Category Archives: Bass Fishing

Bass Fishing Information

Crankbaiting Deeper Water Works Well in Late Summer for Bass

Crankbaiting Deeper Water Works Well in Late Summer

Yamaha Pro Mark Davis Offers Suggestions to Improve Your Technique
from The Fishing Wire

Mark Davis

Mark Davis

Even though it’s September and the next major move bass make will be into shallow creeks and bays, Mark Davis still has a deep diving crankbait tied on and ready to cast. For him, the deep cranking season will continue for at least another month.

“It’s been an extremely hot summer across much of the country, and the water temperature in most lakes is still pretty warm,” explains the Yamaha Pro, “so neither the bass nor the baitfish seem to be very anxious to move shallow. They’re going to remain in deeper water until the lakes start cooling, and until they do, a deep diving crankbait will still be one of the best lures to use to catch them.”

Mark Davis Lands A Bass

Mark Davis Lands A Bass

The technique of deep cranking depths between 10 and about 18 feet is not an easy one to master, but Davis, a three-time B.A.S.S.® Angler of the Year and winner of the 1995 Bassmaster Classic,® began using the presentation more than three decades ago as a guide on Lake Ouachita. Today, he’s considered one of the best deepwater crankbait fishermen in the sport.

“There are some shortcuts to deep water crankbaiting I’ve learned over the years,” smiles Davis, “but it took me a long time to accept them. Probably the most important one is not to even start casting until you know what you’re fishing. About 90 percent of the time, deep cranking is about fishing some feature in deep water, such as a ridge, a hump, or a channel, and you really can’t fish it effectively until you know what it looks like.

“I always idle slowly over the structure and study it with my electronics. Today’s depthfinders and side-scan units will show you the shape of the structure, how big it may be, and provide clues on how you can fish it most effectively.”

While the Yamaha Pro studies the structure, he’s not always looking for bass, either. Instead, he concentrates on trying to identify some smaller, special spot on the structure that might attract and hold a school of fish. Among bass fishermen like Davis, this is known as a ‘sweet spot,’ and it might be a sharp bend in a creek channel, a depth change on a ridge, or a group of stumps on the edge of a point. Sometimes, a sweet spot may not be as large as a bass boat, but even that is large enough to attract bass.

“One type of sweet spot I always try to locate is an area of hard bottom,” emphasizes Davis, “which is particularly important on older lakes where silt usually covers most of the bottom. A hard bottom can be rock, gravel, a shell bed, or even just smooth clay, but it will show up very well on today’s electronics and isn’t hard to identify. When I find hard bottom like this, that’s what I’m going to fish.”

Mark Davis and Bass

Mark Davis and Bass

Initially, Davis keeps his lure choice as simple as possible, choosing either a shad or chartreuse-colored crankbait capable of diving deep enough to reach that hard bottom with a long cast and light, 10-pound line. If the hard bottom or cover is deeper than about 20 feet, he may use a presentation known as long-lining to get his crankbait eight to 10 feet deeper.

“Boat positioning is an important part of deep cranking, too,” continues the Yamaha Pro. “I want to be as far away from my target as possible, but still get my lure down to that target. I’ll also experiment with casting angles, circling the spot to see if the bass want my lure coming from a certain direction. Most of the time, I’ll have my boat in deep water and cast shallow, but sometimes it’ll be just the opposite, and I’ll usually learn this by making a complete casting circle around the target.

There is no way to tell what your best casting angle will be until you experiment like this.

“Deep cranking doesn’t have to be that difficult or that complicated,” concludes Davis, “especially if you learn as much as you can about the structure before you start trying to fish it. In fact, with the quality of today’s electronics, deep cranking has probably never been easier.”

How Bass Fishing Can Be Extremely Frustrating?

Bass fishing can be extremely frustrating! It never fails, when I think I know what to do to catch fish it doesn’t work. And when two days in a row are completely different because you are on two different lakes it gets crazy.

Last Friday I left at 4:00 PM to go to Lake Demopolis in west Alabama to do an article for Alabama Outdoor News magazine. The 200 mile drive was supposed to take about four hours so I went on Friday since I had a tournament at Oconee on Sunday and didn’t think I could drive eight hours and fish several hours on Saturday.

When I was about 30 miles this side of Montgomery on I-85 I passed one of those trailer signs that said “Wreck Ahead – Slow Down.” I knew it must have been bad if they had time to get a sign beside the road.

Sure enough, about two miles later I came to a stop. Traffic was backed up as far as I could see. To make things worse, I was low on gas and had been planning on stopping at the next exit to fill up.

An hour later I got to that exit, one mile from where I had stopped. And it looked like half the people on the interstate had the same idea as me. It took me another full hour to get off the interstate, get gas and get back on the interstate. The gas station was so crowded half that time was just trying to get out of the parking lot!

Back on the interstate I never saw any sign of a wreck. And I got to Demopolis in six hours, not four, so I didn’t get as much sleep as I had hoped.

I fished with local angler Corey Smith and he knows Demopolis well. This lake is really a river with a dam on each end. The downstream dam is just past where the Black Warrior and Tombigbee Rivers join. You can go up either river more than 50 miles.

We caught about 15 bass and two of them were nice. Corey caught a three pounder on a spinnerbait and a five pounder on a swim jig. I caught several bass on a jig and pig.

Fortunately, the drive home that afternoon was uneventful and took only four hours. I got up at 3:00 Sunday morning and headed to Oconee, confident I could catch some bass.

At blast off Jordan and I headed to a lighted dock where I had caught two keepers two weeks before in the Sportsman Club tournament. All we caught there was a short bass. Bass at Oconee have to be 14 inches long to keep and weigh in.

We spent eight hours fishing every kind of cover and structure I could think of to catch a fish. All we caught were fish under the size limit. I did have one that looked like a keeper when it jumped threw my jig head worm. It was a very frustrating day.

In the Flint River Tournament nine people fished eight hour to land six keeper bass weighing about 11 pounds. There were no limits, two people had two each and two people had one each, and five of us did not catch a keeper.

Chuck Croft won it all, first place and big fish, with one weighing 3.27 pounds. Niles Murray came in second with two weighing 3.05 pounds, Phil King was third with two at 3.03 pounds and Dan Phillips came in fourth with one at 1.89 pounds. That was it. Nobody else had a keeper.

Thank goodness fishing will get better around here soon. Highs are supposed to be in the 70s and low 80s this week, so lakes will start cooling and bass will start their fall feeding spree.

I am back on Oconee today with Cody Stahl, a local high school fisherman, doing an article for Georgia Outdoor News. I hope he can show me how to catch a bass there!

Where and How Can I Catch Bass in Georgia In September

Bass fishermen have something to look forward at the beginning of September each year. It will only be about another month before fishing gets good again after a long hot summer. September can be a mean month for catching bass, but they can be caught even now. Yes, you can catch bass in Georgia in September

Our Georgia lakes are as hot as they get all year in September and oxygen content is at its lowest level. And there are more baitfish making easy meals for bass, but shad and herring draw them to open water, making them harder to find and pattern.

Fortunately, there are three patterns that will usually pay off in September. You may be able to find bass on all three on some lakes but at least one or two will work on all our lakes. You can fish at night, go deep or find moving water.

At night many bass move shallow and get more active. For years fishing early in the morning and late in the afternoon has been known as the best time to catch bass in hot weather. Extend that and fish during the dark. It means adjusting some of the things you do, and works best on clear lakes, but you will be more comfortable and catch more bass after the sun goes down.

Fishing deep it a traditional way to catch bass in hot water and bass are schooled up and holding on deep structure and cover. It takes special techniques to find and catch them, but once you find a school you can often catch large numbers of fish in one spot. And bass often come up from deep cover to hit baitfish on top, opening up an exciting way to catch them.

Current turns bass on and finding moving water usually means catching bass. Everything from natural current way up rivers and creeks to water moving across main lake points from power generation at the dam will make bass feed. Look in the right places and you can find active bass in current in most of our lakes.

Each of the following lakes has its own characteristics that fit some of the above three methods of catching September bass:

Thurmond (Clarks Hill}

One Labor Day weekend several years ago I was staying at my place at Raysville Boat Club on Clark’s Hill and woke up very early Saturday morning. I was too excited about an afternoon dove shoot to sleep, so I got in the boat and idled across to a brush pile I had built in eight feet of water. The full moon was beautiful and lit the lake brightly enough to throw shadows.

A bass took my Texas rigged curly tail worm in the brush and jumped twice when I set the hook. It looked to be well over eight pounds, but it threw the hook on the second jump. Two weeks later, just before the sun rose over the trees, I hooked and landed my first nine-pound bass from that same brush pile, on the same kind of worm.

Fishing at night is very good at Clarks Hill and you can catch bass from sunset until sunrise in shallow water. There is a full moon on September 23 this year and there is no more exciting way to catch bass than running a buzzbait or Jitterbug over shallow cover in the moonlight. Fish a topwater bait slowly and steadily to give the bass a better shot at it.

Riprap is always good on Clarks Hill at night but shallow hydrilla beds are excellent, too. Start fishing as the sun sets and keep fishing topwater as long as there is any light, working around the outside edges of the hydrilla and through cuts in it. It is best to locate the beds in daylight so you have an idea of the area to fish. Keep at it until the sun rises.

On dark nights work a Texas rigged worm on a light lead or a light jig and pig around riprap and the hydrilla, too. Crawl both baits on the rocks and drop them into holes and cuts in the hydrilla. You can use a black light to help you see the cover and your line, but this is a great way to learn to feel what your bait is doing.

Moving water is hard to find on Clarks Hill but you can run up the Savannah River to near the Russell dam and catch current flowing both ways. When power is being generated at the Russell dam strong current flows down the river. At night and early in the morning when the Corps is pumping water back into Russell current goes up the river.

Get out on main lake points and work a big crankbait or big Carolina rigged worm with the current. The bass will usually hold on the break on the downstream side of the current, so their position will change depending on which way the water is flowing.

On most of the lake, current is not a factor and bass hold as deep as oxygen levels allow. One year in late August I was playing with an oxygen monitor and discovered there was not enough oxygen below 11 feet deep in the Raysville area for a bass to survive. Further down the lake the depth of good oxygen got deeper.

Ride over deep points and humps watching your depthfinder. When you find fish, often holding near stumps and brush on the steepest drop on the structure, back off and make long casts with a big crankbait or big Carolina or Texas rigged worm. Bass will usually be holding from 18 to 30 feet deep on the lower Savannah River and Little River areas of the main lake.

Watch for surface activity in these same areas. Largemouth will come up to the surface to hit blueback herring and shad and will fall for topwater plugs like Spooks and Sammys. Work these baits over the deep cover even if they are not coming up and you can sometimes draw them to the surface.

Lanier

Lanier means spots and herring in September, and night fishing is usually best on this big, heavily used lake. At night you can actually hold your boat on points on the main lake without getting thrown out by the wake of passing cruisers. And it is a lot cooler.

Lanier is so clear and busy with pleasure craft that bass usually hold deep even at night. You can fish the same places and patterns day and night to catch them, and use the same baits.

Laura and Trent Gober fish many tournaments on Lanier and often finish high on the list. Laura fished the Women’s Bass Tour before it closed and did well on that trail, too. Lanier is her home lake and she loves to go after the big spots there.

Find brush on a deep hump or point and you are likely to find big spots holding there day and night. And think real deep. Bass on Lanier often hold 30 to 60 feet deep. It is harder to fish that deep but it pays off in bigger fish.

Laura likes to throw a Texas rigged Senko on light line and work it through the brush and any other cover on points and humps from Brown’s Bridge to the dam. Ride over the humps and points watching your depthfinder carefully for cover. Sometimes you will see the fish in it if you have a good unit. When you spot a likely looking place, throw a marker out a few feet from it so you can stay on it. At night you can attach a small glow stick to your marker so you can see it.

Back off and make long casts. Feed line out so your lure sinks straight down. When fishing extreme depths, if you don’t let your lure sink on a slack line, the lure will swing way off the cover as it sinks. When you hit the cover, work your bait in it slowly, twitching it in one spot. Yo-yo it on limbs in brush piles, making it dance up and down in one spot.

The same deep places hold bass day and night and the Texas rigged worm works well, but blueback herring offer another option during the day. Bass holding 30 feet deep in brush and tree tops will come to the surface to eat herring that swim near the top on bright, sunny days. During the day, find deep cover, back off and cast a topwater bait like a Spook or Sammy over it. A Fluke can be worked in the same spots in the same way.

Make long casts and work the bait fast, making it look like a bass chasing a herring across the surface. Be ready for a smashing hit when a big spots comes rushing up for an easy meal.

Finding current on Lanier means running way up the Chattahoochee River, and you need a shallow draft boat to be safe. You have to be very careful in any boat, but if you go up the river far enough you will find moving water. If power is being generated at the dam you can find current further down the river.

When you get to moving water fish any cover you see with a Texas rigged worm. Most cover this far up the river will be shoreline rocks and trees in the water. Pitch your bait to the upstream side of the cover and let is wash downstream with the current in a natural movement.

You can also keep your boat downstream of the cover and cast a small crankbait up past it and work it back. Make it look like a baitfish being moved down the river, making it an easy meal for waiting bass.

Oconee

Lake Oconee is unusual for its strong currents that flow both ways. Power generation at the dam creates current all over the lake, and the pumpback moves water back upstream far up the Oconee River and main creeks. That current makes the bass feed heavily in September.

Terry Adams lives near Oconee and fishes it often. He won the BFL and an Oconee Marine tournament on Oconee two years ago with five bass limits weighing over 17 pounds in each. In 2006 he and one of his mentors, Jack Brown, won the Berry’s Classic on Oconee and Sinclair. Terry has won several other tournaments there including some of the old JR Tournaments.

Docks are a key to Terry’s fishing and he looks for docks on deep water. He wants to find a dock with at least ten feet of water in front of it. He pitches a jig and pig to the dock posts, lets it sink to the bottom, strokes it up off the bottom and lets it fall back, then hits the next post. He does not try to get his bait way back under a dock, he says too many fish get tangled up and break off. He looks for active fish on the outside posts.

Current running by the docks makes them much better and pulls the fish out to the outside posts. Waves from passing boats can do this, too, so Terry likes boat traffic. Docks from the Highway 44 Bridge to the mouth of Richland Creek are his favorite ones.

Docks are good at night, too. Terry will look for a lighted dock and run a crankbait under the light if he can get an angle on it. He casts a Shadrap or other small crankbait in shad color. He will also pitch a big worm to the lights. Dock lights are inconsistent on Oconee because they get turned on and off. The best bet is to ride the lake and hit any lighted docks you find.

Fishing a big crankbait 12 to 20 feet deep on points and humps is a good way to catch quality bass on Oconee, too. The bass will hold on the drop on the downstream side of the current, so that can change between generation current running downstream and pumpback current running upstream. Find the drop with your depthfinder then make long casts to get your bait down to the bottom.

West Point

Although the Corps of Engineers seems determined to remove as much shoreline cover as they can pile up and burn every winter, night fishing around blowdowns and stumps can be good at West Point. Brushpiles are also good in the dark and any wood cover you can find will produce bass in the dark.

Find blowdowns during daylight hours and learn how they lay and how to fish them when you can see them. Also find deeper brush on points and humps and mark it. Work a Texas rigged worm through all the wood cover. A big worm, from a Zoom Mag 2 up to an Old Monster, in dark colors, will draw bites from fish holding in the wood.

Look for blowdowns from Highland Marina up Yellowjacket Creek and the Chattahoochee River. From Highland Marina down, much of the shoreline cover has been removed so look for brush piles in 10 to 20 feet of water to fish. If you ride almost any point or hump you will find bush somebody has put out.

During the day bass really key on current moving across the humps and points on the main lake. Week days are best by far since power generation is stronger and more consistent than on weekends. Current moves schools of shad across deeper cover and bass feed heavily on them.

Look for roadbeds, humps and long points from Highland Marina to the dam. Bass will often feed during the day from 12 to 30 feet deep as current flows across them, and they will usually hold on the downsteam side, where there is a drop. Cover like brush and stumps make it even better.

Big crankbaits like Mann’s 20+, Fat Free Shad and Norman DD22 Ns work well to imitate the shad the bass feed on and get down deep enough to catch them. You need to fish them on eight to 10 pound line to get them deep, and fluorocarbon line is best since it is thin, sinks and does not stretch much.

Get on the downstream side of structure and cover and make long casts upstream. Stay close enough to the cover to get your bait down to it. It takes 20 to 30 feet to get a big crankbait down 20 feet, so you have to cast that far past the target to hit it.

Reel your lure steadily with a medium speed. When you hit cover, pause it a second and let it float up, then jerk it so it darts away. Check your line on every cast since it will get frayed hitting the cover.

You can catch bass right now. Try these tactics and adapt them to the ways you fish, and you won’t have to wait another month to enjoy successful bass fishing!

Do Lakes Go Through Fishing Cycles?

If you have been bass fishing for very long you have seen it. For some reason a lake gets “hot” and bass bite like crazy. Suddenly, fishermen are catching more and bigger bass than they have for years. Our Georgia lakes go through fishing cycles, but what causes a lake to produce better bass fishing than normal?

We all know the bass spawn makes a difference in bass populations, but it is not felt for several years. The success or failure of a few bass does not change the long term effect. It is not how many eggs are laid and hatched, it is the survival of the little bass that matters.

In Georgia lakes most bass spawn in April. Some spawn earlier, especially way down south in Seminole, and some spawn later in northern lakes, but the bulk of the spawn is in April. So what happens on our lakes in April and May this year may control how many bass you catch in three to five years on that lake. It is definitely a delayed reaction.

After bass spawn the male protects the fry for a few days but then they must fend for themselves. Everything in the lake, from bream and blueback herring to papa bass, wants to eat the tiny bass. So they must hide while finding enough food to grow big enough that they aren’t near the bottom of the food chain.

Walter George, usually called Eufaula, is a good example of the cycles our lakes go through. There is a lot of very shallow shoreline cover that is perfect for baby bass to hide in and eat as they grow. But if the lake drops a foot or two it leaves the grass they need to hide in high and dry, and many baby bass are eaten.

For some reason the Corps of Engineers seems to drop Eufaula in April after the bulk of the spawn, at the worst time possible. Although there are extensive lily pad fields and deeper grass on some areas of the lake, the very shallow shoreline cover the baby bass need is unavailable to them. So the numbers of them are greatly reduced, all over the lake.

If the water at Eufaula stays high in April and a lot of young bass survive you will see the effect in a couple of years. It will seem you catch throwbacks everywhere you fish, and you will catch a bunch of them. Your bass fishing skill didn’t suddenly get better, there are simply more bass to catch.

The bass hatch is considered a year class and it includes all the bass spawned in a year. As that group of bass grows you can follow their year class and see the ways it affects the catch rate. After three or four years you will catch a lot of keepers, then after five or six years you will start catching more quality bass. That is when it seems it takes a 20 pound plus stringer to win every tournament.

It would seem that a large year class would produce more and more bass every year because the higher numbers produce more young bass, but just laying eggs and having them hatch does not affect the future numbers. What makes a difference is the numbers of fry that survive their first few months. Since each bass produces hundreds of eggs, it does not take many to produce all the young bass needed. What matters is how many survive.

While our lakes were low the past few years lots of stuff grew in the exposed bottom. This cover runs way out so, even if the lakes drop after the spawn, there will be shallow cover for the fry. This spring should see an excellent survival rate in most of our lakes, so our fishing should get better and better for the next five years. That gives us something to look forward to!

How Can You Catch Suspended Bass?

If you ask most bass fishermen how to catch suspended bass, don’t be surprised if the response is: “you can’t.” Suspended bass present fishermen with one of the most difficult problems to solve and many just give up and go look for easier fish to catch. But there are ways to get them to bite and tactics that will help you land fish that others give up on.

Bass suspend away from structure and cover for a variety of reasons. One of the most common is when lakes stratify, forming a thermocline between hot upper oxygenated layers of water and cooler, deeper layers with little oxygen. Bass can’t live in the cooler waters so they get as close to it as they can, suspending over deep water at the level where they can still find enough oxygen.

Suspended bass will often be found holding off points and humps at the most comfortable depth to them. They will be over a deeper channel but not far from the rise in the bottom where it meets the depth they are holding. That allows them to run in and feed, then move back out over deeper water.

Some lakes present a special situation where standing timber under the water rises many feet off the bottom. Bass will often use these trees as cover, relating to the trunks and limbs while holding well off the bottom of the lake.

The best way to find suspended bass where you fish is to ride the lake and watch a depth finder carefully. Follow channels and ditches while watching for fish holding between the bottom and the surface. Riding back and forth over a point or hump, not turning your boat until well past the drop of the bottom contour, will show you schools of bass suspended near them. And moving slowly over standing timber will reveal bass suspended in it if your depth finder is a good one.

Depth control of your bait is critical to catching suspended bass. They are holding at a set depth and will not move far up or down to take a bait. So finding the bass and knowing what level they are holding is just the first step. You must then find a way to put your bait at the level where they will see it.

A crankbait is a good way to catch suspended bass but you must make it work at the dept the bass are holding. There is an old tried and true method of doing this that has fallen out of favor. Trolling it a great way to get your crankbait down to a set depth and keep it there while covering a lot of water, but it is against the rules in bass tournaments so many bass fishermen have abandoned it, but it still works.

Most lure companies have designed a variety of crankbaits that run down to a set depth. For example, a Bandit Series 400 will run 12 to 16 feet deep and a Series 700 will run 14 to 18 feet deep. A Bomber Fat Free Shad will run 14 to 18 feet deep while a Fat Free Fingerling will run eight to 10 feet deep.

The depth varies depending on factors like trolling speed, line size and amount of line out, so you need to experiment to find out the exact combination to produce the exact depth you want. Mark a set depth on a point then troll over it varying line size, length of line out and trolling speed until your bait just ticks the bottom at the depth you want it to run, then troll through schools of bass at that depth.

You can do the same thing if you are limiting yourself to casting, but line size and the distance you cast are even more important. And boat position becomes critical. When you cast a crankbait like the Bomber or Bandit it will dive to its maximum depth as you start your retrieve then rise when it gets near the boat.

Since your crankbait will stay a the desired depth for only a short distance when casting, you must locate the schools of bass then position your boat near them so you can cast past them and work the bait back, keeping it at the critical depth as long a as possible.

Some newer baits on the market make casting and controlling your depth easier. Both the Swarming Hornet and the Fish Head Spin are lead-head baits with a small spinner under the head. When you attach a Roboworm E-Z Shad or other shad looking plastic bait, it imitates a baitfish.

Tie on one of these baits and vary the weight of the lure and the line size to match the conditions like wind, water clarity and depth you want to fish. Smaller diameter line helps keep the bait at the depth you want to fish and you can get by with lighter line since the bass are away from cover.

Position your boat near the school of suspended bass and make a long cast past it. Feed line to the bait as it falls so it drops straight down and count it down. Figure one second per foot of drop, but to be more exact cast to a known depth and count it down to make sure your are accurate.

When the Fish Head Spin or Swarming Hornet reaches the correct depth, slowly reel the lure along. A slow, steady retrieve keeps the spinner turning and keeps the bait at the optimum depth. You can cover much more water at the best depth with one of these lures than with a crankbait since the lure drops straight down to the correct depth then stays at that depth all the way back to the boat.

One of the easiest and most effective ways to control the exact depth you want to fish is by using a drop shot rig. A drop shot rig is one where the lead is tied to the very end of your line and a hook tied on up the line. Special hooks and sinkers are designed for drop shotting and make it a more efficient way to fish, but you can use any sinker and hook as long as the hook is very sharp.

Gamakatsu hooks are known to be super sharp and they make a Drop Shot/Split Shot hook that comes in a variety of sizes and you can choose red or black hooks. These hooks are relatively small and are perfect for nose hooking small plastic bait like a Slider Worm, Roboworm or Gulp Minnow Grub.

A soft, straight worm like the Slider or Roboworm is the usual choice for drop shotting, but experiment with other shapes of baits, too. Some days the bass might like a fat Gulp Grub with a quivering curly tail over a thin straight worm.

Choose one of the plastic baits that match the size of the baitfish the bass are eating, and use a color based on water color. Clear water is usually best for drop shotting so line choice is critical, too. Fluorocarbon line is the standard for drop shotting and Sunline is invisible in the water and holds up well. The lack of stretch of fluorocarbons like Sunline also help with hooking fish on light line.

You can drop shot at any depth you find the fish holding. If they are three feet off the bottom, tie your hook three feet up the line. If they are 15 feet off the bottom, tie your hook 15 feet up the line.

This may sound strange but, since the sinker is at the end of the line, when you hook a bass and reel it in, there is nothing to get in the way of landing it. You may have a lot of line trailing the bass but you can land the fish without reeling it all in.

Get your boat right on top of the school of bass and hold over them watching your depthfinder. Let the sinker on your drop shot rig hit the bottom and you know your bait will be at the exact depth you tied it above the sinker. Twitch your rod tip, making the worm or grub dance right in front of the bass’s mouth.

Drop shotting is the best way to catch bass suspended in timber, too. For these bass, tie a hook a few inches to a foot above a sinker and get right on top of the fish. A good depth finder will allow you to watch your bait as it falls and you can stop it right in front of the bass and shake it. You are usually targeting a single bass in timber rather than a school. A drop shot rig moves the sinker away from the bait while still giving ou exact depth control.

Don’t let suspended bass ruin your day. Try these techniques to land them when others are just shaking their heads.

Fishing Was Tough At Lake Oconee

At Oconee last Sunday 15 members of the Spalding County Sportsman Club fished for eight hours for our August tournament. We landed 20 14-inch long keepers weighing about 38 pounds. There were no limits and four members didn’t land a keeper.

Jay Gerson won with two fish weighing 6.35 pounds and his 3.57 pound largemouth was big fish. Kwong Yu came in second with four at 5.42 pounds, John Miller placed third with 3 weighing 4.97 pounds and my two weighing 4.04 pounds was fourth.

We started at 5:30 so we had about an hour to fish in the dark, and I caught both my keepers before 6:30. They both hit a Texas rigged worm near two different docks. After that I fished all over the lower end of the lake, trying many different kinds of structure and cover at different depths, and caught a few short fish. It was a very tough day.

At 11:00 I heard thunder rumbling back to the west and I looked at the radar app on my phone and saw a line of red headed my way. So I ran the five miles back to the ramp, tied the boat to the dock and sat in my van until noon when the lightening stopped. I will not stay on the water when it is lightening.

After it stopped I fished for another hour and a half and caught a throwback but that was it.

Where Should I jig a Spoon for Georgia Bass?

Jig A Spoon For Bass

One of the most efficient ways to catch a bass this time of year is to jig a spoon. But which of our lakes are best for jigging, and what works best on them?

Way back in 1974 I was spending my Christmas holidays at Clark’s Hill. I had my first depth finder, a Lowarence flasher, on my first bass boat and I was learning to use it. On a ridge in Germany Creek I kept seeing flashes just off the bottom in 12 feet of water. Although I drug crankbaits and worms through the area I never hit anything, so I guessed it must be fish. But I never got a bite, either.

I remembered something I had read about jigging a spoon and dug around in my tacklebox. I didn’t have a spoon but did have some Little Georges, so I tied one on. After trying a variety of retrieves, from casting and hopping to dragging along the bottom, I found if I jigged it straight up and down about two feet, feeling the blade spin going up and down, I would get a hit.

In three days I landed over 60 bass from that school before they moved on. I often find bass stacked up in deep water schools like that and catch them on spoons and Little Georges starting in November and that pattern usually holds up until late February.

What makes a good jigging lake? Clear water helps. Deep structure like trees and rocks can be good, but sometimes bass like a hard clay or sand bottom. A good population of threadfin shad is good since they usually have a die-off from cold water and bass hold under the schools looking for an easy meal.

What do you need for jigging a spoon? A good depthfinder is a must. My old Lowrance flasher worked but to really find fish you need a high quality unit that will show you fish even when they are holding tight to cover. And you need to find the little changes in structure and cover that attracts them.

I like a six foot baitcasting rod and reel spooled with 12 to 17 pound fluorocarbon line. The rod needs to have a fairly light tip so you can feel every move the spoon makes but plenty of backbone so you can set the hook and get the fish away from cover.

Lake Lanier offers almost perfect jigging conditions and I have heard jigging spoons in Georgia got its start there back in the 1960s. Spotted bass are also seem to take spoons even better than largemouth and Lanier is full of spots. But be prepared to go deep in Lanier – spots there often hold in water 50 to 60 feet deep in the winter.

Find standing timber in deep water and ride over it until you spot fish. When you find fish drop a marker near them – it is very easy to get off the fish if you don’t. Drop your spoon down and jig it up and down in front of them. You can usually see your spoon with a quality depth finder to know exactly where it is. If your spoon stops before it hits bottom, set the hook. Bass will usually hit on the fall.

Other good clear water lakes like Lanier are Russell, Hartwell, Allatoona and many north Georgia lakes. They have similar cover and fish as Lanier.

Clark’s Hill is where I got my start and it is a good place to jig, but it is usually more stained. In stained water I often use a Little George for more vibration and flash. And the fish are shallower. Check hard clay and sand humps and points in 12 to 30 feet of water there and on Oconee, West Point and Jackson for similar fishing.

Don’t let the weather keep you inside this time of year. Get a spoon and get on the lake.

How Can Pro Bass Fishermen Catch More Bass Than Me?

Bass fishermen are also getting the chance to start earlier.
You may have seen the article in the Griffin Daily News last Friday about Cody Stahl and Tate Van Egmond, CrossPointe Christian Academy students that live here. They have a high school fishing team and the two of them placed 10th in the Bass National High School Fishing Championship on Kentucky Lake in July. Cody plans on being a professional fisherman and is starting out right.

Both the FLW and BASS now have high school and college organizations. Some colleges offer bass fishing scholarships now. I have been doing articles with some of those high school and college fishermen the past few years. This year BASS named a National High School All American Bass team. Two of them are from Alabama and one from South Carolina and I have done articles with all three. They all are very good fishermen, especially for their age. The current issue of GON has the article with Lori Ann Foshee – the only female member of the team, and on the cover is a picture I took of her holding up two five-pound bass she caught t Seminole on our trip.

Dawson Lenz grew up in Peachtree City and was a good high school fisherman. He chose to go to North Alabama College since it had a fishing team, was right on a great Tennessee River chain of lakes, and they gave him a full scholarship. His team won the College National Bass Championship twice. He graduated this year and is starting to fish the pro trails and I expect him to do well.

I have gotten to spend some time in a boat with some of the top pro fishermen in both trails doing articles. To give you an idea of the kind of money they can make:

Kevin Van Dam – $5,690,476.33 – 370,950 6 million
Casey Ashley – $1,173,262.00 – 230,999 2 million
Rick Clunn – $2,247,191.53 – 882,477 4.5 million
Boyd Duckett – $1,542,753.47 – 27,087 2 million
Micah Frazier – $34,194.00 – 225,728 300,000
Kelly Jaye – $89,051.60 – 80,187 150,000
Steven Kennedy – $1,262,763.00 – 786,277 2 million
Randall Tharp – $335,220.00 – 141,323,144 2 million
Greg Vinson – $512,957.06 – 123,930 650,000

I often wonder, and many fishermen ask me, what is the difference between a club fisherman like me and the top pros, and I have asked them that question. How can pro bass fishermen catch more bass than me? Part of it is time on the water, learning how to find and catch bass under varying conditions. Part of it is the mechanics. I can get a bait under a dock a couple of feet most of the time. Those guys can skip a bait from the front of the dock all the way to the back with little splashing almost every cast. And, unlike me, they hardly ever hit the dock!

I think there is something else, a sixth sense they have about catching bass. I compare it to baseball and playing the piano. Anybody can learn to play both, and practice constantly to become very good. But few will ever play in the major leagues or play a concert at Carnegie Hall. The people that make it to the very top of any profession have something special that gives them an edge.

At times I have a flash of that insight or sixth sense. Before a tournament I will just know in my mind if I go to a certain place and do specific things I will catch fish, and sometimes it works out. It doesn’t happen much to me. But those pros admit they often have that insight. It is so common that one pro is known for saying “if you think it, do it.’ He and the others are listening to that insight.

One of the first top pros I fished with was Boyd Duckett. He had won the Classic the year before we went and was at the top of his game. Even those pros, like all others, have ups and downs. I went with Boyd on his home lake, Demopolis in Alabama, and we were out from daylight to dark. He worked as hard as anyone I have ever been out with showing me his techniques and trying to help me catch fish. At the end of the day he had landed 33 bass – and I had landed 4! We were using the same baits, fishing the same places, but he still beat me eight to one!

A similar experience happened to me on Eufaula. We had a club tournament the same weekend a BASSmasters tournament was going on. That morning I caught a 3.5 pound bass the first place I stopped. As I went to the next place I wanted to fish I saw a bunch of boats – I counted 17 when they stopped – running up the lake behind another boat.
All those boats were following Denny Brauer – one of the top pros at that time. During the day I saw him six times – he was going into places as I was leaving, fishing the same cover and structure I had just fished. I found out later he was fishing a jig and pig on the edge of the grass in them, exactly what I was doing.

At the end of the day he had five bass weighing over 20 pounds. I had my one 3.5 pounder – I never caught another fish that day!

That happens often.

What Are Some Levels Of Bass Tournament Fishing?

After a few years of writing mostly about bass fishing for them I came up with an idea. I tried to think of something that the average bass fisherman like me would like to read, and I knew we wanted specific information that would help us catch bass. We always want something, whether it is a new plug or special worm that will help us.

I came up with the idea to get a local expert to show me ten places on a lake where you could catch bass the month the article would run, talk about how to fish each place and what baits to use. I have done that article every month except one in GON for 19 years now.

The one I missed I was supposed to go to Russell on Friday, write the article on Saturday and leave on a two week trip with my wife on Sunday. Thursday night the guy called and said he couldn’t do the article and I had no time to find someone else and set it up.

About nine years ago GON started Alabama Outdoor News, the same magazine just in Alabama. And I started doing the Map of the Month article there, too, and have not missed and issue since that magazine started.

I have gotten to meet some of the best bass fishermen in the US and spend time in a boat with them. I don’t know how much you guys know about bass tournament fishing.

At the lowest level are club tournaments like I fish. There are over 100 bass clubs just in Georgia and three of them are here in Spalding County. Many fishermen start at the club level and work up. Clubs usually have monthly tournaments with an entry fee of around $25 and you might win $100 for first place. It is not about the money at the club level, it is more fun and camaraderie – and bragging rights.

Next are local trails and state level tournaments. These usually cost $100 to $200 to enter and first place will often win around $5000. They are much more competitive and are in a pro-am format, with the pro paying more and fishing from the front of the boat all day. The amateur pays about half as much as the pro and has to fish from the back of the boat all day and can win about half as much as the pro. It is a great way to learn about fishing, tho.

The next level are the regional tournaments put on by two big national organizations, The FLW and BASS. In those the entry fee is around $1000 and first place pays about $50,000 so you are getting in a much more professional group. And those doing well on these trails start getting sponsors to help pay expenses and give them equipment, including boats.

At the top level the two organizations have a trail fishermen have to qualify for through their lower trails and entry fee is about $5000 per tournament, but first place pays $100,000. And if you are at this level you have to have sponsors that give you cash as well as equipment, and pay your entry fees.

Each group has a final tournament each year for the best of the best. There is no entry fee but it by invitation only and limited to around 50 fishermen. The Bassmasters Classic pays about $400,000 for first and the FLW Championship pays the same or more. And if you win either, you will get somewhere around one million dollars in sponsorships the next year.
Two years ago I went to the Classic in Birmingham as a press observer. A few weeks after I got home my editor at GON called and said I was famous – I was quoted in Sports Illustrated. It is common to say the Classic is the Super Bowl of Bass Fishing. One day on the way to an event I said we should say the Superbowl is the Bassmasters Classic of football. A Sports Illustrated writer overheard me and quoted me, even getting my name and web site right!

So fishing is big business!

Good Luck and Bad Luck Fishing A Tournament At Clarks Hill

If life gives you lemons, make lemonade – or margaritas! Sometimes what seems like bad luck can turn into a good thing. Take advantage of those times. Good luck and bad luck while fishing a tournament at Clarks Hill proved this to me.

I went over to Clarks Hill last Wednesday to get ready for the Flint River Bass Club tournament this past weekend. Thursday morning I got up and drove over to Soap Creek Marina, about 18 miles from my trailer at Raysville Boat Club, to try to find some fish in the 88 degree water.

At 1:30 I ran out of gas. No problem, my boat has two 25 gallon tanks, and the other one had over ten gallons of gas in it. But I could not get the motor to pick it up. After 15 minutes of trying to get the valve to switch over I gave up and got on the trolling motor.

I was about five miles from the ramp so I was not too worried, but the sun was extremely hot and the going slow. It took me over two hours to get in. Just as I got to the ramp a bad thunderstorm hit. It is much harder to load a bass boat on the trailer without the gas motor so I got soaked. Really, I was not much wetter from the rain than I was from sweat.

After filling up the empty tank in town the motor cranked right up. I still haven’t figured out the problem. But it pretty much ruined my day of fishing, and it was my birthday!

The lemonade part of running out of gas happened going in. I watched my depthfinder/GPS unit while going to the ramp and as I crossed one big cove I saw the symbol for an underwater house foundation back in it on the GPS.

The next afternoon as I headed in from a day of practice where I had found a couple of small patterns and caught a few bass I remember the foundation and rode over it. My depthfinder showed what looked like rocks with fish on them at 20 feet deep. I dropped a worm down to it and caught a nice 2.5 pound largemouth.

During the tournament Saturday Jordan and I caught our three biggest bass on those rocks. I would have never found those fish except for my bad luck!

In the tournament eight members of the club fished for 16 hours to land 24 keepers weighing about 44 pounds.
There was one five-bass limit in the two days and two fishermen didn’t catch a keeper.

Niles Murray won with nine keepers weighing 15.51 pounds and had the only limit. Chuck Croft caught only four keepers but one weighed 6.02 pounds for big fish and his total weighed of 12.19 pounds was good for second place. My six keepers weighing 10.40 pounds was third and Jordan McDonald came in fourth with three weighing 3.49 pounds.

Saying fishing was tough puts it way too mildly. Saturday morning Jordan and I started on a bridge riprap at blast off and I quickly caught a two pound bass on a spinnerbait. I thought that was a good sign, I had caught several keepers last year in the same tournament on that bridge. But after two hours of fishing it we had not caught another fish.

We then went to the foundation and during the next 90 minutes I landed two good two pound fish and Jordan got one. At 9:30 we went to a small creek where I had caught some keepers the day before on topwater in the middle of the day around hydrilla and fished it for four hours, and Jordan got his two other keepers and I got one. But they were much smaller than the day before.

We went back to the foundation to fish the last hour of the day and did not get a bite.

On Sunday we started on the bridge again. After almost an hour I had lost one keeper that jumped and threw a crankbait. Then I lost another one on a topwater plug, but caught two keepers on top by 7:30. We then went to the foundation where I hooked and lost another good fish, but got no more bites.

We fished hard until the end of the tournament, trying the hydrilla and another bridge, but got no more keepers. It was a very frustrating after the sun got high both days.

It was very hot both days and uncomfortable to fish. I would much rather fish at night this time of year. It is cooler and more comfortable and the fish generally bite better. But many people don’t like night fishing for a variety of reasons.

At night I like to fish a black plastic worm on a rocky bottom. Bass can see much better than we can since their eyes take in about five times as much light as do ours. And their lateral line allows them to feel or “hear” vibrations in the water, like the lead on a worm rig scrapping along a rocky bottom.

It is a challenge, but kind of fun, too, to try to feel a bite on a worm, get your line tight and set the hook in the dark. And it is hard to land a big fish since you can’t see it to net it in the dark. If you shine a flashlight in the water to see it the bass will spook and take off, and often break your line.

Even with the problems, it is still fun!