings. “It’ll load up and throw a one-pound mullet a long way, and the extra length helps keep baits separated when fishing multiple rods,” he says. “And they’re incredible fighting tools after you hook one of these big fish,” adds Rowland, who rigs simply with a 5000 to 6000-size spinning reel spooled with 20-pound braid, a 40-60-pound fluorocarbon leader terminated at a size-8/0 circle hook.”

“People see us using a lot of different St. Croix rods depending on where and how we’re fishing,” Rowland says. “These new Rift rods are the ultimate boat rods… rods that stay in the boat all the time and stand up to a tremendous amount of hard use. They’re designed for extreme durability, starting with the blanks which are SCIII carbon strengthened with St. Croix’s ART and FRS technologies. They have sturdier stainless steel and alconite guides and very durable but comfortable full-grip premium EVA handles. They also have soft, rubber gimbles that keep rigged rods from bouncing and rattling around in the rod holders. This extreme durability is why guides and so many hardcore saltwater anglers buy boat rods in the first place… they are going to get stepped on and be subjected to other unintentional abuse. But Rift rods are extraordinary in that they’re so surprisingly light and have great ergonomics so that any angler can pick them up and enjoy fishing with them. And with 28 different Rift Salt and Rift Jig spinning and conventional models to choose from, there’s a versatile Rift model to support better angling for almost any species in any situation.”

The demands on tackle don’t get any more extreme than those experienced while shark fishing, which is another favored late-winter sport enjoyed by Tudor and Rowland. “When you can’t find the big tarpon or during those times they won’t bite, shark fishing is a great option,” says Tudor, who admits he doesn’t need to use poor tarpon fishing as an opportunity to set up on a few sharks. “We’ll get big bull sharks up to 400 pounds and some really big lemon sharks, too, but blacktips up to 50 or 100 pounds are my favorite,” he says. “They’re incredible fish that jump like a tarpon and run like a bonefish.”

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Tudor says chum, moving water, and a bit of patience are the keys to a fun day of shark fishing. “Sharks are scent feeders, so you want to find good current and time your fishing to the peak flow of the tide,” he says. “If the wind is pushing the same direction as the tide that’s even better. We’ll typically set up on the edge of some shallow water and hang some carcasses tied up with rope off the back of the boat… usually mahi, mackerel, or bonito carcasses we’ve kept after filleting them. It’s very visual,” Tudor adds. “We’re stationary in 2 or 4 feet of clear water and just looking for sharks who come in from downstream. We’ll usually let them get close and get a bit fired up by the slick, then we’ll pitch them almost anything on a 6/0 or 8/0 circle hook.” Tudor says they’ll use moderate-fast action, medium or medium-heavy power Rift Salt rods depending on the size of the fish. He rigs with 50-pound braid, a 60-80-pound fluorocarbon leader and a 2-foot section of #6 wire for a bite guard. “Shark fishing is always a good time, and you may get some shots at permit or barracuda, too.”

Tudor says St. Croix’s new Rift rods are the best boat rods he’s ever used. “These are versatile, affordable, absolutely phenomenal rods that will compete with any custom-built boat rod out there,” he says. “We liked the old Mojo Salt series, but these are improved across the board. They’re thinner and lighter with even more strength and power and have a beautiful look and feel. They have super high-quality guides and high-end EVA handles that are as durable as they are comfortable. They’re going to appeal to a lot of guides and boat owners who want exceptional strength, durability, power, beautiful aesthetics, and versatility without sacrifice to sensitivity or added weight… and at a very reasonable price.”

It may still look and feel like winter where you’re at, but the weather and the fishing are already hot in the Florida Keys. So, gear up and get in on some of the best saltwater fishing of the year. Don’t want to travel with one-piece Rift Salt rods? We don’t blame you. Check out St. Croix’s Avid Trek collection of 3-piece, saltwater-ready travel spinning rods. Rated for 8-17-pound line and lures from 3/8 to ¾-ounce, the 7’ and 7’6” medium-power models (ATS70MF3 and ATS76MF3) are highly versatile choices for a wide variety of saltwater species.

Keep up to date with Captains Rich and Tom by visiting their Saltwater Experience website and linking to or subscribing to their extensive content.

About St. Croix Rod

Headquartered in Park Falls, Wisconsin, St. Croix has been proudly producing the “Best Rods on Earth” for nearly 75 years. Combining state-of-the-art manufacturing processes with skilled craftsmanship, St. Croix is the only major producer to still build rods entirely from design through manufacturing. The company remains family-owned and operates duplicate manufacturing facilities in Park Falls and Fresnillo, Mexico. With popular trademarked series such as Legend®, Legend Xtreme®, Victory Avid®, Premier®, RIFT, Imperial®, Triumph® and Mojo, St. Croix is revered by all types of anglers from around the world.