Category Archives: Tournament Fishing

2015 Bassmasters Classic Returning to Lake Hartwell

Jan. 16, 2014

Bassmaster Classic To Return In 2015 To South Carolina

GREENVILLE, S.C. — The Bassmaster Classic is going “Upcountry” in 2015.

Greenville and Lake Hartwell, located in the upstate region of South Carolina popularly known as The Upcountry, have been selected as the sites for the 2015 Bassmaster Classic.

B.A.S.S. and South Carolina officials, including Gov. Nikki R. Haley, made the announcement today in Greenville.

Feb. 20-22 will be the competition dates for the field of anglers who qualify for the world championship through various Bassmaster competitions throughout 2014.

A new, multi-million-dollar launch facility, Green Pond, has been constructed near Anderson, S.C., for the anglers’ daily takeoffs. They’ll bring their catches to Greenville for weigh-ins at the Bon Secours Wellness Arena, recognized by the entertainment industry as one of the Top 50 venues in the world. The Bassmaster Classic Expo, the consumer show held concurrently with the competition days, will be at the 280,000-square-foot TD Convention Center in Greenville.

“We are thrilled that the Bassmaster Classic has chosen to return to South Carolina and selected Greenville for their 2015 location,” said Haley. “It’s truly a great a day in South Carolina, and now millions of people will get to see why our beautiful state continues to attract topnotch sporting events.”

“B.A.S.S. is delighted to be returning to Lake Hartwell and Greenville,” said Bruce Akin, CEO of B.A.S.S. “We will be working closely with our South Carolina partners over the next year to be sure Classic 2015 will be the first-class sporting event B.A.S.S. members and fishing fans worldwide have come to expect.”

B.A.S.S last brought the Classic to Greenville and Lake Hartwell in February 2008. The lake produced what was then the third-largest winning weight for a Classic: 49 pounds, 7 ounces. Bassmaster Elite Series pro Alton Jones of Texas was the author of that mark. Jones bested the 44-5 posted by Cliff Pace, then a 25-year-old, up-and-coming Elite pro from Mississippi. Pace went on to become a Classic champ himself in 2013.

Besides Gov. Haley, South Carolina officials on hand for Thursday’s announcement were representatives from South Carolina Parks, Recreation and Tourism (SCPRT); VisitGreenvilleSC; VisitAnderson; the City of Greenville, Greenville County; and Anderson County.

“We are thrilled that the Bassmaster Classic has chosen to return in 2015. The world championship of bass fishing recognizes the great combination of Lake Hartwell and facilities in Anderson and Greenville,” said Chris Stone, president of VisitGreenvilleSC.

Stone noted that in 2008, more than 75,000 people attended the Classic in Greenville over three days.

“We look forward to an even larger event in 2015, which will have tremendous impact on the local economy, with a projected impact of more than $17 million in revenue to the Upstate,” Stone said.

Said Duane Parrish, SCPRT director: “SCPRT is very proud that Greenville has been chosen as the host site for the Bassmaster Classic in 2015. This accomplishment is a testament to the hard work and efforts of VisitGreenvilleSC and VisitAnderson working together with the City of Greenville, Greenville County and Anderson County to once again host this premiere event, and is further proof of South Carolina’s growing reputation as a top destination for sports tourism.”

As one of the largest lakes in the Southeast, Hartwell attracts millions of visitors every year, according to the US Army Corps of Engineers, which manages the lake. Bordering Georgia and South Carolina on the Savannah, Tugaloo and Seneca rivers, the impoundment stretches 49 miles up the Tugaloo and 45 miles up the Seneca at normal pool elevation. Hartwell comprises nearly 56,000 acres of water with a shoreline of 962 miles, making it an ideal challenge for Classic anglers. Largemouth bass are abundant; the lake also holds spotted bass.

“There couldn’t be a better location than Lake Hartwell for the 2015 Bassmaster Classic,” said Jennifer Norman, executive director of VisitAnderson. “With Green Pond, our new $2.6 million mega-ramp facility, our convenient location and our amazing bass fishing, the Bassmaster Classic will showcase all that our lake has to offer.”

For more information about the Classic 2015 location, go to http://www.visitgreenvillesc.com; http://www.scprt.com; http://www.visitgreenvillesc.com; and http://visitanderson.com.

About B.A.S.S.
For more than 45 years, B.A.S.S. has served as the authority on bass fishing. The organization advances the sport through advocacy, outreach and an expansive tournament structure while connecting directly with the passionate community of bass anglers through its Bassmaster media vehicles.

The Bassmaster brand and its multimedia platforms are guided by a mission to serve all fishing fans. Through its industry-leading publications — Bassmaster Magazine and B.A.S.S. Times — comprehensive website Bassmaster.com and ESPN2 and Outdoor Channel television programming, Bassmaster provides rich, leading-edge content true to the lifestyle.

The Bassmaster Tournament Trail includes the Bassmaster Elite Series, Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Open Series, Carhartt Bassmaster College Series, B.A.S.S. Nation events and the ultimate celebration of competitive fishing, the Bassmaster Classic.

B.A.S.S. offers an array of services to its more than 500,000 members and remains focused on issues related to conservation and water access. The organization is headquartered in Birmingham, Ala.

A January Bass Tournament At Jackson Lake

On a cold January Sunday in 2008 15 members and guests of the Flint River Bass Club fished our first tournament of the year at Jackson. There were 28 keeper bass weighed in, 18 spots and 10 largemouth, that weighed 59.16 pounds. Two fishermen had five-fish limits and four did not catch a keeper. Six of the bass weighed three pounds or more.

I made one lucky cast and landed an 8.80 pound bass for big fish and had one other for a total of two bass weighing 12.18 pounds for first. Tommy Reeves has five at 9.07 for second, Bobby Ferris was third with five weighing 6.80 and Rick Webster placed fourth with four weighing 5.90 pounds.

I had a frustrating day up until the big one hit, missing three bites on a slow fishing day. I had one keeper with about 45 minutes left to fish when my partner and I decided to go to one last place. I was throwing a Strike King Series 5 crank bait around a sandy pocket and talking about how we used to catch big bass in the winter but it had not happened in a long time when the big one hit. That is the biggest bass I have caught in a very long time.

Fish hit a variety of crank baits, lizards, and jig and pigs in the stained water that started out at 47 degrees but warmed to 52. My first fish hit a jig and pig under a dock just after noon. Jordan McDonald, my partner, had two on a Texas rigged lizard, one in the morning and one about an hour before quitting time.

Bassmasters Classic Expectations For Chris Lane

Chris Lane of Guntersville, Ala.

Chris Lane of Guntersville, Ala.

Great Bassmasters Classic Expectations For (And By) Chris Lane

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Chris Lane’s dream of winning the 2014 GEICO Bassmaster Classic is different than the dreams of the other 55 anglers in the game.

Sure, every qualifier hopes to win the world championship of professional bass fishing. A win molds a pro career and changes your life, and not just because of the $300,000 first prize.

As the 2012 Classic champ, Lane knows that to be true. Yet this time around would be different. In 2014 — his fourth Classic — he’s not only a competitor, he’s the hometown entry.

Florida-born, Lane now lives on Lake Guntersville, the famed Alabama fishery where the Classic field will compete Feb. 21-23, with weigh-ins in Birmingham at the Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Complex.

Friends, neighbors and fans in his adopted hometown of Guntersville are looking to Lane to take a second Classic title — this time for them. Fans everywhere assume he has a home-water advantage and expect more of him.

“There’s added pressure when it comes to fulfilling the expectations people have of you because you’re fishing at home,” Lane said. “I think my biggest challenge will be time management, using my time each evening preparing for the next day’s competition. It’s hard to put everything else aside when you’re at home.”

Recognizing what’s ahead of him, Lane set to work as soon as he nailed a Classic qualification by winning the final Bassmaster Elite Series event of the 2013 season. His mission: Sew up a gaping hole in his lake knowledge.

“In the five years I’ve lived here, I haven’t fished the lake much from December to March because I’ve had other things scheduled,” he said. “I knew I needed to learn a lot to give myself a chance to do well.”

A Lake Guntersville crash course was made easier because he could go to school at home.

“I could just takeoff from my own dock, get back for lunch with my kids and be home every night,” he said. “I was able to put in a lot of time on the water right up until cutoff on Dec. 31.”

Lake Guntersville has been off limits to Classic anglers since that date. Lane drives over the lake bridge to take his kids to school, but those teasing glimpses are as close as he can get to the water until the official practice period begins in February.

Then, he said, get ready for a slugfest.

“The lake has a lot of big fish,” Lane said. “The 30-plus-pound bags are here.”

By February, the lake’s bass will have been feeding to get in shape for the spawn, and they’ll be as fat as they’ll get all year, Lane said. That means a limit of five big bass a day will be needed to top the leaderboard, he said, and the game could easily change from one day to the next.

“Anyone could come from behind with a huge sack and take over,” Lane said. “This will be a Classic that’s a nail-biter to the very end.”

He predicts the winning weight will be about 83 pounds. That would easily break the Classic record of 69 pounds, 11 ounces set in 2011 on the Louisiana Delta.

Lane made his predictions with a disclaimer: “Weather permitting. Water clarity will be a big factor in the weights.”

Only one angler has won a Classic in his home state. Interestingly, the state was Alabama, and Boyd Duckett triumphed in the 2007 Classic on Lay Lake, 120 miles from his Demopolis home. But no angler has won a Classic in his home town.

Lane wants to be that angler: “It was so sweet to win a first Classic. Winning this one would be just as sweet, being at home.”

2014 Bassmaster Classic Title Sponsor: GEICO

2014 Bassmaster Classic Official Sponsors: Toyota, Bass Pro Shops, Berkley, Evan Williams Bourbon, Humminbird, Mercury, Minn Kota, Nitro Boats, Skeeter Boats, Triton Boats, Yamaha

2014 Bassmaster Classic EXPO Presenting Sponsor: Dick’s Sporting Goods

2014 Bassmaster Classic Official Apparel Sponsor: Carhartt

About B.A.S.S.
For more than 45 years, B.A.S.S. has served as the authority on bass fishing. The organization advances the sport through advocacy, outreach and an expansive tournament structure while connecting directly with the passionate community of bass anglers through its Bassmaster media vehicles.

The Bassmaster brand and its multimedia platforms are guided by a mission to serve all fishing fans. Through its industry-leading publications — Bassmaster Magazine and B.A.S.S. Times — comprehensive website Bassmaster.com and ESPN2 and Outdoor Channel television programming, Bassmaster provides rich, leading-edge content true to the lifestyle.

The Bassmaster Tournament Trail includes the Bassmaster Elite Series, Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Open Series, Carhartt Bassmaster College Series, B.A.S.S. Nation events and the ultimate celebration of competitive fishing, the Bassmaster Classic.

B.A.S.S. offers an array of services to its more than 500,000 members and remains focused on issues related to conservation and water access. The organization is headquartered in Birmingham, Ala.

Bass Pros Getting Ready for Bassmasters Classic

Angling Pros Prep for Alabama Classic at Guntersville

By Frank Sargeant, Editor
from The Fishing Wire

GUNTERSVILLE, ALA. Let the speculation begin.

Among serious bass anglers, prognosticating who will win the Bassmaster Classic to be fished on Alabama’s Lake Guntersville in February is right up there with studying the odds on FSU/Auburn.

Alton Jones with nice bass

Alton Jones with nice bass

Pro basser Alton Jones, veteran of 14 Bassmaster Classics, says the Xcalibur Rattlebait may very well play big in this year’s late February championship on Alabama’s Lake Guntersville.

Rattlebaits catch bass

Rattlebaits catch bass

Lipless crankbaits like the Rattlebait are particularly effective in a red-rust or crawfish color in late winter and early spring at the big lake, locals say.

Jerkbaits will catch Gunersville bass

Jerkbaits will catch Gunersville bass

Suspending jerkbaits like the Smithwick Suspending Pro Rogue might be a good backup choice, especially if tournament days are cold.

Use maps, gps, everything you can to plan a tournament

Use maps, gps, everything you can to plan a tournament

Alton Jones uses years of recorded data on prime spots, plus Google Earth, to create a personal map of choice fishing spots for all his tournaments.

Current dock talk seems to be favoring former Classic champ Chris Lane, who has been living on Guntersville the past several years and preparing for just this challenge, and Randall Tharp, a former G’ville area resident who appears on a roll this year with his skills sharpened to the max in both B.A.S.S. and FLW competitions. KVD, of course, is always to be reckoned with, as is new young gun Brandon Palaniuk and Angler of the Year Aaron Martens.

One who can’t be ignored is Texas pro Alton Jones, who has been in 14 Classics, won one, and earned some $2 million on the pro circuits over a long career.

Jones joined a crew from PRADCO, the parent company of Arbogast, Bomber, BOOYAH, Heddon, Xcalibur, Smithwick, Yum and several other brands well-known to bassers at the lake this past week for a practice session and some fine tuning with the new-for-2014 lures.

“Any lure can win any tournament, but if I were betting on one for this event here in late February, I’d bet on the Xcalibur Rattlebait in royal red or royal shad,” said Jones. “If the winter warms up early, the fish will be hanging over the grass shoots where the new beds will grow up in 4 to 6 feet of water or so, and vibrating-type baits let you fish fast and find the concentrations so it’s a good strategy when the fish are in that situation.”

He said he also likes the Smithwick Suspending Pro Rogue jerkbait, both over new grass and around bluff banks where shad schools are visible in late winter.

“If it stays cold, the fish may be deeper and I might go to the new Perfect 10 Rogue, which runs down to 10 or 12 feet,” says Jones. “It’s a bigger lure, and it attracts big fish if they’re around.”

Last but not least, Jones said, if weather is warm he’d probably have a swimjig with a YUM trailer on it to fish shallow pads and primrose beds.

Jones has fished Guntersville many times over the years, and has kept a computerized record of all his spots. He records the locations on the water on his Humminbird GPS systems, then transfers it to computer for storage so that the memory in the GPS does not get overloaded. When he returns to a given lake, he can reload all the results from all his trips back into the machine and have a record readily at hand of the best spots-one that he can also call up on iPad or iPhone.

One of the areas that keep showing up, he notes, is Mud Creek-a spot forecast by several top local anglers to figure in the winning Classic catch.

“I like to use Google to see how the weed patterns change at various times of the year,” says Jones. “You can call up history on satellite views and get a look at the weed growth from every season of the year, and that tells you where there might be some spots that local anglers might overlook. Fishing on a lake like Guntersville where there are so many tournaments all the time, finding a spot that other anglers have not hit recently can give a huge advantage.”

The Classic will be fished Feb. 21-23 at Guntersville, with daily take-offs from the city basin across the street from the Chamber of Commerce. Weigh-ins will be trailered and take place at Birmingham Civic Center, which is also the site of the Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo. For details, visit www.bassmaster.com.

Fishing A Bass Tournament In Wisconsin

In 1997 when I started doing my Internet site on fishing I started visiting a bass fishing news group. After several years of posting messages and reading the posts of others I felt like I knew some of them pretty good. That group of fishermen started getting together for a bass tournament twice a year.

In the spring we had the “Mid Tennessee Classic” on either Dale Hollow or Center Hill Reservoirs. Each September the week after Labor Day we met in Rhinelander, Wisconsin for the “North Woods Classic.” When I retired in 2001 I started attending those tournaments and they have been a lot of fun.

We have people come from as far west as Texas and southern fishermen from Georgia and Florida. Some folks came from North East states like New York. Our love of bass fishing brought us together and it has been a lot of fun.

I left on Labor Day in 2009 for the 1200 mile trip north pulling my bass boat. I drove 919 miles the first day in 15 hours and spent part of the night in Madison, Wisconsin. That left a short 250 mile drive for Tuesday morning. I got checked into my motel and went to Boom Lake to practice.

Boom Lake is a 2500 acre lake right in town that connects to the Wisconsin River and several “flowages,” ponds that interconnect through small channels. The lake has been tough, in all my trips there I had never caught a limit of five bass and Tuesday afternoon started that way. I caught three small bass.

Wednesday, the day before the tournament started, I picked up Dan and we headed to the lake. It was scary. I caught bass everywhere I tried, ending up with nine nice keepers. That night at dinner everyone said they had caught fish.

Dan fished with me on Thursday and I started catching fish around lily pads on Senkos. At noon I had four largemouth in the boat and went to deeper water to try to catch a smallmouth. Less than 30 minutes later I landed one over 14 inches long and had my limit and was through fishing for the day.

Wisconsin has a no cull law. When you put a fish in your livewell you can’t let it go and keep a bigger fish. It is a hard decision when you catch one just barely 14 inches long like my third largemouth. If you keep it you can’t cull, but if you let it go immediately, hoping to catch a bigger fish, you may not get a limit. Since I had never limited before I put all keepers in the livewell.

At the end of day one I was in first with five weighing 11-14. One other fisherman, a local bass expert, also had a limit. Most people only had one or two fish, more typical of past trips.

The second day was predicted to be stormy and my partner met me at the ramp and said I was on my own, he was not willing to go out if it was lightning. I never heard thunder all day but it did rain. I started catching largemouth immediately and had a limit at 11:30. For the rest of the day I tried to catch a big pike or muskie but didn’t have any luck.

I ended up winning the tournament with ten bass weighing 20 pounds, 2 ounces. Second was 19-1, a bass guide from Florida had landed five smallmouth the second day weighing almost 15 pounds to go with his four pounds the first day. There were four limits the second day but I was the only one with limits both days.

A friend from Des Moines and I stayed for another week at a cabin north of Rhinelander and had some great fishing but weird weather. A week ago last Friday it sleeted and snowed on us. Saturday morning my pliers were frozen to the carpet in my boat and the lockers were frozen shut.

Our favorite lake was Crab lake, another 2000 acre lake. It is a glacier lake so there are rock piles everywhere. One day I found one about a foot under the water while running on plane. That cost me a new prop and lower unit in my boat. But in four days fishing Crab Lake I landed 101 smallmouth, the biggest weighing 3 pounds, 15 ounces, the biggest I have ever caught.

I am glad to be home and very glad it has cooled off here. I don’t think I could stand the hot weather I left on Labor Day after wearing a heavy coat for a week in Wisconsin!

Top Six Tournament at Lake Oconee

Several years ago six members of the Flint River Bass Club fished the Georgia BASS Federation Nation Top Six tournament at Lake Oconee. There were 13 clubs competing for top club in the tournament and the individuals were trying to finish in one of the top 12 places and advance to the Southern Regional.

In a very unpleasant surprise a cold front came through on Friday and brought record setting cold weather. The bass seemed to go into shock and the fishing was extremely tough. After fishing two days it took only a little over nine pounds to make the state team.

Five members of our team camped and it was all the heater in my little motor home could do to keep it “almost” comfortable at night. Jordan McDonald was my partner and we slept under several blankets. During the days fishing we wore all the clothes we had trying to stay warm.

On Thursday Jordan and I fished hard all day but neither of us caught a keeper bass. We did watch another fisherman catch some fish near us. On Friday it was much colder and the wind was awful. I managed to catch one keeper jigging a spoon in 22 feet of water.

Friday night I drew as a partner for Saturday the guy we had seen catching fish on Thursday. We made our plans for Saturday based on his thoughts we could catch fish on his pattern after lunch.

Saturday dawned extremely cold. We fished hard all day, hitting docks I like to fish until about 11:00 then going to his pattern for the rest of the day. Neither of us caught a keeper.

During the night one of our team members got sick and could not fish. I agreed to leave my boat on the bank and fish with Mike Morris, our sick team members partner for the day. It was a good decision. Mike is an excellent fisherman and had weighed in eight pounds on Saturday. We fished the same areas the same ways I had fished on Saturday but Mike got a limit weighing 9.5 pounds and ended up second overall.

I managed to catch four keepers weighing a little over 7 pounds and came in 22nd overall. To my great disgust I lost a big bass that just pulled off for no apparent reason. That fish would have put me on the team if I had landed it.

To add insult to injury, my partner on Saturday fished with Flint River team member JJ Polak on Sunday. They fished the same places he and I had fished on Saturday but he landed four bass weighing 10.5 pounds and made the team.

It always amazes me how different fishing can be one day to the next and how it changes for me. I will never understand how I can work hard one day and not catch a fish and do the same thing the next day and have a good catch. I guess that is why we call it fishing, not catching!

November Tournaments and Fishing Trip

A few years ago on a Monday I met Bobby Ferris at Jackson Lake to get information for a December Georgia Outdoor News article. For this “Map of the Month” article Bobby discusses patterns for catching bass at Jackson in December and the baits he would use. We then marked 10 spots on a map of the lake where you can use those patterns and baits to catch bass.

I met Bobby several years ago when he worked for Central Georgia EMC and lived near Jackson. Since then he has transferred to Southern Rivers EMC and moved to Lamar County. We have fished together a good bit over the past few years and Bobby joined the Flint River Bass Club. Last year in that club he won 7 of the 12 tournaments and this year he has won two of the seven he has fished.

Bobby and partner Donnie Schafer fish the Highland Marina Tournament Trail on West Point and they finished 8th overall this year, quite an accomplishment when fishing against teams that fish West Point almost every day.

Two weeks ago Bobby and Donnie fished the Potato Creek Bassmasters Buddy tournament at Lake Sinclair and won it with five bass weighing over 18 pounds. That is a fantastic catch in any tournament. They also had big bass in that tournament.

Monday Bobby caught two largemouth at Jackson, one weighing about 4 pounds and the other about 5 pounds. He also had several spotted bass weighing around 2.5 pounds each. His best five that day would have weighed about 16 to 17 pounds if he had been fishing a tournament. Those bass hit topwater plugs.

Unfortunately, that pattern is probably over for this year after the cold front came through this week. Bass will be on the rocky point pattern we discussed in the article and it should work for most of the month. Last year on New Year’s Eve Bobby caught a 9.5 pound bass at Jackson and had five weighing about 24 pounds that day, and the patterns he caught those fish on are in the article.

Bobby is on Team Triton, qualifying for this honor through his bass fishing. The Sports Center in Perry is his sponsor and he gets his boats through them. Bobby really likes Triton bass boats and says they perform good and are excellent fishing platforms.

Check out this article and give Jackson a try in December. It should be excellent for spotted and largemouth bass.

The next weekend the Potato Creek Bassmasters fished their November tournament at Lake Sinclair. Lee Hancock had the only limit and his five bass weighed 7.66 pounds, giving him first place. He also had big bass with a 2.08 pound fish. Wade Crawford had four weighing 4.67 for second, Don Schafer had four weighing 4.27 pounds for third and Todd Stoerkel had two weighing 1.70 for fourth.

There were 15 members of the club in this tournament and they caught 21 keepers weighing about 26 pounds. Five members did not catch a keeper bass in this eight hour tournament.

The Spalding County Sportsman Club also fished our November tournament that weekend and we were at West Point. Kwong Yu had a five fish limit weighing 8.64 pounds and won. Brent Terry also had a limit and his 8.02 pounds gave him second place. He had a 3.97 pound bass that was big fish. Jason Wheeler was third with two bass weighing 2.42 pounds and Butch Duerr had 2 weighing 2.30 for fourth.

Only seven members of the club fished this tournament and we weighed in 18 bass weighing about 26 pounds. There were no zeros but two of us had only one fish each. There were only 4 largemouth weighed in, all the rest were spots.

I came in dead last in this tournament with one small spotted bass. The fishing was very tough for me and I got only three bites from bass all day, catching the one keeper and two spots about 11 inches long. Several people caught bass on topwater baits that morning. I had one bite on top and it was a nice crappie.

Most of the keepers came on crankbaits, jigs and worms. There was no one strong pattern but shad were everywhere.

Fishing should have been much better this time of year at Sinclair and West Point. Maybe the unusually warm weather was the problem. If so, the cold this week should help!

Thanksgiving Fishing

Most people are thinking hunting, not fishing, this time of year but fishing can be excellent right now. For many years I spent Thanksgiving Holidays at Clark’s Hill fishing for bass, hybrids and crappie. I often had the lake to myself.

Now fishing is more popular in the colder parts of the year but the lakes are much less crowded. There are almost no skiers and skidooers and far fewer fishermen are on the water since many are in the woods. But the weather is often beautiful and fish sometimes cooperate.

Friday before last I went to Bartlett’s Ferry to get information for a Georgia Outdoor News article. I met Tommy Gunn there and he showed me some of his favorite ways to catch December bass on the lake. We fished some of the ten spots that will be on the map in the article. Bass were already starting to feed on them.

Tommy lives just over the Alabama line in Cusseta and makes Jawbreaker Jigs to use and sell. One of his patterns in the winter is to flip and pitch a jig and pig to shallow water cover like docks and he caught a four and a half pound largemouth bass on that pattern.

We also fished points and drops with jig head worms and caught several spotted bass. None of the spots weighed over about two pounds, typical of lakes where the spot population has exploded. You can catch a lot of spots but they just don’t get very big compared to largemouth.

That trip gave me confidence in a jig and pig. The Flint River Bass Club fished Jackson Lake last Sunday for a November tournament. Al Bassett called me Saturday afternoon and told me his club had a tournament at Jackson that day and it was won on spinner baits, so I made sure I had one tied on, but I also tied on a jig and pig.

Al said they caught fish on wind blown points and it was real windy Saturday. Sunday dawned cold and calm and we never did get much wind. I started with a top water bait then tried crank baits and spinner baits but did not get any hits. At 9:00 I got a bite on a jig and pig and landed a 14 inch spotted bass, my first of the day.

That got me throwing the jig and pig a lot and a few minutes later I made a long cast down the bank across where an old dock used to be. There were still two posts in the water and I threw between them and the bank and got a hit. When I set the hook a nice bass came to the top but went back down. I pulled it up and down several times, thinking I was hung in brush.

About that time I remembered there is an old concrete and rock pier under the water there. I had thrown across it and the fish hit on the other side. I was pulling the fish to the top then it would go back down.

I finally got the fish over the pier and it came to the boat fairly easily. I guess I had knocked it against the rocks too many times and took the fight out of it. The fish was a 3.71 pound spot, a big one and they usually fight hard. I was lucky I was using 20 pound P-Line Fluorocarbon line. It was frayed for about eight feet but it held up.

A few casts later I got another keeper spot then cast onto the apron of concrete coming out of a boat house. When my jig fell off the end into about a foot of water I saw a fish swim off and thought I had spooked it. Then I realized it had my jig. I was lucky to land a three pound largemouth. That was my fourth bass by 10:00, in one hour.

The rest of the day was slower and I caught three more keeper bass, two of them spots and one largemouth. The rest of the club had a pretty tough day, too. Many said they had been catching fish on spinner baits up until Sunday but they did not hit them during the tournament.

We had ten fishermen in the tournament. My five fish limit weighed between 11 and 12 pounds and I placed first. The 3.71 pound spot was big fish. Tommy Reeves also threw a jig and pig and had a limit weighing between eight and nine pounds for second. I can’t remember who came in third but Tony Evans placed fourth.

If you get a chance, go fishing this winter. You might be surprised at what you can catch.

Why Do Some Fishermen Catch Bass When Others Can’t?

Sometimes I wonder why I go bass fishing in the winter and if a bass can be caught out of ice water. A Sunday in late January, 2011 at West Point really brought those thoughts on strong. The Spalding County Sportsman Club held its January tournament there and nine brave members showed up to fish seven hours. There were a total of two bass weighed in!

Sam Smith won it all with one keeper largemouth weighing 2.26 pounds, getting first place and big fish. As close behind as you can be on our scales, Niles Murray came in second with a spotted bass weighing 2.25 pounds.

The rest of us had stories of casting practice and one member told of losing a big one a the boat. I never had a bite all day although I tried everything I could think of to find a fish. A huge part of catching bass is confidence and when my surface temperature gauge showed 38 degrees at launch I lost all hope.

To show how much I know and how good we are, there was another tournament going on that day. West Georgia Bass Club is an buddy tournament trail open to anyone wanting to join and they fished the same day we were there with 93 teams in the tournament. I saw other bass boats all day that were probably in the tournament.

Almost one third, 33 of the teams, had a bass to weigh in. I was shocked to see the winning team had five bass weighing 19.08 pounds. It took 14.19 pounds for second, 13.59 for third and 12.98 for fourth. Those weights amazed me and I wonder how they caught such good stringers of bass under such bad conditions.

I have fished with several of the guys that caught fish in that tournament. They took me out and showed me how they fish for articles for Georgia Outdoor News. They fish just like I do, with much the same tackle and equipment. Yet they made decisions that day that allowed them to catch bass while I never got a bite.

Sometimes I think the ability to catch bass is almost a sixth sense or special ability. It is like playing baseball – anyone can learn to play. But no matter how hard most practice and work at it, they will never reach the majors. The same goes for concert pianists. Anyone can learn to play the piano but no matter how hard they practice only a very select few will ever go on tour.

Anyone, even me, can learn to bass fish. But no matter how hard I try I keep having days like that Sunday. And so far at that point that year it wass the only kind of day I had. I had not caught a bass in 2011!

Does Catch and Release Bass Fishing Make A Difference?

When bass tournaments first started back in the late 1960s fish were often put on stringers and most were dead at weigh-in. But that didn’t matter, bass were kept to eat. When local fishermen blamed the tournaments for wiping out their bass in their lake, Ray Scott came up with the idea of “catch and release” as a public relations ploy.

At some of my club tournaments in the 1970s we would keep fish and have a big fish fry, especially on two day tournaments. No one really worried about releasing fish although we got dirty looks from local anglers. But that gradually changed so now almost all the bass we weigh-in are released alive.

When Linda and I got our first bass boat in 1974 we had a rule that any bass we caught over three pounds was released. Smaller bass were kept to eat. We let the bigger bass go mostly because they just don’t taste as good, but also to try to protect bigger fish. A three pound bass has survived for several years and we hoped they would continue to grow and we could catch them again when they were even bigger!

Catch and release is now almost a religious experience for many bass fishermen. Killing a bass upsets them almost as much as it upsets a PETA protester. They will go to extreme lengths to try to revive a bass that is dying.

Does catch and release really matter from a biology standpoint? The answer is a definite “Maybe.” A bass kept and cooked definitely does not survive to fight another day. Some that are released do. But catch and release has problems, too.

Releasing large numbers of bass in a small area like is done at boat ramps and marinas hosting a lot of tournaments can overcrowd an area, putting strain on the food the bass eat. Crowding can lead to spread of diseases. So the long term effects of catch and release can be bad for an area.

Delayed mortality of bass often hides the real numbers of fish that die. Bass that are stressed by being hooked, fought, landed, placed in a live well, ridden around in a boat then taken out, put in a bag, dumped on scales then dumped back into the lake may be alive when they hit the water but die hours or even days later.

The science behind catch and release is somewhat questionable. About half the 12 inch long bass in a big lake will not survive the next year of their life, regardless of fishing pressure. Nature takes care of them Heavy fishing pressure on a small body of water can hurt populations but what percent of bass on a lake measured in thousands of acres are harmed by tournaments?

There does seem to be some effect, but it is mostly anecdotal. In 1983 it was easy to catch a lot of 11 inch largemouth at West Point but it seemed hard to land 12 inch keepers, the minimum size at that time. Then in April a 16 inch size limit was imposed on that lake.

Within a few years we were complaining about catching a bunch of 15.5 inch bass but 16 inchers were very hard to find. Then the size limit was reduced back to 14 inches and, guess what. It seemed we caught huge numbers of 13.5 inch largemouth but 14 inch long bass were hard to find.

Now spotted bass have changed that completely because they don’t grow very fast and there is not size limit on them. Even with a 12 inch limit on spots in tournaments, a most of the bass by far weighed in at West Point are spots.

Releasing all bass can harm rather than help a lake. Spotted bass in lakes like Blue Ridge and Jackson where they are not native often overpopulate, crowding out native populations of smallmouth and taking the place of bigger largemouth. Spots are so aggressive that five one pounders may take the place of one five pound largemouth in many cases.

The catch and release mentality keeps fishermen from helping out managing a lake like Oconee. Biologists say we need to remove bass shorter than 11 inches in Oconee to keep overcrowding of smaller bass down since Oconee is an infertile lake. But very few keep those small bass, making it impossible for the slot limit to do its job.

It is easy to blame a lot of things for not catching bass on a fishing trip. If blaming tournament fishing or fishermen killing bass works for you, use it. But in reality the bass are probably there for you to catch. After all, those tournament fishermen had to catch them somehow and tournament results show someone will catch a lot of bass somehow almost every time.

Keep a few bass to eat if you want to. Release most of the bass you catch to make you feel good and as a PR tool. But don’t condemn anyone for enjoying a few bass filets.