October Bass At Wedowee with Brian Morris
Bass schooling on top. Bass hitting crankbaits in shallow water. Bass
actively feeding all over the lake. October fishing is great! And Lake
Wedowee is one of your best bets for enjoying great fall action this
month.
Wedowee is located where the Tallapoosa and Little Tallapoosa Rivers join
near the town of Wedowee. The shoreline is steep and rocky and both
rivers make sharp bends and turns above where they join. Downstream of
their confluence there is more open water. All over the lake rocky
points, bluff walls, flats and docks hold spotted bass and largemouth.
Shad are the main baitfish but bass feed on bream and crawfish, too.
Access to Wedowee is limited to a few small public boat ramps and one
bigger ramp at the Highway 48 Bridge. There are some marinas on the
lake but most have limited parking. This lack of big ramps means there
are not a lot of tournaments on Wedowee and it is less crowded than many
other area lakes. You will have plenty of company on the lake when bass
fishing in October but less than you would expect on other big lakes.
Brian Morris grew up bass fishing and fished with several clubs as well
as competing on the BFL trail. In 1992 he discovered fishing at Wedowee
and fell in love with the lake, then in 2002 he and his family bought
Wedowee Marina. He moved a few minutes from the lake in 2003 and has
concentrated on fishing it since then. He now guides on Wedowee and
is sponsored in tournaments there by BusterMilesAuto dealerships, Wedowee Marine, Legend boats and Rapsody Fishing Rods..
“Cooling water makes the bass active all over the lake,” Brian said. They
are actively feeding up before the cold weather and you can catch them on
a variety of baits. Shad are beginning to move into the creeks and bass
set up for them on points and cover near the mouths of the creeks and
bigger coves. The bass are gorging on shad and will often spit them up
when you catch them, so, if shad are in the area bass will be nearby,
too.
Brian will have several baits rigged and ready for October fishing on
Wedowee. He says you should start early in the morning and finish up
late in the day with a topwater bait like a Sammy or a Spook. And he
warns to keep it ready at all times. Bass school on top this time of
year and may suddenly come up near you. A quick cast to the activity
will usually result in a hit.
A crankbait is one of Brian’s favorite baits to fish in the fall and he
keeps a couple ready. A Series 3 and a Series 5 Strike King bait in shad
colors will cover different depths. Brian usually starts with the smaller
bait since it matches the size of the shad and will usually run the depth
he wants to fish this time of year. But, if he is catching smaller bass
on the Series 3 he will throw the bigger bait in the same area. Since it
gets deeper it will often catch bigger bass.
A spinnerbait works well in the same areas Brian throws a crankbait,
especially if there is some wind rippling the surface. He likes the
Hildebrandt or Strike King in white and chartreuse bait with one sliver
blade and one gold blade. It can be run across points just like
crankbaits, but can be fished at different depths depending on the
conditions.
A quarter ounce punisher jig teamed with a Paca Chunk or Zoom chunk works
well when flipped and pitched around docks and heavy cover on sunny days.
Bright sun will push the bass into shade and they will ambush anything
that looks like food. Brian likes the smaller profile of the quarter
ounce jig but goes to a bigger three-eighths ounce one if the wind is a
problem or if he wants a faster fall.
A shaky head jig is Brian’s “Goto” bait and it will catch bass when
other baits fail. He uses custom made jigs teamed with a four inch
Finesse worm in Green pumpkin. For a bigger profile he puts a Trick worm
in the same color on his jig head. It is fished on eight pound
fluorocarbon line and a spinning outfit.
Brian showed me the following ten spots for October bass a couple of
weeks ago. Smaller largemouth were on them then but the bigger fish will
have moved onto them by now. We also spotted a lot of schooling activity
and Brian got our biggest bass of the day when a school came up nearby.
1. N 33 21.101 – W 85 30.887 – Headed downstream from Wedowee Marina and
the Highway 431 Bridge you will go into a big “S” bend with Pineywood
Creek in the outside of the first bend. The outside of the next bend has
a double cove on the right then a single cove at the end of the bluff
wall. You will see a single, small dock with a tin roof back in it. Stop
on the upstream point of the pocket with the dock and start fishing,.
Keep your boat out in the channel and throw across the point. Imagine
the bluff wall continues on out underwater and you will have a good idea
of the way the drop runs, with a sharp drop into the old river channel on
the outside. Bass hold along this drop and move up to feed. Cast across
it with a crankbait and spinnerbait, covering the water from three to
about12 feet deep.
Brian says bass also move along the right bank going back into this cove
following the shad, so work on back into the cove casting your crankbait
and spinnerbait to the bank and working any cover you see. Cast across the
secondary points as you come to them. Keep working back into the cove
until you run out of bass or baitfish. It would be worth your time to
fish back out with a shaky head, especially if you caught fish going in.
2. N 33 21.295 – W 85 31.650 – Run down past the mouth of
Wedowee Creek on your left and the channel straightens out. Before it
bends back to the left you will see Rice Pavilion on the left on the water
and a small cove then a big one on the right across the river from them.
You want to fish the upstream point of the upstream smaller cove. It is
very rocky on the river side but more clay on the back side.
This point is another river ledge that goes from an above water bluff to
an underwater point. It runs downstream, parallel to the bank across the
mouth of the cove, like hole#1. Brian likes to get out on the point in 25
feet of water and cast his crankbait up onto the point, working it along
the drop.
There are flat rocks on this point that sit vertically off the bottom,
forming holes the bass hide in. You want your crankbait to tip the rocks
as it runs along the drop, bouncing off them to attract the bass. Do the
same with your spinnerbait, slow rolling it along just bumping the rocks.
Fish around the point, hitting it at different angles. You can also work
a shaky head along this point, letting it fall into the holes between the
rocks to get to inactive bass that will not come up to hit a faster moving
bait. The rocks are fairly flat and smooth so you won’t get hung up as
much as you would expect.
3. N 33 21.315 – W 85 31.715 – The pocket downstream of hole# 2 makes a
double dip then a long clay point runs out on the upstream side of the big
cove. This point runs straight out toward the channel, not parallel to it
like the one above it. There is an old roadbed on the upstream side of
that point and bass stack up on it and move up onto the point to feed.
They also hold here before following the shad back into the big cove.
Brian says he pulled in here as a bad storm hit a few years ago and caught
bass “left and right” while the storm raged.
Sit out on the point and cast to the bank at the roadbed, working all
around the point with all your baits. Try different angles and speeds to
vary your bait. As on other places like this, wind and current make it
better. If there is any current running down the river the bass will bite
better so hit it hard. Work your bait with the current as much as
possible. Bass expect to see baitfish moving with the current so make
your lure move as naturally as possible.
4. N 33 21.376 – W 85 32.910 – Just before the river turns back to the
left going downstream a big creek enters on the left. Just upstream of
the main creek point a small ridge like point runs out. It has riprap on
the outside and is very narrow. There is a single tree out on the end of
it and it runs parallel to the seawall and bank going out to the main
point between the creek and river.
There is an old rock quarry off this point and there is a flat on the
upstream side of the narrow point. Stay way out and get even with the end
of the narrow point, and cast up toward it. If the sun is out you will
see some big rocks in the shallows just upstream of the end of the narrow
point. Work them and the flat above them with all your baits.
This and other places mentioned are all good places to hit early in the
morning with a topwater bait. Brian likes a Zara Spook, Jr. and works it
fast across the points and flats, searching for active bass. You may see
bass hitting on top or baitfish moving on the surface, a good sign, but
you can draw strikes from roaming bass by working a topwater bait over the
area. Brian says he always fishes topwater the first hour or so of
daylight since it often produces a big fish.
This is a good schooling spot where bass push shad upon the flat and
attack them so keep a watch for that kind of activity. Brian will throw a
topwater bait or crankbait to feeding fish and he says it can happen on
any of these spots at any time of day. Be ready.
5. N 33 20.141 – 85 32.153 – Round the bend to your left and you will
pass a public boat ramp on your left. The bank runs straight a good ways
here and there are several small pockets on it. About half way down to
the next bend watch for the two deepest pockets on your left. Between them
is a trailer with a dock with lots of metal posts on it on the upstream
side and a wood dock on the downstream side. Just upstream of the dock on
the downstream side is some brush and trees out in the water about even
with the left corner when facing it.
Brian will keep his boat out in 25 foot deep water and cast up toward the
bank to hit the brush. Stay downstream of the dock a little, about even
with the boat ramp on that side, and cast upstream. He will run a
topwater then crankbait across it, then slow down with a jig head or
Carolina rigged Finesse worm. Brian says a Carolina rig can be fished on
most of these spots where you fish a shaky head but heavier sinkers will
get hung up more often in the rocks.
6. N 33 19.583 – W 85 33.260 – For a change of pace, especially later in
the month when the shad are further back in the creeks, run downstream
around two big bends and go into Allen Branch. You will see a big open
yard running down to the water on your left not far into the creek. Stop
just past it on the small point with riprap on it and start working into
the creek. Fish all the way to the next main point with riprap on it, just
downstream of the powerlines.
Brian says shad follow this bank as they move into the creek and hold on
any cover like rocks or brush they come to, waiting on passing shad. A
crankbait or spinnerbait casts toward the bank all along here will draw
strikes. Follow up with Carolina rig or shaky head in the same areas.
7. N 33 19.661 – W 85 34.001 – Run downstream and where the river makes
big bend to the left a long shallow point runs way out from the bank. The
river channel swings along on the upstream side and it drops off fast.
There is a danger buoy out on it and bass hold and school on it all year
long. It is a good spot to fish any of your baits.
Stay on the upstream side of the long point and fish from the bank all the
way out to and around the end marked by the buoy. Try all your baits,
casting from deep water up onto the shallow point and fishing them back.
When you get past the buoy swing around and fish back toward the bank.
Brian says the fish are usually on the upstream side but he had caught
them on the downstream side, so fish it before leaving.
While fishing here Brian’s prediction about schooling bass came true. He
spotted surface activity across the river on a point between two pockets
of standing timber. After easing over there he landed a good keeper
largemouth, over the 16 inch slot, on a Spook. Like he said, it is always
a good idea to keep something ready for schooling fish.
8. N 33 18.973 – W 85 34.868 – Go to the mouth of the Tallapoosa and start
upstream in it. Stop on the upstream point of the first big cove on your
left. This point runs way out toward the river channel and drops off into
it, so bass use it to move to the cove. They will feed all along this
shallow point during October. Stop way out on it and move in slowly until
you see how far the point runs out.
Brian likes to fish up one side then down the other, covering the point
from both sides. This is a good crankbait and Carolina rig point and he
will use both to cover it from end to end. There are rocks, stumps and
brush on the clay point to hold bass.
9. N 33 18.190 – W 85 34.842 – Go under the Highway 48 Bridge and watch
for the second pocket on your right past the bridge. This is another
bluff that turns into an underwater ledge running across the mouth of a
cove. There is a small dip in the bank then a big clay point where the
bigger cove opens up. Both are excellent places for bass to hold as
baitfish move into the cove. There is good deep water on both sides.
Fish all around the points with both your baits, and try the blowdowns
around them, too. Pitch a jig and pig into them and bump it over every
limb. If the sun is bright bass will hold in the shade of the limbs and
the trunk and wait on an easy meal.
10. N 33 17.811 – W 85 34.560 – Go into the big cove on the left just
downstream of Triplett Creek, the one with three arms. Go to the back of
the center arm and stop at the last dock on your right. This is a good
place to find bass later in the month because large numbers of shad move
back in here and the bass follow them. Wind blowing out of the west moves
shad in here year round so it is always good but gets even better in late
October.
Start at the dock on your right and fish the right bank all the way to the
back with crankbait and spinnerbait. Brian says this is the best side but
he catches fish on the left bank, too. If there are a lot of shad back in
here you can circle the back until you stop catching bass.
These spots show you the kinds of places Brian catches October bass on
Wedowee. Check them out, see how they look and how the bass relate to them
and you can find many more just like them all over the lake.
To get first hand view of how Brian fishes the lake go to his web site and
arrange a trip with him at www.lakewedoweefishing.com or email him at
briangofish@gmail.com