Category Archives: Bass Fishing

Bass Fishing Information

Four Pound Spotted Bass At Lanier

Last Sunday at Lanier 12 members of the Spalding County Sportsman Club fished our November tournament. In 8.5 hours we landed 14 keeper bass weighing about 34 pounds. All were spots, not a single largemouth was weighed in. There were no limits and four people didn’t have a keeper.

I managed to win with four weighing 11.84 pounds and my 4.30 pound spot was big fish. Niles Murray came in second with three weighing 6.49 pounds, Raymond English placed third with two at 4.71 pounds and Billy Roberts was fourth with one at 3.26 pounds.

I was looking forward to this tournament since I had won the Flint River tournament at Lanier two weeks earlier. In that tournament I landed three keepers the first two hours on three points not far from where we launched. So in this tournament I headed to those points as soon as we blasted off.

After three hours of casting with nothing to show for it I was real frustrated. In the Flint River tournament wind was blowing in on the three points where I caught fish but in the Sportsman Club tournament the wind was not hitting them.

A little after ten I ran to Mud Creek and stopped on a rocky point where I had caught my biggest spot ever, a 4.27 pounder, in a club tournament about ten years ago. The wind was blowing in on this point, so hard I had trouble fishing it, even with a spinnerbait.

As I rounded the point I saw some brush on my depthfinder but the wind was too strong to stop on it. After I got around to the lee side of the point I put down my spinnerbait and picked up a rod with a four inch soft swim bait on a quarter ounce jig head tied on it. I had never caught a bass on a swim bait but I knew it should be good.

After a few casts on the point I felt my line tick as the bait sank in about 15 feet of water. I managed to set the hook and finally land a spot that weighed 4.03 pounds. That really cheered me up!

I made a few more casts with the swim bait then picked up a jig and pig since I was in a good position to fish the brush I had seen. As the jig came through the brush a fish hit it and I landed the 4.30 pound spot, my biggest ever! That gave me two four pound spotted bass at Lanier in one day! Enough to win the tournament, but at the time I didn’t know that.

I got those fish recorded on my GoPro camera and it is a real comedy watching me try to get the fish to the boat, pick up the net and get them in the boat since I was by myself. What you can’t see is the fact I could see the fish in the clear water the whole time I was fighting them and was scared I would lose them.

I fished that point another hour without a bite then tried a couple more similar rocky points with wind blowing in on them but didn’t catch anything. At about 1:00 I went to a point back in Mud Creek and found a brush pile on it. After throwing out my marker I cast a jig head worm to it and landed a spot that was just barely 14 inches long.

When I got on top of the brush I used a drop shot and immediately got a bite. After a long fight on the light rod and eight pound test line I landed the two pound spot. That was it for the day although I fished hard until the end at 3:30. It was weird, I caught two fish two times within ten minutes of each other but nothing else in the 8.5 hours! That’s tournament fishing.

Professional Bass Fishermen Give Advice To Young Fishermen

What Young Fishermen Should Do To Become A Pro
Professional Bass Fishermen Give Advice To Young Fishermen

Almost all young bass fishermen dream of becoming a professional bass fisherman in the future. A very few will. The idea of fishing every day, winning tournaments and being admired by other fishermen is enticing. But it is a hard life, and you must work, even in high school and college, to make your dream come true.

Fishing almost every day in tournaments and practicing for them sounds great. But it means long, hard days on the water no matter what the weather. And most don’t think about the travel to lakes all over the US with long drives, little sleep and being away from family and friends all during the tournament season.

Even in the off season a successful pro will spend many hours away from home while working shows. Presenting your sponsor’s products at boat shows, fishing shows and other events is critical for success, but it means even more travel.

You can be good at catching bass but there is a lot more that goes into a pro career. If you can’t get and keep sponsors you can not stay on the tournament trail. And those sponsors need people that can represent them well to the public, not someone that can just catch fish.

So how should a high school or college fisherman prepare for a professional fishing career? Some things may seem simple and straight forward. But others may not be so apparent. Who better to know and explain the things that you need to do than the guys fishing the Bass Masters Classic? As the BASS motto goes, they are living the dream.

At the 2014 Classic at Lake Guntersville and Birmingham I got to interview some of the pros fishing it. These pros ranged from first timers fishing the Classic to some who had fished more than a dozen Classics.

I asked them what a young fisherman needed to do to plan for a professional career. Their answers will give you good guidance in your planning to make your dreams come true.

Greg Vinson

Greg Vinson was fishing his third Classic at Guntersville after placing second in the 2012 Classic. I spent the practice day in the boat with Greg and he gave me detailed answers to my questions.

“Stay in school,” Greg said. “No matter what happens in your fishing career, a good education is important for the rest of your life,” he added. If your fishing career works out your education will help you. But if it something keeps you from being a professional bass fisherman, a college degree is very important.

Greg also said a young fisherman should fish every chance he or she gets. Join a youth club and fish those tournaments. Join a regular club as soon as allowed and fish them with more experienced fishermen and learn from them.

“Many young fishermen get too excited and don’t pay attention to detail,” Greg said. Learn to pay attention to detail. Make sure all your hooks are sharp and your reels are in good shape.

Also learn to pay attention to detail when on the water. Greg is good at this. He notices every bird diving, every circle of feeding fish and every change in wind direction.

All those are obvious but he also looks for little details like the size of the baitfish the bass are eating. One shad floating in the water can tell you what size bait to use. If a fish you catch spits up a crawfish, use baits that imitate them.

“Get the basics down,” Greg said. Learn to fish patterns, not places, and apply them to every lake you fish. Work on baits you don’t have confidence in until you do. Remember where you get bites, and learn from every one.

“Electronics are critical in fishing now,” Greg said. Learn to use them and what they mean. Work on all your techniques and get the mechanics of pitching, flipping and casting down so well you don’t even have to think about them, even if you are practicing in your back yard.

Patrick Bone

Patrick Bone was the only Georgia fisherman at the 2014 Classic. He qualified by winning a Southern Open but has done well on both the FLW tournament trail as well as BASS trail tournaments.

“Decide where you want to go,” Patrick said. Do you want to fish the top trails and travel all the time, or would you rather learn you home lake in detail and concentrate on tournaments on it. It is much easier to learn one lake and stay near home that to constantly travel all over the US fishing tournaments on new lakes.

“Remember you are starting at the bottom,” Patrick added. Don’t expect to hit the pro trail and instantly win, or to do well in every tournament. Don’t let bad tournaments hurt your confidence.

“Support at home is critical,” Patrick said. For a high school or college fisherman, support from parents and mentors can make all the difference. If married, lack of support from your wife will mean either the end of your career or the end of your marriage.

“Fish with clubs, youth teams and enter draw tournaments as a co-angler,” Patrick said. Learn from every day on the water. Try to find a mentor, an experienced fisherman to teach you as you fish. There are a lot of good people out there that can make your learning curve much steeper.

David Kilgore

David Kilgore lives in Jasper, Alabama and was one of nine contenders from Alabama, the most of any one state. He was fishing his first Classic at Guntersville but had won over $200,000 in 50 BASS tournaments in his career. He has qualified to fish the Elite Series three times but has turned each opportunity down. He cites the expenses of fishing the trail and time away from his family and business as reasons to not fish it.

“Join a high school team or youth team in your area and try to fish every tournament,” David said. “Pick a college with a fishing team and fish all those tournaments, too,” he added. There is no substitute for time on the water to learn the habits of bass.

Fishing high school and youth tournaments are likely to put you on lakes close to home, and you can learn from them. But college teams travel well away from their local area and that will teach you to find bass on unfamiliar lakes. You have to learn bass patterns that hold up no matter where you fish.

Fish other tournaments as a co-angler, and learn from every trip. Pay attention to everything you see and every fish you catch. David says you should keep a detailed fishing log of every bass you catch to help you learn how a bass’s brain works under different conditions. Keeping a good log you can review will help you learn.

Randall Tharp

Randall Tharp was fishing his first Classic at Guntersville after winning the FLW Championship that year. He had concentrated on the FLW tournaments but decided to fish the BASS Opens to qualify for the Elite trail, and won an Open so he qualified.

“Don’t get in a hurry to fish the pro trails, get an education first,” Randall said. Randall didn’t get his first bass boat until he was 30 years old so he got a late start, concentrating on education and business first, and now he is one of the top pros on both trails.

“Be true to yourself first,” Randall added. Don’t let your fishing take over your life. But fish every day you can within reason. Enter as many tournaments as possible as a co-angler, but don’t ever get into debt from your fishing.

Learn from others you fish with, but also figure out your own way of doing things. Every lake and every day is different. If you figure out your own way of fishing after learning from others, you can go to your strength in all tournaments.

“If you have a God given ability to catch bass, that special quality that sets you apart from weekend anglers, use it in the way that suits you. Develop your own style of fishing and don’t let dock talk make you change from your strengths.

To develop this skill, learn from others by being a Marshall in tournaments, fishing as a co-angler put time in on the water. Develop your confidence, probably the most important quality of a successful pro. But don’t let your fishing interfere with your home life.

Clifford Pirch

Clifford Pirch was fishing his first Classic in 2014 after winning over $213,000 in 32 BASS trail tournaments. He is a hunting and fishing guide from Arizona and has been successful on the FLW trail, too, winning over $740,000 there.

Clifford agreed staying in school, getting a degree in public relations or marketing, and spending time on the water is the way to go. But he also said there is a tremendous amount of information out there on learning to catch bass.

“Study magazine articles, information on the net and even newspaper reports,” he said. You can learn a lot and get some good ideas from them. Then put it with your information from time on the water and put all this together for your use.

“Make a pre-tournament plan and stick with it,” he said. Too many young fishermen try to fish every thing they can and miss a good pattern by not sticking with their plan. If you have put in the time studying for a tournament don’t waste it by not following your plan.

Kevin VanDam

Arguably the top bass fisherman of this century, Kevin VanDam has fished 24 Classics and won four. He is well known to most fishermen and a great role model for young fishermen.

“Stay in school and get a marketing degree,” Kevin said. If you can’t market yourself and your sponsors you will not be able to have a pro career. Kevin is a master at both, and his advice is critical for your success.

“Fish high school, youth, club and college tournaments,” Kevin said. Learn from experienced fishermen and get the basics down. But you also must learn to budget your time and energy in a tournament, and fishing them is the only way to do that.

Skeet Reese

I got to eat lunch with Skeet Reese at the media day and he spent time talking with me even though several of his sponsors were at the table. Many of the top pros were overwhelmed with media and sponsors demanding their time, but they all had a good attitude and were willing to answer questions. That willingness is critical to a pro’s success.

“Start out with high school and college teams as well as one day tournaments,” Skeet said. Don’t try to go too fast. Work your way up through Opens with the goal of qualifying for the Elite trail. Learn in every tournament as you go.

“Find a good partner to marry,” Skeet said. Support at home is critical for you to be successful. A good marriage will help you on the tournament trail. If you have problems at home, you will have problems in tournaments.


Aaron Martens

Aaron Martens lives in Leeds Alabama and was fishing his 15th Classic. He moved to Alabama to be closer to the bigger tournament trails and for the variety and quality of waters to fish in Alabama.

“Fish, fish, fish,” said Aaron. Fish a lot to get productive at it. But he warns if you don’t love to fish and fish competitively, you won’t do well. If it is a job rather than a pleasure you will have a tough time. It has to be in your blood.

Hank Cherry

Hank Cherry was fishing his second Classic at Guntersville and has won over $275,000 in 30 BASS tournaments. He placed third in his first Classic on Grand Lake in 2013 and has done well in FLW tournaments, too.

“Put fishing the pro trails out of your mind until you get a college degree,” Hank said. Your degree in marketing or PR should be your priority. Fish youth clubs, high school teams and college teams, but get your education then concentrate on your pro fishing career.

Edwin Evers

Edwin Evers has won over 2.2 million dollars in his career and is one of the most popular fisherman on the trails. He placed third at Guntersville in the 2014 Classic, his 13 trip to them.

“Stay in school, get a degree in marketing and fish a lot,” Edwin said. Fishing high school, youth and college teams is a great help, but don’t overlook other possibilities. You can learn a lot by being a marshal at tournaments, too.

“Learn from everyone and everything, but develop your own style,” Edwin said. Don’t try to get information about a lake that can mislead you. Consider anything you hear, but get on the water and confirm it but don’t get locked into something others have told you. Time on the water is the only way to learn this.

Jordan Lee

What better fisherman at the Classic for advice for young fishermen than Jordan Lee. He fished at Guntersvile as the college trail representative and placed sixth in his first Classic. Just 23 years old, he is the youngest Elite Series fisherman this year.

Jordan got hooked on bass fishing when he was ten and knew, after catching his first bass in his grandfather’s pond, that he wanted to be a pro fisherman. He went to Auburn University and fished the college team there and has done well in other tournaments, too.

“Fish a lot as a co-angler, make friends with the pro fisherman and learn from them,” Jordan said. That is the way to learn patterns and techniques to catch bass. Fish a variety of lakes so you can be adaptable.

“Learn to use electronics,” Jordan said. They are critical for catching fish in tournaments now. You have to get all the basics down, but electronics will show you the structure and cover to fish, and even the fish in it.

The obvious things a young fisherman should do, according to these pros, is to fish a lot, learn the basics and get a degree.

Less obvious is the consistent recommendation to get a degree in marketing or PR so you can market yourself and represent your sponsors. It might seem a degree in fisheries biology would help more, but you can learn the basics of catching bass on the water while getting and keeping sponsors so you can keep fishing.

Make your plans and start working toward the dream of being a pro fisherman now.

What Does Find the Bait, Find the Bass Mean?

Find the Bait, Find the Bass!

By Livingston Lures Pro Joe Budzinski
from The Fishing Wire

“Lake Conroe on Fire right now, Break out your Deep Cranks”

Big Lake Conroe bass

Big Lake Conroe bass

It is the time of year where a sportsman has to decide to grab a rifle or a fishing rod. Chuck and I chose wisely. We grabbed our Power Tackle Cranking rods paired with our Ardent reels, and went to work.

Lake Conroe, Texas, is on fire right now. The big fish have begun to move up to feed for the upcoming winter months. We drove several areas until we found bait balls being FEASTED upon by feeding bass.

Bass feeding on baitfish

Bass feeding on baitfish

Bait balls are easily found this time of year, but you will need to find the ones being pummeled by bass on your graph. You can see this on your graph or side imaging by the bait balls sporadically broken up through the water column. Massive, uniform schools of bait tend to be the ones that are not bothered by predators.

Bass eats a crankbait

Bass eats a crankbait

Chuck and I discovered an area of approximately 50 yards of sporadic chunk rock bottom in 14-16 ft of water where the majority of feeding was found. The Livingston Deep Impact 18 with EBS MultiTouch was our weapon of choice. The bass this time of year have shad on the brain, so ensure you set your MultiTouch setting to the third biological Baitfish sound – Fleeting Shad. This was key. Our retrieve was a stop and go retrieve after our Livingston Lures began digging the bottom and/or bouncing off the chunk rock. This retrieve coupled by the EBS Sound on the pause was a great one-two punch.

Do not be afraid to bounce these Deep Impact’s off the bottom to generate strikes. Often I call this technique “planting corn”, meaning the bill of the lure digs into the bottom enough to create a corn row, worthy enough to begin to seed. Your color of choice depends upon water conditions, and lake forage. Get yourself a variety or colors and hang on. This is the time of year you can get your arm broke by a Green Monster!

Fish on!

— Joe Budzinski, Army Bass Angler

Conditions Recap:
Time: 2:30 pm to dusk
Skies: Sunny
Surface temp: 73
Water: Clear
Wind: 1-5 NE
Hooks Rating: 4 of 5

Jordan McDonald and Douglas Outdoors

Jordan McDonald called me Tuesday to tell me he was leaving for New York. After doing well on tournament trails this year, he is starting a full time job with Douglas Outdoors. That is a dream come true for him. He will be working with a great outdoor company and spending his time hunting, fishing and talking to fellow hunters and fishermen.

Jordan will be a great representative for Douglas Outdoors. I have known him for ten years. He joined the Flint River Bass Club ten years ago and has fished with me in club tournaments over most of the years since then. I have watched him mature, learn about bass fishing and increase his skill levels.

Many young people have the dream of fishing professionally but very few make it. Just like many youth dream of playing football or soccer professionally, very few are able to make it. Jordan has done what it took to reach the level he is at currently and is in a good position to go on even further. I think Jordan McDonald and Douglas Outdoors is a good fit.

I wish him well.

Why Does Burning’ Spinnerbaits Bring Reaction Strikes from Fall Bass?

Burning’ Spinnerbaits Bring Reaction Strikes from Fall Bass

Yamaha Pro Matt Herren Uses a Fast Retrieve to Trigger Bass Into Biting
from The Fishing Wire

November ranks as one of Matt Herren’s favorite months of the year, but not because he enjoys deer hunting and most whitetail seasons open this month. Rather, the Yamaha Pro knows November means it’s time to burn his spinnerbaits for autumn bass.

“Burning,” in this case, means reeling the blade baits as fast as he can turn his reel handle, keeping the lures just two to three inches below the surface. It’s a technique the Alabama-based angler has used successfully on lakes around the country for more than two decades, but one many of today’s fishermen frequently overlook.

“Burning a spinnerbait is purely about getting reaction strikes,” notes Herren, who will be competing in his sixth Bassmaster Classic® next March. “Throughout the autumn months, when water temperatures are still generally in the 60’s or high 50-degree range, bass are gorging themselves on baitfish, and a spinnerbait probably imitates a shad or herring as well as any lure made.

“There is a lot of feeding competition among the bass, and they go after a fast-moving spinnerbait without hesitation, just trying to get it before another bass does. It works in stained to clear water, and typically throughout the day, too.”

Spinnerbait for burning in the fall

Spinnerbait for burning in the fall

The Yamaha Pro chooses spinnerbaits featuring what is known as thin wire construction. A thinner wire increases the lure’s overall vibration and also makes it easier to retrieve. Herren’s color choices are simple, too; any color is fine as long as it matches a shad, such as white or white/chartreuse. For maximum vibration, he uses double willow leaf blades, and his weight choices range from ¼ to ¾-ounce.

“When I fish spinnerbaits this time of year, I usually have three different models tied on and ready to use, depending on how the fish act, and on the size of the baitfish,” Herren explains. “One will be a very compact spinnerbait between 3/8- and ½-ounce, but which looks small, in case the bass are feeding on smaller threadfin shad. I’ll also have two other spinnerbaits weighing ½-ounce and ¾-ounce, but with different blade colors, such as gold or even copper.

“White or nickel blades will usually produce on most lakes, but just in case the bass are finicky, I can offer them something different.”

Using a fast 7:1 reel and 15-pound fluorocarbon line, Herren concentrates in larger tributaries and upper-lake arms where baitfish migrations are often the strongest, targeting steep bluffs, rocky banks, submerged vegetation, standing timber, and even channel breaks. Depth is not that critical, because he’s caught bass suspended in water as deep as 50 feet.

Matt Herren with fall bass

Matt Herren with fall bass

“I really think one key to burning a spinnerbait over deeper water is slowing my fast retrieve just for a second to make the blades change their speed,” he continues. “This can be as simple as stopping my retrieve, shaking my rod tip, or slowing down so the spinnerbait sinks a few inches. It’s just for a split second to change the blade cadence. Then I start reeling fast again.

“Changing your retrieve like this is a pretty standard way to fish a spinnerbait anytime of year, but it’s important to remember to do it even when you’re reeling as fast as you can because it’s a major part of getting bass to react. In the fall, you’ll frequently have a bass following your spinnerbait, even though it’s moving fast, and just a simple change of cadence can be enough to bring a strike.”

In recent years as the spinnerbait’s popularity has lessened and other lures have taken its place, the technique of burning has practically become a lost art, concludes Herren. Nonetheless, it’s a technique the Yamaha Pro will continue to use wherever he fishes this time of year because he knows how effective it still is.

Winning A Club Tournament At Lake Lanier

Last Sunday nine members of the Flint River Bass Club fished our November tournament at Lake Lanier. I think the rain scared off many of the members but it was weird. It was raining hard at my house at 3:30 AM when I was hooking up the boat and I had my windshield wipers on high all the way to I-85. Then it quit raining.

Everything was wet and misty, but during the tournament I never put my hood up on my rainsuit. Then on the way home I had to turn on my windshield wipers on high about the time I got off I-285 and on I-675 headed back. I am glad it held off while we fished.

In the tournament the nine of us cast for eight hours to land 12 keeper 14-inch bass weighing about 28 pounds. There was one five-fish limit and three fishermen didn’t have a keeper. There was only one largemouth – the other 11 were spots.

We did catch some good spots. Five of them weighed over three pounds each, and the biggest one weighed 4.79 pounds. That is a big spot. Spots fight harder than largemouth and are fun to catch.

I managed to land a limit and won with 8.87 pounds, Sam Smith had three weighing 5.56 pounds for second, Chuck Croft had big fish and third place with his 4.79 pounder and Don Gober was fourth with one at 3.77 pounds.

I started fishing a spinnerbait on a rocky point at 6:30 and landed my biggest keeper, a spot just over three pounds, on my second cast. At 8:00 I landed my second biggest fish on a jig head worm on another rocky point, then got my third keeper on the next rocky point I fished with the jig head worm at 8:30.

Catching three keepers in the first two hours made me feel pretty good, but I did not hook another fish until 2:00 when a keeper largemouth hit my jig head worm back in a pocket around some brush. With 15 minutes left to fish I ran to a rocky point near the ramp and, when I looked at my watch and saw it was 2:25 and I had to be at the ramp before 2:30, said to the fish and myself, ‘Ok, this is my last cast.”

As the jig head worm sank I saw my line jump and set the hook on a 14 inch spot, filling my limit. That is why I never give up and never go in early. You just don’t know which cast will result in a fish.

Fishing was tough for us at Lanier but folks that fish it a lot and know it are doing well. On Saturday it took five spots weighing over 17 pounds to win a tournament there and many teams in that tournament had five fish weighing over 12 pounds. And fishing there and on other area lakes will get better and better until Christmas if the weather this year is like it usually is here.

Targeting Bass During the Fall Turnover

Randy Howell Offers Tips on Targeting Bass During the Fall Turnover
from The Fishing Wire

Randy Howell catching fall bass

Randy Howell catching fall bass

Photo Credits: BASS/Wired2Fish

When the thermocline starts to break up and the cold water from the depths begin to mix with the warmer surface water it is called the turnover. The fish scatter and can be hard to locate. Many of the big fish will go very shallow and hold onto any piece of cover or structure they can find. Which is exactly why I like to fish super shallow and focus on targets.

I like to find shallow flats near deeper areas, especially areas where grass is or was present. I look for any sort of structure like logs, grass patches, and even a single stick up can be enough to hold a fish. I will move quickly from target to target and hit as many key spots as possible.

Missing the target by even a foot or two is enough to keep the fish from biting, that’s why it’s important to make multiple cast and intentionally bump the target with your bait. Casting accuracy is extremely important when fishing this way, which is why a finely tuned 7.3 Daiwa Tatula or Zillion reel with the T-Wing casting system is crucial. I like to use a Steez 7’2″ med/hvy rod for casting accuracy and control. I spool up with 16 lb.Gamma fluorocarbon line to haul em out of cover.

My three favorite baits for this time of year are; a 3/8 oz. double willow blade Hawg Caller spinnerbait, a Livingston Lures Walk-n-Pop 77 top water popping bait, and a 1/2 ounce Lunker Lure Flat Shad buzzbait. For sub-surface fishing I will use the Livingston Lures Howeller squarebill crankbait.

Photo Credits: BASS/Wired2Fish

Randy Howell Lands A Bass

Randy Howell Lands A Bass


When I pull into an area and locate a target I drop my Power-Poles and make several accurate casts at each target. If I am trying to cover a lot of water quickly I will utilize the buzzbait and the Howeller squarebill. If I want to slow down and really pick the area apart I will go with the Walk-n-Pop and the spinnerbait.

The one advantage to the squarebill is that I can bounce it off of the targets and generate a reaction strike. For the spinnerbait I can slow it down quite a bit and really keep it in the strike zone longer than the other baits.

As your water begins to turnover, and fishing gets slow, I suggest going shallower than ever before. Make an effort to slow down, make precise casts with a variety of baits, and you can make one on the toughest seasonal changes, very productive.
Until next time, Good luck and God bless!!

–Randy Howell

SIGN UP for Randy’s Newsletter

North Or South For Georgia Bass

Go North Or South For Georgia Bass in September

September is often a mean month for bass fishermen. Although there are hints of cooler weather and the days are getting shorter, the bass are slow to respond and start feeding consistently in shallow water. But you can catch a lot of bass, and some big ones, no matter where you live in our state.

If you live south of the Fall Line, Lake Walter F. George, usually called Lake Eufaula by fishermen, is a great place to catch September bass. It is at the top of its usual five year cycle right now, with a lot of quality three to five pound largemouth in the lake.

The Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife Division, Fisheries Department says you can expect to catch a lot of bass over the 14 inch minimum size with a good number of fish over three pounds. You also can catch some quality fish over six pounds, with the chance of a wall hanger over eight pounds.

Scott Montgomery and his father own Big Bite Bait Company near Georgetown and Scott has been fishing Eufaula all his life. Scott says bass are still in their summer pattern in September, with more migration toward more shallow water late in the month. But you can consistently catch them on two basic patterns.

When the light is low early in the morning, late in the day and on cloudy days the lily pads are a feeding area for bass. While the sun is bright some bass will still hold under the pads and be caught around them, but your better bet is get out on the many ledges where they hold and feed on bright sunny days.

The area around Cowikee Creek has all the cover and structure you can fish in several days and is one of the best areas on the lake for bass fishing. Big flats covered with pads are everywhere and the creek and river ledges in that area concentrate bass in key spots.

In both areas subtle changes can make all the difference between casting and catching. A small ditch running through the pad fields and a cut or sharp swing in the channel on the ledge are structure changes you want to find. The pads provide the cover in shallow areas but rockpiles, stumps and brush on the ledges are the type cover you want to fish.

Scott says your tackle selection is fairly simple. For the pads, have a weedless topwater bait like his company’s Top Toad or Floatin’ Toad tied on. A spinnerbait or jig and pig will also catch fish from the pads and you can fish them slowly when you find a concentration of fish.

On the ledges Scott likes a big plug like the Bomber Fat Free Shad or Norman DD22N for covering the depths quickly to locate fish. To slow down and work an area carefully switch to a Texas or Carolina rigged big worm like the ten inch Mangum Kriet Tail or Kriet Creature bait.

Since the water is clear this time of year use shad colored baits. A sexy shad or gizzard shad color in the crankbait is good and tilapia or green pumpkin with blue and purple flakes in the soft baits are good choices. And watermelon with red flakes is always a good choice for the worms.

If you put in at Lake Point State Park you don’t need to go far. The boat channel in Cowikee Creek is marked by poles leading from the launch ramp out to the river. Although these poles are not always right on the creek channel, they mark an area clear of stumps and standing timber you can run, some of them sit right on the creek ledge.

The second set of pole markers going out of the park are a well-known spot. It is well known since it holds so many bass and is a good example of the kind of channel ledge you want to fish. Just downstream of the green marker is a hump rising to about 13 feet deep at full pool. The channel makes a swing by it and there are stumps on the hump and drop into the channel.

Scott starts fishing here by sitting in the channel and casting toward the highway causeway. Try a big crankbait first then drag you soft baits along the bottom, fishing both from shallow to deep. Work all the way around the hump, bring your baits from deep to shallow, too.

You can work your way down the creek checking the ledges all the way to the river. A good depthfinder is invaluable to find the changes in the bottom and even seeing bass and baitfish. The presence of baitfish means bass will be close by and you should fish the area to find the key spot they are holding. Current makes these deeper spots a lot better as does some wind blowing across them.

When you get out to the Chattahoochee River channel it is marked by drum buoys and provides many good drops to fish. A good one that is an example of what to look for is just downstream of channel marker 100.7. Stop at it and idle downstream on top of the ledge, watching for a ditch that cuts across it. The top of the ledge is only six to eight feet deep but the ditch drops off to 18 feet deep then comes right back up and the river channel is much deeper.

When you find the ditch, start with your boat in the mouth of it and fish up the ditch, casting all your baits to both sides of it. When you hit cover like stumps or brush concentrate casts to that area. Current is very important here since it eddies across the drops and makes the bass feed.

For shallow pad fishing start at the second set of pole markers coming out of Lake Point and make a hard left if you are going downstream. Idle toward the point with cypress trees on it and lily pads all around it. Scott says this is an excellent place to find shallow fish.

Scott stops on the point and fishes toward the motel at the state park. Make long casts into the pads and fish across them, pausing when you come to holes in them. Keep your boat out from the edge of them and also pause when you get to the edge. Bass often hold right on the outside edge.

Look for other pad areas near the channel and try to find a ditch coming through them or where the form a point. There are dozens of similar spots all the way to the river to fish.
If you live in the north half of the state Lake Lanier is hard to beat for September fishing. The lake is loaded with big spotted bass and they are on predictable patterns all month.

State fisheries biologists say there is a good population of two to four pound spots in Lanier and most tournaments have a five pound plus fish weighed in. Some fishermen think there is a new world record spot swimming in Lanier and seven pound plus spots are reported fairly often.

Rob Jordan grew up fishing Lake Lanier and lives in Suwanee and fishes it several days a week. This year he won a BFL tournament on the lake with five fish weighing 19.5 pounds, and has weighed in a 21.5 pound five fish tournament limit, so he knows its spotted bass and their habits well.

“Lanier is not like other lakes since the big spots roam water 50 to 60 feet deep and you can not catch them by fishing like you do in other lakes,” Rob said. You have to fish where the big ones live, and September is a transition month on Lanier. But if you fish the right places and right baits this month you can catch some big ones, as the six pound, six ounce spot he caught in September while guiding a client last year proved.

Rob will have a drop shot and shaky head worm ready for fishing slowly this month. For catching more active bass he will fish a topwater bait and a swim bait. He is often sitting in 80 plus feet of water and casting to water 30 feet deep or deeper, so you have to fish deep for the big ones.

The main lower lake is the best area to fish, according to Rob and you can find key spots in a variety of ways. Shoal and channel markers are often near the places where big spots hold very deep and move a little shallower to feed.

A couple of good examples are near the dam. In the mouth of Shoal Creek green channel marker 3SC sits on the end of a long rocky hump right by the channel. There is a danger marker on top of the hump so it comes up very shallow but water 100 feet deep is not far away. Every point and hump in Lanier has brush on it fishermen put out, and the bass hold in it and roam out to feed so locating brush piles is important.

This hump is very rocky, something spots love, and there is brush all over it at different depths. Rob likes to start with his boat out in very deep water and cast a topwater plug like a big Zara Spook to the shallows around the hump and work it back fast. This will often draw a suspended spot up to feed. Also throw a big swim bait to cover the top and sides of hump.

For bragging size spots Rob likes a Bull Shad swimbait. He custom paints them, a skill he learned from his cousin Professional bass fisherman Jim Murray, Jr. Jim also taught him a lot about fishing for bass. His colors that resemble blue back herring work well since that is the baitfish big spots eat. Fish the swimbait at different speeds and depths to find what the big spots want.

Move your boat to more shallow water, around 35 feet deep, and watch your depthfinder for brush. When you see it use a drop shot worm to fish beside and in it. While you are looking for brush cast a shaky head worm to ten feet of water and work it back to 30 feet deep for spots feeding on the rocks.

Rob likes soft like a ZMan Finesse worm on his drop shot or jig head. Any watermelon color with flakes in it can be good, as are colors like morning dawn. If the fish want something bigger he will offer them a Big Bites Bait six inch Finesse worm in the same colors.

Another good place is the hump just off channel marker 1YD in Young Deer Creek marked with a danger marker. It also has rocks and brush with deep water nearby to hold magnum spots. Fish it the same way. Some wind blowing across these places makes them even better.

Always watch for surface activity. September is a good month to catch schooling spots. If you see swirling fish near you cast a topwater plug or swim bait to them. If you see splashes in the distance, or gulls diving, run to them, stop a long cast away from the activity, and catch the fish as they chase shad or herring.

There are dozens of similar places all over the lower lake to fish, and they are easy to find since channel markers near shoal markers point them out. Pleasure boat traffic gets extremely bad on Lanier, even in September, so weekdays or weekends before 10:00 AM are the best time to fish.

Whether you live north or south in Georgia these lakes are close enough for a one day trip. Or if you variety, head to the other part of the state from where you live to experience a very different kind of fishing. Decide which you like best.

Have You Watched Costa’s Geobass Shows?

I have been enjoying watching Costa’s Geobass series of videos posted online.

In this series, four guys travel to exotic destinations to try to catch bass. But they consider any fish named bass a bass, including saltwater species, so it is not just black bass, although they do go after trophy largemouth.

The videos are fast paced and fun to watch, and they do catch fish. They use fly rods only and tie their own flies to suit the situation. They are like any group of fishermen, picking at each other and having fun.

They go to such places as Christmas Island, Papua New Guinea, Brazil, and many others

Check out these videos – I think you will enjoy them.

Young Fishermen Doing Well in Bass Fishing

The Georgia Bass Nation Top Six was at Hartwell weekend before last. I had been looking forward to fishing it for months but my boat died at Martin so I didn’t get to go. But the Flint River Club did send a team. I got an email after the first day of the tournament showing Brandon Stooksbury with the Flint River Club in second place, but have not been able to find out the final results.

At the same time the adults were fishing the Top Six the Bass Nation High School State Championship took place on Hartwell. Last year at Eufaula Cody Stahl and Tate Von Egmond won. They attend Cross Point Christian Academy in Hollonville and both live here near Griffin.

Cody and Tate won again this year, weighing in over 21 pounds of bass in two days and becoming the first team to win two years in a row. And to make things harder, Cody had an injured hand during the tournament, making it harder to fish effectively.

Cody said they caught their fish on spinnerbaits and jigs, and their bigger fish came on the jig and pig from blowdowns. Cody likes a Fishog 1/2oz black/blue ‪#‎Jigsaw jig tied on an ALX rods ‪#‎Promise7 flipping rod to pull them out of the heaviest blow downs!

After the first day of the BFL Regional at Neely Henry Lake Jordan McDonald was leading on the co-angler side with five bass weighing just over 12 pounds. Jordan qualified for this regional tournament through the Bulldog BFL trail here in Georgia.

Jordan fishes with me in both the Flint River Bass Club and Spalding County Sportsman Club. He joined ten years ago when he was 16 years old and has come a long way in that time. He fishes both the BFL and Weekend Series here in Georgia. He is one of the Young Fishermen doing well in tournaments.

Catching fish as a co-angler can be tough but Jordan does it well. The co-angler stays in the back of the boat all day and does not have any control over where they go to fish. And the boater can make it almost impossible for the co-angler to fish by the way he positions the boat. Unfortunately, Jordan had a bad second day in this tournament and caught only one bass.

In the American Bass Anglers Weekend Series he won the point standings for co-angler this year in Georgia. He is starting to get some sponsors, like Douglas Outdoors Rods, one he is especially proud of since he loves their rods for fishing.

Laura Ann with SCAD Fishing Coach and Randy Howell at her scholarship signing ceremony

Laura Ann with SCAD Fishing Coach and Randy Howell at her scholarship signing ceremony

Laura Ann Foshee was the only female on the BASS High School All American team. From Alabama, she is a good fisherman and I did an article with her on Seminole this past summer. Monday she had a signing ceremony when she get her fishing scholarship to Savannah College of Art and Design. That college is forming a Women’s Varsity Fishing Team to compete at the college level. They already have a Men’s Varsity Fishing team. Laura Ann is the first female to be awarded a fishing scholarship there. Among others, Randy Howell attended the event.

Its great to see young local fishermen doing so well in tournaments, and I hope someday to see them fishing and winning the Classic and coming back to Griffin to speak.