Category Archives: Where To Fish

When Do Kentucky White Bass Spawn?

Kentucky White Bass Spawning Runs Are Here
from The Fishing Wire

March is traditional white bass time across much of the South, but in Kentucky and most other states this year extreme cold slowed the runs until April. Here’s a report from Lee McClellan offering tips that will be helpful, where ever anglers pursue the spawning run of these prolific panfish.

It is now the first of April. If you asked most Kentuckians what it feels like weather wise, they would say it is the first of March.

The warm winds finally began to blow from the South earlier this week and brought the white bass upstream with them.

The spawning runs are finally here.

Kentucky White Bass

Kentucky White Bass

Most white bass are caught on small jigs or spoons when they swarm into rivers and creeks during the spring spawning season.

“Last week, in Nolin River Lake, they were up to the Cane Run arm of the lake and should be between Bacon Creek Ramp and Broad Ford by now,” said Rob Rold, northeastern fisheries district biologist for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. “We’ve had a lot of warmer, sunny days lately and the water temperature at Wax Marina was 54 degrees on Tuesday.”

Water temperatures breaking the 50 degree mark combined with rainfall signal to white bass that it is time to move upstream to reproduce. They need a gently rising river along with sun-warmed water to begin migrating from the main lake into the headwaters of reservoirs such as Nolin River Lake, Taylorsville Lake, Cave Run Lake, Herrington Lake and Lake Barkley.

Nolin River Lake has arguably the best white bass population of any Kentucky reservoir. The really good fishing occurs from Lick Run all the way upstream to Wheeler’s Mill. Bank anglers have good access to both sides of Nolin River at the Nolin River Voluntary Public Access Area (VPA) via KY 728 (Priceville Road) and Kesselring Road. Bank anglers also fish at Bacon Creek Boat Ramp and at Broad Ford.

Boaters should not venture upstream of Bacon Creek Boat Ramp as Nolin River Lake reverts back to the pool and riffle habitat of the pre-impoundment river at this point, risking the health of any boat motor’s lower unit.

Local anglers are catching white bass around the KY 248 Bridge in the headwaters of Taylorsville Lake in Anderson County. White bass run as far up the Salt River as the once-vibrant river trading town of Glensboro in spring.

The headwaters of Herrington Lake will be churning with white bass with the warming weather. This historic run spawned lure inventions and a regional reputation for incredible fishing. The legendary white bass fishery in Herrington Lake went through a fallow period in the 1990s and early 2000s, but is now producing good numbers of white bass from 12 to 14 inches long.

The good fishing starts near Bryant’s Camp Boat Ramp and upstream into Rankin Bottoms, near the KY 52 Bridge between Lancaster and Danville. Bank anglers may access Rankin Bottoms at the Dix River VPA site at the end of Rankin Road off KY 52 near the bridge. This site grants over a mile of bank fishing for white bass.

Small topwaters as well as crappie plugs are also effective at fooling white bass, which typically weigh a pound or two but can go up to 6 pounds.
With water temperatures just reaching the low 50s, white bass are moving into the upper reaches of Lake Barkley. They are also hitting in the Cumberland River just below Lake Barkley.

When the flows modulate slightly after the recent rains, the white bass will be active below locks and dams on the Green and Kentucky rivers.

White bass fishing inspires such ardor in anglers because these fish strike practically anything that comes near them during their spawning runs. No other fishing compares to it when white bass are really on and biting. Bank anglers can enjoy fishing just as good as those fishing from boats.

Herrington white bass anglers invented the plunker and fly presentation, originally comprised of a piece of broom handle with an eyelet screwed into it. They tied a piece of heavy monofilament to the eyelet with a treble hook dressed in white marabou at the other end. They cast this rig into the boils of feeding white bass and popped the rod to draw the attention of white bass.

Modern anglers use a white chugger-style topwater with the back hook removed. They tie a piece of light braided or monofilament line to the eyelet of the hook and attach a 1/32-ounce marabou jig or a dressed treble hook to the business end. Some remove both hooks to keep the rig from tangling on the cast. This presentation still catches white bass as well as it did in the 1950s.

White or chartreuse 1/16-ounce marabou or feather jigs suspended under bobbers and allowed to drift downstream also work extremely well on white bass. Adjust the depth of the bobber until it disappears from a fish.

In-line spinners of practically any color, small silver spoons and white 2 ½-inch curly-tailed grubs rigged on 1/8-ounce leadhead all score white bass.

White bass are either right on top, a few feet deep or just above bottom. The depth you catch them changes from day to day and sometimes from hour to hour. Keep probing the water column until you find them. When they are mid-depth or deeper, the curly-tailed grub is hard to beat.

The white bass are here, signaling this dreadful winter is finally gone for good. Get out in the next couple of weeks for the most exciting fishing found.

Author Lee McClellan is a nationally award-winning associate editor for Kentucky Afield magazine, the official publication of the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. He is a life-long hunter and angler, with a passion for smallmouth bass fishing.

Get the latest from Lee and the entire Kentucky Afield staff by following them on Twitter: @kyafield.

What Is Fishing Like In Florida In April?

April freshwater fishing in Florida is full of fun, opportunities, rewarding challenges
from The Fishing Wire

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) scheduled the first of four license-free recreational fishing days on the first full weekend in April each year (April 5-6, this year), because it coincides with a productive freshwater fishing period, when the weather is usually pleasant. Many of Florida’s recreational sport fishes, inlcuding black bass, bluegill and redear sunfish, move into shallow waters to spawn during spring, making them more available for anglers to catch.

License-free freshwater fishing weekends are a great time to introduce other family members, friends and neighbors to fishing and see if they and you would like to take up the sport. Besides enjoying the fun of reeling in a fish, many people find recreational fishing to be a good motivator to enjoy the great outdoors and living a more active, healthy and natural lifestyle.

Captain Sean Rush guided his anglers to this 11 pound, 10 ounce monster on Rodman Reservoir, easily qualifying for Florida’s Lunker Club.
During license-free freshwater fishing weekends (the first weekend in April and the second weekend in June), no recreational fishing license is required. However, all other bag limit and season, gear and size restrictions apply.

To further encourage recreational fishing, the FWC will conduct a special contest during April to collect photos of anglers. All you have to do is post a photo of your family fishing in Florida’s fresh waters on Twitter or Instagram with #FLfish (or you can use #FWC-FamilyFishing). In return for your efforts, the FWC will enter you into a drawing for one of six surprise packages, each including a $50 gift card from Bass Pro Shops, thanks to TrophyCatch; a Glen Lau video library on DVD; and assorted fishing lures, hooks, line and goodies to make your next trip even more productive.

Submitted photos must be your own. Editing software must not be used, and the photo cannot include inappropriate content. Photos should be taken during April while freshwater fishing in Florida and include multiple anglers enjoying their day together on the water. The FWC may subsequently use the photos for educational or outreach purposes.

So where will you go for your next freshwater fishing trip? Plenty of resources are available online to help you choose. Start by visiting MyFWC.com/Fishing and under “Freshwater Fishing” pick “Sites/Forecasts.” There you can find the top destinations for pursuing bass, bream, catfish and other species in 2014, as well as regional forecasts and tips for local waters; information on all 80 FWC fish management areas; and links to our boat ramp finder and freshwater fish attractor locations. Another good resource is TakeMeFishing.org/State/FL.

Freshwater anglers have enjoyed wonderful fishing so far in 2014 across Florida, and this spring should see a continuation of that trend.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s (FWC) incentive-based conservation program, TrophyCatch, rewards anglers for participating in citizen-science, by catching, documenting and releasing largemouth bass heavier than 8 pounds. Besides the immediate gratification of releasing these older bass to fight another day, anglers provide valuable information about the number and distribution of these trophy bass and what it takes to sustain a trophy fishery. Biologists compare the findings to existing conservation programs such as habitat restoration efforts, aquatic vegetation management strategies, bass stocking histories and various regulation management approaches to determine what works best.

Between Jan. 1 and March 23, 2014, anglers entered 220 Lunker Club, 89 Trophy Club and three Hall of Fame bass. That is a three-fold increase over the same period last year. Part is due to simplified rules and more anglers being aware. Nevertheless, it is clear that Florida is producing and recycling vast numbers or trophy bass.

Bluegills and shellcrackers spawn in April, May and June across Florida, providing fast action for young and old alike.
You never know when you may find a lunker on the end of your line. To be prepared, go to TrophyCatchFlorida.com now, register and check out the rules and prizing. Just registering makes you eligible for a random drawing in October for a Phoenix bass boat powered by Mercury and equipped with a Power-Pole. However, every time you have a TrophyCatch bass verified, your name is entered 10 more times. Moreover, every verified bass earns you not only bragging rights on the Web but also a customized certificate, decal and club shirt, plus at least a total of $100 in gift cards from Bass Pro Shops, Dick’s Sporting Goods and/or Rapala. Bigger fish earn greater rewards: Anglers who have 13-pound-plus Hall of Fame entries also get a $500 fiberglass replica of their catch.

So far there are already four Hall of Fame bass this season. Joseph “Brooks” Morrell’s 14 pound, 9 ounce-bass from Lake Kingsley in Clay County is the current season leader. If it holds up, he will earn the TrophyCatch Championship ring in October, which is donated by the American Outdoors Fund.

However, there is still a lot of fishing to be done before then, so get out there and see what you can catch.

Instant licenses are available at MyFWC.com/License or by calling 888-FISH-FLORIDA (347-4356). Report violators by calling 888-404-3922, *FWC or #FWC on your cell phone, or texting to [email protected]. Visit MyFWC.com/Fishing and select “more news,” or scr.bi/Fish-busters for more Fish Busters’ Bulletins. To subscribe to FWC columns or to receive news releases automatically, click on the red envelope on any page of MyFWC.com.

Keys To Catching Lake Lanier Bass

Keys to Catching Lake Lanier Bass eBook

Ten spots on Lake Lanier for each month of the year, with GPS Coordinates, description, lures to use and how to fish each one
By: Ronnie Garrison – ISBN# 978-1-940263-01-4

For an emailed copy in Microsoft Word, email [email protected] – $4.00
CDs are also available for $6.00 – email [email protected]


From Georgia Outdoor News Map of the Month series of articles and the eBook series “Keys to Catching Georgia Bass”

2014 © Ronnie Garrison – All Rights Reserved
Maps – 2014 © Georgia Outdoor News – All Rights Reserved

How to Use This Book

The articles for this series of books, Keys to Catching Georgia Bass, were written over a span of 18 years. Conditions change but bass tend to follow patterns year after year.

For example, Lake Lanier has gone through a series of years with low water then full again. After a couple of years of low water, grass and bushes grow that will be flooded in shallow water when the lake fills. But after a few years that cover rots away. Bass will still be in the same areas, you just have to fish the cover in them that is available when you fish.

The eBook is $4.99. I may have some copies printed but the price would be about $10.00. If you want a printed copy please email me at [email protected] to reserve a copy if I do have them printed.

Are Whitefish Making A Comeback In Green Bay?

Whitefish Resurgence on Green Bay
from The Fishing Wire

Oddly enough, Wisconsin DNR researchers speculate that the abundance of invasive gobies are providing a food source and drawing the whitefish to Green Bay.

Water quality and habitat improvements lead to whitefish resurgence on Green Bay

GREEN BAY – With the deep freeze thawing this weekend, ice fishing pressure for lake whitefish is expected to pick up again as anglers enjoy a resurgent fishery made possible in part by cleanups that have improved water quality and habitat.

Whitefish can be caught through the ice

Whitefish can be caught through the ice

Winter creel data for Green Bay shows a growing number of anglers fishing for lake whitefish and a significant increase in the number they caught and harvested.
WDNR Photo.
“We have some fairly strong year classes of younger fish on the doorstep, and documentation of spawning populations in the tributaries on the western shore, so the future looks good for the lake whitefish fishery in Green Bay,” says Scott Hansen, Department of Natural Resources fisheries biologist stationed in Sturgeon Bay.

For the first time in decades, DNR fisheries crews in November 2013 documented spawning condition whitefish in the Fox, Peshtigo, and Oconto rivers. Until now, they had only been documented in the Menominee River.

“These recently emerging west shore tributary spawning populations are probably contributing a lot to the fishery and we are just beginning to understand their life histories.,” Hansen says. “We’re hopeful they’ll sustain the bay ice fishery for a long time.”

The whitefish sport fishery came on quickly; harvest rates in 2007 were one-one hundredth of what they were in 2013. Hansen says it’s difficult to point to a clear cause to explain the growing fishery, but that a couple theories exist and they may be synergistic.

First, there has been a re-colonization of the Menominee River population of whitefish, more than a century after huge runs of the fish dried up. “The river is a cleaner place than when lake whitefish were extirpated back in the late 1800s and the fishing is regulated so overfishing isn’t an issue,” Hansen says. “Fish populations in general have responded to those beneficial changes.”

Whitefish

Whitefish

The lake whitefish is typically caught at 1 to 2 pounds, but some strains can reach weights to 12 pounds. (Wiki Commons)

Federal Clean Water Act regulations that limited pollutants allowed in discharges into the bay and its tributaries have helped improve waters since the 1970s, and in more recent years, efforts by federal, state and local governments working with citizen groups and businesses to remove contaminated sediments and improve habitats in the Menominee River are paying off, as recounted in “Healing the Lower Menominee River” in the August issue of Wisconsin Natural Resources magazine.

Also, because whitefish as a whole on Lake Michigan have been in a rebuilding phase over the last 10 to15 years, this population probably originated from whitefish straying from adjacent stocks during the November spawning period– the Big Bay de Noc stock (Upper Michigan) or North Moonlight Bay stock (east of Door County). Some genetic analysis that’s been done by University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point has supported this to a certain extent though the data demonstrated a mixture of several whitefish stocks contributing to the Menominee River population, Hansen says.

Back in the mid-1990s a few whitefish were discovered in the river in fall brown trout surveys. By the mid-2000s the run had grown substantially and tagging efforts indicate these fish are contributing to the winter sport fishery; 2003 looks to have been a big year class for whitefish recruiting from the Menominee River.

Green Bay Whitefish harvest leaped in 2011, and was again near a modern peak in 2013
The strength of the Green Bay lake whitefish fishery also may reflect the species’ search for new sources of food as the levels of Diporeia, the preferred food of lake whitefish, have declined dramatically throughout Lake Michigan. Whitefish size-at-age has declined significantly over the past 10- 15 years as a result of this lost food source and is compounded by their increased abundance.

“The preponderance of whitefish in Green Bay in the winter may in part be a result of the fish looking for food. The decreased body condition reflects the diminished preferred food source and therefore hungrier fish may simply be more apt to bite on hook and line,” Hansen says. “It appears a primary food source, among available forage fish in Green Bay, is round gobies, although we don’t know that the gobies are necessarily more abundant in Green Bay than other parts of Lake Michigan.”

This phenomenon somewhat contradicts lake whitefish foraging habits as they are not known to be a primarily piscivorous (fish eating) species. Furthermore, DNR’s tagging study suggests that lake whitefish from the Menominee River do not migrate out of Green Bay so these fish may just be taking advantage of food that is most available to them in their home range.

Round gobies are an invasive, bottom dwelling fish that is an aggressive, voracious feeder and has taken over prime spawning sites traditionally used by some native fish species.

Hansen says that documentation of the emerging west shore tributary spawning populations helps increase the likelihood that the whitefish fishery will continue, even as the Lake Michigan and Green Bay ecosystems continue to change.

“These emerging spawning populations are probably contributing a lot to the fishery and we are just beginning to understand what those fish do,” he says. “Perhaps they’ll sustain the Bay ice and commercial fisheries for a long time. Let’s hope so.”

Louisiana Delta Fishing

Delta Delights in Louisiana
from The Fishing Wire

Pack up your tackle and hook up the trailer for a world-class fishing vacation

Fish from the delta

Fish from the delta

While most tourists consider a visit to New Orleans the highlight of any trip to Louisiana, if fishing is your passion aim your sights a little further south to the famed Mississippi Delta and the town of Venice. The quality and variety of the fishing opportunities available from Venice are quite simply unsurpassed by any place in the United States, or many of the heralded fishing destinations around the world.

The little town is the southernmost outpost in the state, but from a base at Venice Marina you will have access to a variety of passes leading into the open waters of the Gulf of Mexico, where the variety and abundance of gamefish is truly mind-boggling. Bull redfish, red snapper, grouper, kingfish, blackfin and yellowfin tuna, wahoo and marlin, to name a few, are available seasonally and some are in residence year round.

If you’d rather fish inshore or on more sheltered waters, you can explore the endless miles of channels, bays and bayous where you can sight cast to redfish, catch a limit of beautiful sea trout, stalk massive tarpon and encounter drum, flounder and even largemouth bass. The fishing for redfish and tuna out of Venice is so incredible, the marina has earned two enviable nicknames: “Tunatown, U.S.A.” and the “Redfish Capital of the World.” Bottom line-it doesn’t matter if you trailer a boat that is offshore capable, a simple aluminum skiff or pretty much anything in between-the Delta has you covered, and so do Mike and Bill Butler, your hosts at Venice Marina.

Venice Marina was already a well-known fishing destination when the Butler brothers purchased it about 12 years ago and began making renovations to the tired facility. A few years later, it was flooded by Hurricane Katrina’s massive tidal surge, but Bill and Mike, both natives of the Delta, were not going to let a hurricane smash their dreams. They rolled up their sleeves and set to work undertaking a massive cleanup and rebuilding project.

The result is a totally new facility from the ground up that offers visiting anglers pretty much everything they need to enjoy the amazing fishing the surrounding waters have to offer. The new complex includes 120 slips; parking for trucks and boat trailers; two concrete launch ramps; fuel, ice, bait, a huge fish cleaning facility, fish cleaning, packing and shipping service; a marine supply and tackle store; Crawgator’s Bar and Grill; and multi-room cabins that can house a group of fishermen or your family available for rent.

The marina is also home to dozens of the finest professional guides and charter boat operations on the Gulf, and there is even a condominium complex for fishermen who wanted to own a summer place close to the action. This coming June, the marina will have camper pads and hookups available for sportsmen who like to travel in more self-sustained luxury.

“Down here it’s all about the fishing,” said Bill Butler. And he should know. In addition to being the operations manager of the facility, he also competes on the SKA® Professional Kingfish Tour. His tournament boat is a Yamaha-powered 42-foot Invincible center console, which also happens to be an ideal boat for fishing the nearby Gulf waters. On a recent fishing trip with Bill, yellowfin tuna were the target but each day on the way back to the marina the crew took advantage of the open season for red snapper, catching limits of these tasty and abundant fish in a matter of minutes.

The fishing in this area of the Delta truly knows no season. There are gamefish to be found year round. Yellowfin tuna are abundant twelve months out of the year; the hotspots just change along with the prevailing size of the fish being caught. During spring, summer and fall the best tuna action takes place around the many oil production platforms, with live bait and surface lures the prevalent technique. The tuna will range from 20-pound blackfin to yellowfin breaking the 100-pound mark. Summertime is also your best bet for billfish, including blue marlin and sailfish. It’s also a great time of year for incredible dolphin fishing. In the fall, even bigger yellowfin invade the area with many exceeding 200 pounds, and most years they can be caught all winter long. At that time, chunking with dead bait becomes a primary tactic. The tuna fishing is so good that Sportfishing Magazine® ranked Venice in the top five places in the world to fish for these great gamefish.

Catch fish like these from the Louisiana Delta

Catch fish like these from the Louisiana Delta

Fall also sees an influx of big wahoo that can be caught along the many rip lines that develop offshore. Depending on weather, wahoo might be around though the winter, but prime time for big bruisers is during March and April. The region also plays host to abundant schools of king mackerel that consistently include the largest found anywhere in the fish’s range. And if that’s not enough, try deep dropping for a variety of species of grouper.

Speckled trout and redfish abound in the weather-protected backcountry waters pretty much year round, and the area is also home to massive tarpon that gather here to feed on the abundant baitfish that swarm in and out of the vast, nutrient-rich marshlands that make up the Delta. When you need a break from the fishing, the entire region is a naturalist’s playground. Flocks of exotic birds including roseate spoonbills can be found foraging through the marshes and during fall and winter the waters are filled with ducks on the southern leg of their migratory path. There are endless miles of scenic beauty to explore.

Venice is truly a sportsman’s paradise and an ideal place to spend an incredible fishing vacation. Venice Marina, www.venicemarina.com, with hosts Bill and Mike Butler, is at the epicenter of the action. Bring your own boat or take advantage of the fleet of charter boats and backcountry guides that call Venice home.

Bass Fishing Lake Chickamauga

Chickamauga Bass with Jeremy York

Chickamauga has been the best bass lake in the Southeast, if not in the whole country, the past few months. Many eight pound plus bass have been landed and in most tournaments you didn’t even need to weigh in if you had five bass weighing less than 25 pounds.

The bad news is the patterns producing those incredible stringers working the first three months in 2013 year are over by the end of March. The good news is those bass are still there, hungry in May and can be caught on a variety of new patterns.

Chickamauga is a TVA Lake just outside Chattanooga on the Tennessee River. It runs 59 miles from the dam up to the Watts Barr Dam, with many big feeder creeks. Although it is not in Georgia or Alabama, many fishermen in our state are less than three hours away and make the trip often. If you are not one of them you are missing out on some incredible bass fishing.

Jeremy York owns Angler’s Warehouse near Athens, Georgia. Two years ago one of his pro staff invited him to sample the great bass fishing that was just being discovered on Chickamauga. He went up and caught some big bass and fell in love with the lake. He now makes the three hour drive several times a week in the winter and does some guiding on the lake, about 25 trips so far this year.

Jeremy is a tournament fisherman and fishes the pro trails as well as local and regional tournaments. In the BFL on Chickamauga in March, 2013 he weighed in five bass weighing 30.25 pounds – and came in third! In another tournament he had five weighing 27 pounds and came in 14 place.

In five guide trips in March 2013 he and his clients had their five best weighing 26, 39, 36, 30 and 32 pounds. That is better than a six pound average for four of the five trips.

In five trips this year he and his clients have landed an eight pound plus fish in each. One of his best trips was with a father and son. Within a few minutes of starting the father landed an 8.75 pound largemouth, he landed a 6.5 pounder and then the son landed an 8.68 pound fish, all within the first hour.

Jeremy found a pattern that works great from the beginning of January through March. When the water temperature hits 48 degrees the bass really turn on and 48 to 52 is the ideal water temperature. It starts slowly as soon as the water reaches 45 degrees. The pattern holds until the water gets to about 58 degrees, usually around the first of April, and the bass head toward the bedding areas.

Although this pattern is over this year, it is worth remembering for next year. Jeremy came up with the idea for the Extreme Bait Ball Rig that is sold by Picasso. It is an Alabama rig with teasers on the arms, so it looks even more like a school of baitfish. That is what he caught the big bass on from January through March.

He rigs it with one eighth ounce Buckeye Jewell heads on the hook arms and rigs them and the teaser attachments with either a 3.5 or 4.5 inch Shadalicious blue gizzard or Texas shad swimbaits. For bigger bass he runs the 4.5 inch bait on the hooks with smaller ones on the teasers, or runs the bigger size on all.

The ideal rig for throwing this heavy bait is an I Rod Bama Rig Special Genesis II rod with a Revo SX reel spooled with 80 pound Power Pro braid. He tried several reels and all wore out in a few trips except the Revo.

There are three things to remember when throwing this rig. Lob it, don’t make a usual cast. Keep reeling when you feel something until the bass almost jerks the rod out of your hand. You will hit stumps with it and if you set the hook you are unlikely to get the rig back. And finally, when you do hang up, keep your line tight as you go to it, go past the hangup and pop it loose with small pops of the rod tip.

Jeremy took me to Chickamauga the second week of April and warned me the great bite was probably over. Although he got a nice 4.5 pounder first thing that morning on the rig, fishing was slow. We went into the spawning pockets and they were full of bass just starting to fan beds. The fish were very spooky and we could not get them to hit, but we saw many in the six pound plus size starting to bed.

Adding to our problems that day the water rose almost two feet while we were there. The lake is scheduled to be at full pool by April 15th each year and it was four feet low when we got there. But it was filling fast.

When the water temperature is right Jeremy fishes transition areas like stump flats near the mouths of spawning areas. There needs to be deep water nearby with a shelf or flat with stumps on it. A ditch or cut running across the flat is key. The bass feed on those types of places during the winter and pre spawn.

Other good types of cover are banks where big rocks transition to chunk rock to sand, often found at the mouths of feeder creeks and coves. Big largemouth and smallmouth both like this kind of area and will hit the rig fished there. On one trip this year he got a six pound smallmouth and a six pound largemouth.

On the stump flats keep your boat out in deeper water near the cut or ditch and cast up to four or five feet of water. Work your rig back steadily, keeping it above the stumps but near the bottom. On the transition banks stay out a long cast from the bank and cast near it, fishing the rig back to cover water two to six feet deep.

File this information away for next year. But now for the good news. Those big bass are still in the lake and you can catch them right now. Fishing will be good from now through May and you can use a variety of baits to catch them.
Right now (in late April) about half the bass, especially the bigger fish, are on the beds or have been in the last few days. You can sight fish for them or drag a Carolina rigged lizard through the bedding areas. If sight fishing, look for stumps, the favorite place for a bass to bed on Chickamauga.

Jeremy likes a Big Bite Baits Fighting Frog on a light Texas rig, a white swim bait with a weighed keel hook or a whacky rigged Senko rigged weightless for sight fishing. He will cast well past the bed and pull the bait to it, letting it drop into the sweet spot. Let it sit and shake it and the bass will usually eat it if they are hard on the bed.

Good areas for sight fishing are in Soddy Creek, which usually has the clearest water on the lake, and other creeks on the lower half of the lake. The pockets up the river are full of spawning bass, too, but they are harder to see since the water is usually more stained there.

Another good area is Dallas Bay around Chester Frost Park. Jeremy says there have probably been 100 eight pound plus bass released there in tournaments this year and they will not leave the bay since the spawn is approaching. They will stay in the bay, feed until spawning and then gradually work back out to the river, feeding on post spawn areas.

The stump flats on both sides of the ramp are good spawning areas to check since they are littered with stumps. Be careful, the flats run way out. Try to follow the ditches and cuts going back into them since the bass will follow them. Often the biggest bass will be bedding on stumps closest to the deeper water in the cuts.

Bass move into the spawning areas in waves and about half of them are there now the last week of April. More will move in during the next few weeks, depending on water temperature and moon phase. They will stay on the bed for about a week then move off and spend about a week recovering. They won’t feed much during that week but will start feeding heavily after that so there will be a lot of hungry fish all during the month of May.

To catch post spawn fish Jeremy will try a variety of baits. A Spook or similar walking bait worked over the stump flats will draw explosive strikes. Keep your boat in the cuts and cast ahead of you down the cut and fan cast the flats on both sides. Cover a lot of water, fishing fast until you find feeding fish.

A swim jig worked over the same areas will also catch fish, especially if the fish are not real aggressive. Swim it in the same places you worked your topwater. You can also work a spinnebait over those areas or try to bump the stumps with a square bill crankbait.

Toward the end of May there will still be a few bedding bass but the bream spawn comes into play. Bass will feed on the bream that are bedding in the same areas as the bass use, so fish a swim jig around the bedding bream to catch those bass feeding on bream.

Another big key in May is the shad spawn. Chickamauga has two kinds of shad, both threadfin and gizzard shad, and golden shiners, all favorite foods of bass. The shad will spawn on gravel and shell bed flats and rocky banks this month and the bass often go wild feeding on them. Jeremy says the shell beds on flats near the river channel are a huge key to the shad spawn so seek them out.

Look for the schools of shad running the banks early in the morning or working the flats. Jeremy likes to see smaller areas of shad spawning. If there are shad spawning on 100 yards of bank there might be 20 bass feeding on them and they will be real scattered out. If there are shad on only about 20 feet of bank, those same 20 bass will be concentrated and easier to catch.

A spinnerbait, rattle bait or swim jig all work well on the shad spawn. Work them over the flats, running them right on the bottom. On the banks, cast right to the bank, even up on the rocks and pulling your bait into the water. The bass will be facing the bank so you want to cast as shallow as possible.

The shad usually spawn early, the first couple of hours of light on sunny days, but will stay shallow much longer on cloudy days. If it is sunny and the shallow activity stops, back off and fish a little deeper to catch the bass following the shad out a little ways off the bank where they hold until the next morning.

Why is Chickamauga so hot with big bass right now? Jeremy says the stocking of Florida and Northern strain largemouth as produced a cross, an F1 hybrid that grows very fast and is very aggressive. Tennessee DNR reports show they stocked both Florida and Northern strain largemouth as well as F1 hybrids in 2002. Those fish have reached trophy size and their offspring are reaching bragging size every year.

Jeremy thinks the next two years are going to be fantastic, with some huge bass caught in Chickamauga each year. All those eight to ten pound bass will mostly still be around for a couple of years and could be two to three pounds heavier. And all those five and six pounders will also be two to three pounds heavier.

For the future, there are a lot of four and five pound bass coming along, too. There is a 15 inch size limit on largemouth and an 18 inch size limit on smallmouth on Chickamauga and those limits have contributed to the larger fish in the lake. That size restriction also insures a good supply of quality fish for the future. So the fishing should stay really good for the foreseeable future. You definitely want to head to Chickamauga and get in on catching them.

A three day non resident Tennessee fishing license is $16 and can be bought on line before your trip. A ten day license is $25 and an annual license, good until February each year, is $80. You might want an annual license since you are sure to fall in love with fishing Chickamauga.

Can I Go Ice Fishing On Lake Of The Woods?

Ice Destination: Lake of the Woods
from The Fishing Wire

This legendary lake that straddles the U.S./Canada border serves up outstanding ice fishing through a long season that is already underway

One Question Quiz:

Lake of the Woods ice fishing walleye

Lake of the Woods ice fishing walleye


Lake of the Woods is well known for:

Giant walleyes
Fast action from a mix of saugers and walleyes
Great daytime bite all winter long
All of the above

You probably guessed it, but the answer definitely is “d) All of the above.” And in truth, those answers represent only a few of the reasons why Lake of the Woods stands out as one of the world’s most renowned ice-fishing destinations. Straddling the U.S./Canada border, with the U.S. portion in Minnesota, this massive lake freezes early and stays that way for a long time, and the walleye ice season remains open longer than on other Minnesota lakes.

Lake of the Woods also has liberal limits, with an eight fish combined walleye/sauger limit (only four may be walleyes; size restrictions apply). With the sauger population currently in excellent condition based on anglers’ observations and sampling studies conducted by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, the opportunity exists to harvest a nice bag of fish most days. The walleye population is likewise in excellent condition, with a large average size and more than a few genuine giants in the mix.

Plentiful resorts line the Minnesota section Lake of the Woods, and the gateway town of Baudette is a definite fishing community. In fact, it’s sometimes called the Walleye Capital of the World. From a practical standpoint that means that everything you might want for fishing – from bait to supplies to fishing reports to rental ice houses – is readily available. Making a good thing even better is that despite Lake of the Woods’ tremendous size, much of the best fishing is very handy to the areas where the lake is most accessible, and good fishing areas tend to be easy to find.

“The resort industry makes it easy for an angler who may not ice-fish quite as often to get out there and enjoy success in an ice house that has been placed in a productive area,” said Nick Painovich, who operates Zippel Bay Resort with his wife Deanna.

Zippel Bay maintains a plowed road from the resort to the lake’s basin, where they have an extensive village of ice houses near the outlet of Zippel Bay. The resort’s entire road system is flagged and even marked with street signs, and stays sufficiently well maintained for you to drive out to an ice house in a 2-wheel-drive vehicle.

Of course, opportunities are not limited to resort guests fishing from rental houses. Extensive productive flats are accessible to anglers pulling portable shelters with snowmobiles, and Lake of the Woods is hugely popular with ice anglers who prefer to pick their spots and drill their own holes and remain more mobile with their approach.

Finding Fish

Catch walleye thru the ice on Lake of the Woods

Catch walleye thru the ice on Lake of the Woods


Painovich noted that through the first part of the season, much of the best fishing occurs fairly close to the shore. Early and late in the day during the first part of the season, he suggests concentrating on water in the 12- to 16-foot range. Through the middle of the day, the best action is usually in the 20- to 22-foot range. In fact, the resort offers shallow/deep packages that allow guests to split time between two locations and concentrate their efforts in those areas that are most likely to produce at different times of the day.

“For the average guy who might not want to move around during the day, the 18- to 22-foot range is good,” Painovich said.

Shallow, deep or in between, most fishing is over broad flats with a bottom that consists of sand or rubble, and the fish schools tend to roam, not necessarily holding on defined breaks or rockpiles.

Mixed catches of walleyes and saugers predominate through the first part of the season, with the biggest walleyes and the very best walleye bite often occurring shallow around first and last light.

Through the middle of winter the fish move deeper, and the best mid-day catches will occur in 30 feet or more of water. About 80 percent of the fish caught out deep will be saugers, according to Painovich. The walleyes still will feed shallower early and late – just not quite as shallow.

Late in the ice season, the walleyes and saugers typically begin moving shallower again, and the pike bite often gets really good. Large pike staging to move into Zippel Bay to spawn begin working their way up flats during March and provide excellent opportunities, especially for anglers fishing with tip-ups.

Best Baits

Because the water in Lake of the Woods is fairly dark, baits that make noise tend to work well. Painovich pointed toward a Lindy Rattl’N Flyer Spoon, Darter and the new 360 Jig as excellent choices. He recommended a two-rod strategy, with an aggressive, noisy bait on one line and something small, quiet and natural – possibly a live minnow on dead-sticked Frostee Jig or Slick Jig – on the other.

“Even when they won’t hit that noisy Darter, it helps bring them close to investigate and they’ll end up taking the other bait,” Painovich said.

In terms of live bait, he recommends using emerald shiners when they are available, and pointed toward fathead minnows as a good second choice. Zippel Bay also sells frozen minnows for tipping spoons or jigs to add scent and flavor.

The biggest size Darter works well for anglers who opt to target pike with a rod in hand, however many Lake of the Woods fishermen do the bulk of their targeted pike fishing with tip-ups.

Igloo, Too

If you do fish Lake of the Woods this winter, leave time to stop by the Zippel Bay Igloo. Located just outside the Zippel Bay among the resort’s ice house village, the Igloo is an on-the-water snack bar and watering hole that offers everything from satellite TV to rental ice holes beneath tables, so you can continue to fish while you eat a snack and watch a ballgame.

Want to Go?

To learn more about Lake of the Woods ice fishing opportunities and to plan your winter adventure, visit www.zippelbay.com or give them a call at 800-222-2537.

How To Catch Winter Clarks Hill Crappie

Many crappie fishermen are getting tackle ready, planning and looking forward to March when the slabs start to move into the shallows to spawn, but they are making a mistake. If you aren’t fishing for crappie in February you are missing out on some of the best fishing of the year, especially for big fish.

Clark’s Hill is our biggest lake and offers great crappie fishing. There are many creeks and smaller rivers entering the lake that run in different directions, so you can find a place to fish that does not get the brunt of the winter wind. And you can find just about any water clarity you want to fish.

two big crappie

two big crappie

Rod Wall grew up and still lives near the lake in 96 South Carolina. He has a place on the South Carolina Little River arm of the lake and builds docks and seawalls on Lake Greenwood and Clark’s Hill. All his life he has been fishing Clark’s Hill for crappie.

About six years ago Rod started fishing crappie tournaments. He set small goals, first trying to catch a limit in each tournament, then to place and now to win. He does well on the Crappiemasters, Crappie USA and Georgia Slabmasters trails. He guides for crappie on both Lake Greenwood and Clark’s Hill.

Rod has done well enough on the trails to be sponsored by B ‘n M crappie rods, Vicious Line, and Hummingbird Electronics. He likes Southern Pro jigs and Midsouth Tackle jigs and trailers for his fishing and carries about 400 color combinations of jig heads and trailers with him in his boat.

Rod’s usual partner in tournaments is his 15 year old son Braxton and he has learned well. He has won two youth national championships, the 2010 Crappie USA Pickwick tournament and the 2011 Crappiemasters Alabama River tournament.

Nice winter crappie

Nice winter crappie

“You can catch some of the biggest crappie of the year right now,” Rod told me. The fish are moving into the creeks toward spawning areas and are feeding actively. There are several ways to catch them that work from right now through March.

To prove his point, he took me fishing in mid-January and we landed about ten crappie. The biggest seven went from 1.40 to 1.91 pounds – on his tournament scales. Those are big crappie. But he catches even bigger. His best seven fish

Winter crappie

Winter crappie

tournament limit weighed 17.5 pounds and he has landed three pound crappie on Clarks Hill this time of year.

Rod likes to longline, also called pulling or trolling, for crappie. His Lund boat is set up with Driftmaster rod holders allowing him to fish 14 B n M rods out the back. This setup lets him cover a lot of water quickly, finding the schools of fish and catching them.

To start the day Rod will look for stained water since he says crappie hit better on a reaction bite when the fish can’t get as good a look at the bait. He will watch his depthfinder for baitfish and schools of crappie to determine the depth he wants to run his jigs and use either four or six pound test Vicious line and vary the weight of jig heads to keep them at that depth.

“One of the biggest mistakes a beginner crappie troller makes is to not know the depth he is fishing,” Rod says. The best way to learn is to put out some one sixteenths ounce jigs and troll them over a flat of a consistent depth. Vary the speed of your boat until the jigs start to bump the bottom. If it is 12 feet deep that will tell you that size jig will run at that depth at the set speed.

Speed and line size is as critical as the size of the jig. The length behind the boat you troll is also important. Rod has made a chart so he knows exactly how fast to troll a jig size and line size combination to fish a set depth.

Normal trolling speed is from .6 to 1.2 MPH. A good GPS will tell you exactly how fast you are trolling and Rod keeps a constant eye on his speed. His boat is rigged with a Minkota remote control trolling motor and he can work it from the back of the boat near the rods to keep his boat on an exact course and speed.

Crappie relate to the channels as they move toward the spawning areas so he starts near the channel, fishing points and flats along them. We caught most of our fish in January off the end of a big flat that ran out to the Little River channel and dropped off on one end into a small feeder creek. They were stacked up on the drop.

Another mistake beginners make is to try to start with too many rods. Although Rod uses 14 B ‘N Rod rigs, you should start with just six to eight rods until you learn to control them and not get tangled.

It is also important to keep your rod tips down at the surface of the water, especially if there is any wind. Wind will catch the line and make it change depths and speeds, making control difficult if the rod tip is up off the water.

On his boat Rod will have four eight foot B ‘n N rods across the back beside the motor. Three more rod holders on each side have a 12, then 14 and finally a 16 foot rod. This allows you to cover 32 feet plus the width of the boat on each troll, a swath almost 40 feet wide.

In more clear water or if you want to run your jigs deeper, use four pound test line. In stained water or if you want to keep your jigs higher you can use six pound test line. First thing in the morning Rod will try several different colors but will switch most of his jigs to the color the crappie prefer.

Rod warns that the color choice can change rapidly during the day so if the fish slow down hitting one color try others. Also vary your speed if the bite slows on one that has been working. Watch your depthfinder so you stay at the depth the fish are holding and keep your bait there by changing jig size or line size for the speed you need to go.

A loop knot used to attach your jig head to the line definitely gives it more action and Rod always ties them on that way. With the light line a good know is critical. You need to tie one that will not cut the light line.

Some of Rod’s favorite places to fish on Clark’s Hill are the South Carolina Little River arm above the Highway 378 Bridge, Soap Creek above the Highway 220 Bridge, Haw and Wells Creeks on the Savannah River arm and Germany, Rousseau and Kemp Creeks on the Georgia Little River arm. He also fishes up Big Hart Creek and Little River around Kemp Creek.

Start toward the backs of these creeks in the mornings in February and pull out toward the mouth until you find the fish. On Clark’s Hill you can find space away from other boats giving you room to troll and make the wide turns necessary to be successful. Once you find an area holding crappie, either when you start catching them or seeing a lot of bait and crappie on your depthfinder, stay in that area.

Rod likes curly tail jigs and will tip them with a live minnow to see if that helps. He often puts jigs out on one side with minnows and jigs without minnows on the other side of the boat to see what the fish prefer. If they are hitting the jigs without minnows there is no need to use them.

Crappie often are just barely hooked on the jig so you should not set the hook or fight them too fast. Just pick up the rod and start reeling. Keep the fish in the lane that rod is in so they don’t tangle other lines and let them run when they want to. You have to keep the boat moving so reel very slowly.
You will need a long handle net for bigger fish. Rod says you should never get the fish closer to the boat than the length of line equal to the rod length. When the fish is about a rod lengths line away, slowly lift your rod tip to bring it to the net.

No matter how tempting it is to try to land a big striper, hybrid or largemouth when you hook one, they will make a mess of all your lines. In tournaments Rod will instantly break them off. The day we fished he hooked a nice striper and tried to land it. It tangled 12 of our 14 lines. If you want to try to land a big fish be prepared to untangle lines. Jut be sure it is not a really big crappie before you break it off!

Another trick when trying to find out exactly what the fish want is to run a zigzag pattern with your boat. That will speed up jigs on one side and slow them down on the other. This not only changes speed, it will change depth, so you can find out what they want.

On sunny days Rod will use translucent jigs and more colorful jigs on cloudy days. A little breeze often helps but stronger wind makes boat control difficult. To control his speed when trolling with the wind Rod keeps a drift sock in his boat and puts it out to slow him down. He will also put his motor in gear and he says that will slow your speed up to a tenth of a mile and hour by itself.

Some current definitely positions the fish deeper on cover so it makes trolling more difficult. No mater what, make sure your jigs stay clean. Any small piece of grass or other trash on the jig will guarantee the fish won’t hit it.

Don’t hesitate to change speed, color and depth when you are not catching anything. As Rod says, if you aren’t catching any fish it certainly doesn’t hurt to change.

The trolling season for crappie extends a long time. Warming water even for a few days can turn the fish on and anytime the water is over 50 degrees the fishing is good. There are both black and white crappie in Clark’s Hill and the blacks move in earlier, followed a couple of weeks later by the whites, so that extends the good fishing time.

Rod says black crappie will spawn at 60 degree water temperature and whites a couple of weeks later, so keep up with the water temperature. Fish move in waves of schools so you can keep up with them and catch them over a longer time than you might expect.

Smaller fish are often more aggressive and hit more shallow, so drop your jigs a little deeper if you are catching small fish but seeing others a little deeper. But be sure to always keep your jigs above the fish. Rod says crappie will sometimes come up six feet to hit a jig but will never go down to take one.

There are other ways to catch crappie this time of year. Rod has rod holders on the front of his boat for pushing bush piles and standing timber. This method involves putting the rods out in front of the boat, moving up close to the brush or tree, and letting the jigs or minnows drop straight down.

Depth is critical when pushing, too, so try different depths until you find what they want. Standing trees in the mouths of spawning creeks and pockets often hold large numbers of crappie and you can catch a lot while pushing them.

Clark’s Hill used to be known for its crappie fishing during the spawn in the button or buck bushes but the lake has been low for so long that has not happened in years. Fish will spawn just about anywhere along the bank and even out in deeper water on brush and standing timber.

The lake was 16 feet low the day we fished, just before all the rain in the middle of the month. The lake had come up about a foot since Christmas and should still be rising. The rain will give more color to the creeks and that should improve the trolling.

Rod’s depthfinder has a barometer indicator on it and he likes to see a rising or falling barometric pressure. He says a steady barometer is not good but movement in either direction will help make the bite better. An approaching front, with changing pressure, definitely helps.

If you want to catch some big crappie, head to Clark’s Hill this month. Try Rod’s methods or fish the way you like best. There are other good creeks on the lake, too so don’t get stuck on one pattern on place.

To book a guide trip with Rod on Greenwood or Clark’s Hill call him at 864-993-8868 or visit his web sites at http://slabmasterguideservice.com for more information and to book a trip.

Where Can I Catch Bass In the Winter in Georgia?

Peach State Winter Bass Hotspots

Baby its cold outside. But unlike the song, Georgia bass fishermen don’t want to sit by the fire. Instead, we want to get out on the water and catch some fish. We are lucky because there are some excellent places to catch winter bass here.

From the southern border with Florida where some bass often start fanning beds in January to the North Georgia mountains where spotted bass gorge themselves in the coldest water, good fishing is available. Some middle Georgia lakes have a mixture of spots and largemouth and others have special patterns that pay off now. Pick a lake close to you or drive a ways to find some good winter bass action.

Seminole

Pam Martin-Wells has won more money on the bass trails than any other woman and was recently inducted into the Legends of the Outdoors Hall of Fame. She grew up on the Flint River at Lake Seminole and guides there when not on the tour. She knows the lake well and keeps up with what the bass are doing.

For winter fishing on Seminole Pam heads to Spring Creek. The water there usually stays clear and that helps in cold water. It also warms quickly, pulling bass up toward the spawning flats early. With standing timber everywhere in the creek they have good places to hold and the hydrilla beds offer perfect cover for them.

To find winter bass Pam would start near where the Wingate cut-through hits the Spring Creek channel. She gets on the edge of the old creek channel and follows it as it winds its way across the timber filled flats. Remember that the channel does not follow the boat channels. It winds and loops through the timber.

As you ease along the channel watching your depthfinder you can usually see the hydrilla edges. The hydrilla grows on the flats along the channel but the channel itself is too deep for it. So you are fishing the channel drop, timber that is on the edge of the channel and hydrilla edges along the channel. All combine to make excellent bass “highways” that they follow and hold on.

Pam fishes the channel from the cut-through all the way out to the main lake. Outside bends are best and the ones that turn right where a ditch runs up on a spawning flat are excellent. If the outside bend is near the flat it is good but a ditch for the bass to follow makes it even better.

A big crankbait like a Fat Free Shad is the bait Pam uses to find fish in the cold water. She keeps her boat in the creek channel and makes casts that parallel the edge of the hydrilla. Crank the bait down then work it fairly fast along the edges where the bass are holding. Trilene Big Game line is tough enough to pull big bass out of the hydrilla so that is the line she chooses.

If the bass don’t want to chase a crankbait or if Pam hits a school of fish and they quit biting, she picks up a Wave Worm Tiki Stick. She rigs it both Carolina and Texas style and fishes it along the edge of the channel, too. She prefers a Tru-Tungsten sinker because it is denser than lead and she can use a smaller size weight. The smaller size comes through the grass better. That weight also gives her better feel because of its density.

A cold front really puts the bass at Seminole down. Try to plan your trip during a warming spell. If there have been two or three days of relative warm, stable weather the bass fishing should be excellent.

Lake Harding

Robert Medas and Kevin Phillips grew up together near LaGrange and have fished the area together for several years. They joined the West Georgia Bass Club and have done well in this competitive team trail club. Their tournaments often put 50 to 70 boats on the water. In 2007 there were 163 teams in the club.

In 2005, their first year in the club, Robert and Kevin placed 4th in point standings for the year then followed it up with a first place finish overall in 2006. In 2007 they started out the year with a win at West Point in January and were in 8th place overall after 9 of the 12 annual tournaments.

Lake Harding, also called Bartletts Ferry, is a good winter time lake for them. It has varied cover and structure that gives them a choice of kinds of places to fish based on the weather and other conditions. And the lake has a big population of spotted bass. Spots tend to feed better in cold water and are less affected by cold fronts than are there largemouth cousins.

Another reason Harding is a good winter choice is the stability of the water. Since it is just downstream of West Point the water level stays fairly constant. There are areas of the lake that seldom muddy up, another big plus in cold water.

In cold water the bass at largemouth at Harding are usually holding in deep brush waiting on passing schools of shad. Spots are more likely to be found around rocks on points. For both species Robert and Kevin team up by throwing different baits, with one fishing faster moving crankbaits and spinnerbaits while the other works a jig and pig or jig head worm.

Halawakee Creek is a good choice for winter fishing. Although it is on the Alabama side of the lake a Georgia fishing license is good there. This creek stays fairly clear all winter and you can find any kind of cover and structure you want to fish.

Work up the creek, hitting rocky points for spots. Run small crankbaits and spinnerbaits over the rocks and work a jig and pig or a jig head worm on them. Fish from 8 to 18 feet deep. You can hop from point to point as you fish up the creek, concentrating on the rocky ones.

For largemouth look for brush piles down 12 to 18 feet deep. Many docks have brush around them and some of the feeder creeks have good brush on the channel. Also pay attention to steep banks where blowdowns have fallen into the water. The creek above the second bridge is a very good area for this kind of cover.

There are also a good many humps and channel ledges in open water in Halawakee Creek. Most maps don’t show them so watch your depthfinder as you ride the middle of the creek. There are good humps and channel drops from the mouth of the creek to the first bridge. Long points also extend way out from the bank.

On the ends of these points and on humps and channel drops Robert and Kevin like to jig a spoon. Locate fish and bait near the bottom in 18 feet of water, position your boat right on top of them and drop a jigging spoon like a Hopkins down to them. Work it up and down in one place and be ready to set the hook on the fall.

Clarks Hill

I grew up in McDuffie County, went to high school in Thomson and started fishing Clark’s Hill in the 1950s. My family has had a place on the lake since the mid 1960s and for many years I spent the last two weeks of December fishing there. Winter has always been one of my favorite times to fish the lake and some of the patterns I have found pay off every year from late December all winter long.

When the water gets cold the bass stack up on the ends of long, shallow points on the Georgia Little River side of the lake. I especially like the area around Germany Creek since I have a place at Raysville Boat Club and fish there the most. There are many shallow points and ridges on the river and the creeks in that area that hold winter bass.

Ride the channels watching for a point, hump or ridge coming up to about 12 feet deep. A hard clay or sand bottom is best and rock or gravel makes it even better. Watch your depthfinder for schools of baitfish nearby and marks of fish near the bottom under them.

Starting at 12 feet deep jig a Little George or spoon like the Hopkins in the fish you see. Stay right on top of them and move it up and down in one place. Start with short hops, raising your rod tip about a foot and letting the bait fall on a tight line. Gradually make higher and higher hops until the fish show you what they want. At times you will need to raise your rod tip three to four feet, making the lure rise that far off the bottom before falling back.

Be ready for a tick as the bait falls and set the hook when you feel it, or if the bait does not fall all the way back to the bottom. When using the Little George you should be able to feel the tail spinner moving as you raise and lower the bait and if you feel it stop spinning set the hook.

Work deeper and deeper, especially if the water is clear. Most of the bass I have caught have been 12 to 15 feet deep in stained water and the Little George works better in stained to muddy water. The deepest I have ever caught a bass doing this was 57 feet deep in Grays Creek. I was jigging a Hopkins Shorty spoon straight under the trolling motor and the water was fairly clear, so keep working deeper until you find the fish.

Bass also stack up in ditches this time of year at Clarks Hill and a Zoom Fluke fished in them on a jig head is and excellent way to catch good fish. Put your boat in 30 feet of water anywhere a ditch enters the main lake and make long casts down the center of it. Swim the bait just off the bottom and set the hook if you feel any weight.

If the steady movement doesn’t work try hopping the jig and Fluke back. Hop it a foot off the bottom and let if fall back. Work all the way out to the boat, fishing water from a few feet deep to 30 feet deep down the center of ditches and depressions. You will often find a school of bass and catch several in one place doing this.

Lake Burton

Daniel Workman has worked on boats in the Burton area for several years and fishes the lake a lot. He enters pot tournaments there and has also fished with some area clubs. His best catch in a tournament on the lake was a five fish limit weighing 22 pounds and he has landed a six pound spot there.

Burton produces big spots and they feed good in cold water. Blueback herring in the lake have made it a great place for big spotted bass . The state record 8 pound, 2 ounce spot was caught at Burton in February. Winter is a good time to fish for spots on the lake and you might catch some good largemouth, too.

Daniel says the spots school up on deep points and humps and follow the herring during the winter on Burton. To find the bass you first find herring then go to nearby humps and points that top out 15 to 22 feet deep. Cover like brush or rock on the top will help hold the bass.

The lake is small enough you can fish most of it in one day but Daniel concentrates on the lower end, usually fishing from the area around Murray Cove down to the dam. The water stays clear here and cold water fishing is better in the deeper, clearer water.

A variety of baits work well for big Burton spots in cold weather. A jerkbait is excellent if the water is clear and it usually is. Make a long cast across a point or hump and crank the bait down, then work it back with a jerk then a long pause. The colder the water the longer the pause should be. A bait that suspends, like the Lucky Craft Pointer, is very good for this kind of fishing.

Spots will come up from deeper water to hit the jerkbait. Try different cadences with it. Sometimes a jerk-pause-jerk works but try a jerk-jerk-pause, too. Vary the action of the bait until the bass tell you what they want.
If a jerkbait is not working Daniel will throw a big crankbait like a big Fat Free Shad in shad color. He makes long casts across the structure with it and cranks it back with a steady speed, keeping it down as deep as possible.

Plastics are good, too. Texas, Carolina and jig head rigged worms will all catch Burton bass. A Zoom green pumpkin Finesse worm with the tail dyed chartreuse with JJ’s Magic to add scent and color is his choice for all of the rigs. Daniel fishes the Texas rig through brush but likes the jig head better on a clean bottom.

Work the plastic bait through cover on deep points and humps when the fish are not active. Try all three rigs since some days the fish seem to prefer one over the other. Fish the Texas and jig head worms on fairly light line and use a lighter leader on your Carolina rig in the clear water.

Some bass fishermen stay at home this time of year because of the cold. There is no reason for that with the kinds of clothing available to fishermen now. Dress warmly in layers and top it off with a snowmobile suit or other cold weather gear and you can stay relatively comfortable.

A few tricks really help you stay warm. Wear a hood over your head that covers your neck and keeps neck and head warm. That makes a lot of difference. The bass fisherman’s traditional baseball cap is not a good choice this time of year, unless you have a stocking cap pulled down over it and a hood over both.

Another good trick is to fill your pockets with handwarmers. The chemical type are cheap and easy to use, and most will last all day. Put two tiny ones in your boots, a couple in pants and shirt pockets and keep one in each jacket pocket to thaw your hands and you can keep on fishing.

Don’t sit at home and complain about the cold. Dress warmly and try one of these lakes for good winter action. You have a choice in the types of waters you want to fish and the kinds of bass you want to catch. But you can’t catch any of them sitting by a fire!

Fishing Lake Burton in Georgia

I am often amazed at the hidden jewels of fishing lakes we have in Georgia. I fish many big lakes in this area and am familiar with them, but I often get a surprise when visiting lakes a little further from home.

A few years ago in late December I drove up to Lake Burton to get information about a February Georgia Outdoor News article. Burton is a small Georgia Power lake between Clayton and Hiawassee, north of Gainesville. The 157 mile trip took me just under three hours each way and I went by Tallulah Falls, a place that brought back many childhood memories of summer trips to the mountains.

Lake Burton hit the news when a new state record spotted bass was caught by Wayne Holland on February 23, 2004. His huge spot weighed an amazing 8 pounds, 2 ounces and looked like it had swallowed a softball it was so fat.

I fished with local angler Daniel Workman and we were on the lake for four cold hours, from 7:00 AM until 11:00 AM. I got only one bite during that time but managed to land a spot that weighed 4 pounds 1 ounce on Daniel’s scales. That just missed being my biggest spot ever, not quite matching the 4.24 pounder I caught at Lanier a few years ago.

Burton is an old lake ringed by docks. The houses are very nice and many of the docks are double decker houses that would make a fine lake cabin by themselves. It would look a lot like Jackson if it were not for the clear water and high hills surrounding. The scenery is very nice and just adds to the fishing.

There are lots of largemouth in the lake, too. Daniel said his best tournament catch ever came in a night tournament when he brought in five largemouth weighing 22 pounds – and came in third place. The best catch he has ever seen there was five largemouth weighing an amazing 27 pounds.

If you want something different, plan a fishing trip to Burton. The drive is worth it for the change in scenery and big spotted bass. During our trip we saw one other boat, a canoe being paddled around the edge of the lake.