EARLY SUMMER MUSKY STRATEGIES

St Croix Rod Pros Offer EARLY SUMMER MUSKY STRATEGIES

June 13, 2023

Early-Summer Musky Strategies

Top musky sticks share tips on finding and hooking more fish during June and July

While anglers in states like Indiana and West Virginia have been targeting Esox masquinongy since ice out, others in key musky states like Wisconsin and Minnesota have been anxiously awaiting their season openers. Musky season opens June 3 in Minnesota and between May 6 and June 1 in Wisconsin, depending on location. 

St. Croix pros Rob Manthei of Wisconsin, Brad Hoppe of Minnesota, and Chase Gibson of West Virginia all make a living chasing muskies. We asked each of them to share their insights and strategies for finding and hooking muskies during the months of June and July.

Rob Manthei, Northern Wisconsin

St. Croix Pro Staff Rob Manthei

Rob Manthei has fished the fabled musky waters of Vilas, Oneida, and Iron Counties in Northern Wisconsin all of his life and has guided clients there for 28 years. He says specific strategies at season open depend on the weather and water temperatures. 

“Every musky angler in Wisconsin is at the mercy of our May weather patterns,” Manthei says. “In a normal year we’ll often have a mid-May spawn here in Northern Wisconsin, but it’s been a late spring so I’m expecting we may still have some spawning going on into early June.” 

Muskies are broadcast spawners, meaning they pair up, spawn, and lay their eggs in shallow, soft-bottomed areas when water temperatures reach the mid-to-upper-50-degree range. “During a late spring like we’ve had this year, everything with the spawn tends to happen more quickly once it starts,” Manthei says. “The spawn will last from five days to two weeks, then the fish move out of the shallow spawning bays and into adjacent key transition areas. I’ll be looking around those shallow spawning bays for any emerging weed growth, wood, or boulders along the shoreline.” 

Manthei says the general rule is smaller presentations for post-spawn muskies, but he regularly bucks that trend. “I let the fish tell me what they want,” he says. “If I see muskies grabbing my 13”-15” walleyes prior to the opener, that tells me I can come out of the gate with a bigger presentation. Generally, though, I’m sticking to 6”-7” minnow baits and smaller ¾-ounce to 1-1/2-ounce single-blade bucktails. I really like twitching small minnow baits and small gliders in the early days of the season.” 

Manthei says an 8’ or 9’ medium-heavy power rod like the St. Croix Legend Tournament Musky LMTSC90MHF GRINDER or LMTSC80MHF TOP-N-TAIL excels in these smaller-bait presentations. “These Legend Tournament models are well balanced and cast even a ¾-ounce bait a mile,” says Manthei, who completes his downsized bait system with a 6.4:1 reel spooled with 65-pound or 80-pound Seaguar Threadlock braid. 

“By late June, I’ll typically also start looking to bigger lakes with healthy cisco populations,” Manthei says. “A lot of muskies will move out after the spawn and suspend, fattening up on ciscoes. I use side imaging or Active Target on my Lowrance to look for the suspended bait and predators in the first open basins adjacent to the spawning bays. “They’re easy to find with electronics, but if you don’t have them, just focus on the top ten feet of the water column,” Manthei advises. “Most times the bait will only be 5’-9’ down, and it may push even closer to the surface in the evening.”

Some of the baits Manthei regularly employs in such situations include a Musky Innovations Magnum Swimmin’ Dawg swim bait or a suspending, diving crank like the Drifter Triple D or Livingston Rachel

“You’re basically just using an open-water retrieve with the swimbait; just count it down to your target depth and start cranking steady with some occasional brief bursts with the reel handle,” Manthei says. “With the lipped diving baits, you just want to crank it down to depth, then give it a big twitch and pause. Make the bait appear injured.” For these open-water presentations with full-sized baits, Manthei casts a heavy power Legend Tournament Musky LMTSC86HF SLING BLADE or LMTSC90HF BIG NASTY rod.

He says the suspended basin bite on the lakes he fishes remains strong through mid-July, although the fish may push deeper depending on temperatures and the thermocline. 

Weed flats and edges also come into play for Manthei by the end of June and the start of July. “The cabbage beds have matured on most of my favorite lakes by then,” he says. “I always fish the 7’-to-12’ green cabbage beds first, but the coontail will hold a lot of fish once it matures as well.” Manthei studies the composition and contours of each bed, looking for prime, predator-holding ambush spots like inside turns, points, and pockets. He may fish big bucktails, large jerk baits, glide baits, or other offerings in and around the weeds, depending on the situation at hand.

Brad Hoppe, Minnesota

St. Croix Pro Staff Brad Hoppe

Brad Hoppe has owned and operated Musky Mayhem Guide Service in the waters of West-Central Minnesota for the past 23 years and owns Musky Mayhem Tackle with his wife, Carrie. He also hosts Mayhems 10K Casts TV on KOTV, Roku, and YouTube along with co-host Chase Gibson. 

“Musky season opens the first Saturday of June in Minnesota,” the St. Croix pro says. “This year, that’s June 3, and the spawn should have happened by then. When we get this late but rapid warm-up, spawning usually only lasts for 7 or10 days, so even if it’s still happening during the opener, chances are it won’t last long.” 

Hoppe says he typically looks for two things in the month of June. “As fish wrap up spawning, I’m looking for transition areas close to those shallow spawning grounds,” he says. “Those first breaks towards deeper water, early cabbage lines, sand and gravel… stuff like that.” 

Like Manthei, Hoppe says he often cuts against the grain of conventional early-season musky thinking and opts to cast big baits. “Right after the spawn, those fish haven’t eaten,” he says. “So, I’ll go big and slow down to offer them a really big and easy meal.” 

Hoppe most often finds himself casting giant spinnerbaits like Musky Mayhem Double Cowgirls and Detonators, as well as large rubber baits on a St. Croix Legend Tournament Musky 9’6” heavy power BLADEMASTER II rod (LMTFC96HFT). “I’ll slow the retrieve way down on the blade baits and minimize speed and action on the rubber lures as well… really just small hops on a slow retrieve,” he says, adding that the full cork and EVA handle and GRASP reel seat on the BLADEMASTER II help to alleviate the fatigue that can otherwise limit efficiency when casting and retrieving such large, water-resistant lures. “This rod is incredibly light in the hand for such a big, powerful stick,” he says. “And the ergonomics of the GRASP reel seat and hybrid full-handle design only add to its unique capabilities.”

St. Croix Legend Tournament Musky Rod

The second thing Hoppe looks for in June is suspended fish. “I always look forward to this, especially with some of my older clients who have trouble casting for long periods of time,” he says. “Open-water trolling is very effective in lakes with whitefish and cisco populations during the early summer. The muskies push out after spawning and set up around the schools of suspended bait.”  Hoppe says a variety of lures are effective for open-water trolling and often chooses baits based on forage species and the depth where they’re located. “We’re usually dragging bigger plugs like 10” and 12” Supernatural Headlocks and Matlocks, 13” Grandmas, or 10” Phantom Hex on St. Croix Mojo Musky Trolling rods. These heavy and extra-heavy power moderate action rods are crafted from a hybrid of SCII carbon and linear s-glass, so they are incredibly durable, which is what you need when a big musky crashes a giant plug that’s already got the rod loaded up. I’ll run the shorter 7’ rods as down rods and the longer ones on the planer boards.” 

Hoppe says the thermocline starts to develop in many of the lakes he fishes around the beginning of July. “Once that happens, I stop targeting suspended fish, because they often come up to hit the plugs from a little too deep and I don’t want to compromise a safe release,” he says. “Instead, I’ll position the boat in 20’ of water or so and start casting to 8’-12’ primary break lines. Sideview or live sonar will show you when open-water fish start moving in towards these weed lines, but the transition is usually complete by mid-July.” 

Hoppe says baits vary from day to day, depending on the cover, the mood of the fish, and available forage. “If the muskies are hanging deeper, I’ll use a Musky Mayhem Grenade,” he says. “This is a 13”, five-ounce weight-forward tail-bladed spinner specifically designed for fishing deep weed edges. The depth is key; Using my electronics I can confirm where fish are hanging and use other lures like Red October tubesCowgirlsBulldawgs, or Medusas to cover any part of the water column I might need,” says Hoppe, adding that he effectively presents all these offerings on the same St. Croix Legend Tournament Musky BLADEMASTER II (LMTFC96HFT) rod. “I’ll switch to the new BLUE OX (LMTFC90XHF) model if I’m fishing really big rubber,” he adds. 

Tactics change again when the fish disappear completely into the weeds. “Look for the freshest, greenest weeds,” Hoppe advises. “Cabbage first, coontail second, and speed up your retrieves. You can downsize your bait when fishing over or through the weeds to lures like Rapid Squirrels, smaller Double Cowgirls, or tubes. Grenades go through the weeds well, too,” adds Hoppe, who pairs his BLADEMASTER II rod with a 400- or 500-size mid-speed Tranx reel.

Chase Gibson, West Virginia

St. Croix Pro Staff Chase Gibson

Chase Gibson of Bridgeport, West Virginia is a fishing guide, co-host of Mayhem 10K Casts TV with Hoppe, and owner of Muskiebumper Bump Boards. There’s no closed musky season in West Virginia, so Gibson starts fishing at ice-out and stays in the Mountain State – also fishing in Ohio – before moving up to Minnesota from mid-July through October. 

“Our West Virginia reservoirs are loaded with shad, crappie and standing timber, so these are some of the factors that make musky fishing here unique,” he says. “Our thermoclines set up by mid-June, and muskies will suspend in deep, timbered coves, as well as out in open water.” 

Gibson says jigging with Bondy Baits is a staple presentation in June and July. “The 9-foot BLUE OX is a great jigging rod,” Gibson says. “Its shorter length makes it easy to maintain control while moving around the trees.” 

Gibson jigs with100-pound Cortland Masterbraid spooled on a Tranx 500 high-speed reel and generally follows one of two alternate jigging cadences. “Less popular is the taller stroke,” he says. “That means lifting the tip of the rod from the surface of water up to about eye level… maybe a five or six-foot stroke. More often a shorter, faster, snap-jigging technique is most effective. This more aggressive motion moves the rod tip from the surface of the water up to about waist level, then you drop it back down as fast as you can on a tight line. You’re looking to just make them eat it… it’s more of a reactionary-type strike.” 

Which jigging cadence Gibson uses ultimately depends on the fish’s activity level. “Using live sonar is very helpful in adjusting your presentation to match the fish’s mood,” he says.

If jigging isn’t working, Gibson will back out and bomb casts into the timber with a black nickel colored Detonator. “I’ll start with a medium-fast retrieve and once the lure gets about halfway back to the boat I’ll speed up and burn it the rest of the way in,” he says. “This gets a lot of follows and they’ll usually eat it on the first turn at the boat.” 

Gibson says Cowgirls, Medusa, and Bulldawgs work well for timber-casting, too. “A lot of times I’ll put an extra 1.5 ounces of weight on the front hook hanger to get those rubber baits down faster and keep them running a bit deeper,” he says. “I fish these rubber baits on the Legend Tournament Musky BLUE OX rod and snap-rip them as fast as I can.” Gibson adds that a Musky Innovations Dyin’ Dog has a great dive-and-rise action that works great when muskies are neutral or negative.

Like Hoppe, Gibson is also a fan of trolling when muskies are suspended in open water and terrorizing balls of abundant shad. “We’ll run a planer-board rod, an out rod, and a down rod on each side of the boat and just follow the river channel at 4-4.6 MPH,” he says. Gibson runs bucktails with an eight-ounce weight on the leader in front on the down rods, about 8-10 feet down right in the propwash. He prefers Llungen Lures .22 Short crankbaits on the out rods and planer-board rods. 

“Rod choice is a key consideration when trolling,” Gibson says. “You’re pulling big, heavy lures at high speed, so those rods are already under a significant load before a fish even hits. You need extremely durable rods to stand up to the abuse. St. Croix Mojo Musky Trolling series rods have tons of power and strength with a moderate action that really helps absorb shock and keep hooks where they belong throughout the fight.” 

Wherever you’re located within musky country, the months of June and July signal game on for pursuing North America’s top freshwater predator. Follow the advice of our pros to more fish-holding locations, more follows, and more fish boatside in the net or cradle.

THREE WAYS TO CATCH THE NEGLECTED ROCK BASS

TRY THESE THREE WAYS TO CATCH THE NEGLECTED ROCK BASS FOR SOME GOOD EATING FISH THAT ARE FUN TO CATCH

Three Ways to Catch the Neglected Rock Bass

from The Fishing Wire

The tiny spinnerbait hit the water with a delicate “plop” a scant foot from the shoreline as we floated silently down the Shenandoah River. The current swirled backwards in an eddy there, making it a prime hangout for the fish this river is famous for—the smallmouth bass. The instant I engaged the spinning reel handle, a sharp strike telegraphed up the thin graphite rod. Setting the hook with a solid sweeping motion, I felt steady resistance from a stubborn quarry on the end of the line… surely a tail-walking smallmouth.

But something was different. This fish felt strong, but somehow not as powerful and full of the leaps and runs I had come to expect from a pugnacious smallmouth bass. Welcome for sure, as any gamefish would be on a hot sunny day on a river. Just not what I was expecting.

As I worked the fish in, I realized why the fish felt different. A plump rock bass had nabbed the small spinnerbait I was using. Reaching down, I twisted the hook free and released the plump, brass-colored panfish back into the glass-clear water, none the worse for wear.

No, the humble rock bass won’t win many popularity contests among anglers. These fish are not sleek and powerful like a landlocked striper. They don’t jump like a belligerent largemouth bass or streak wildly through the currents like a silver-sided rainbow trout. And their fight definitely won’t match the antics of a sassy smallmouth.

But despite their lack of spectacular credentials as a gamefish, these stocky little panfish are strangely appealing. Maybe their dependability is what makes them so attractive as a quarry. Rock bass can almost always be counted on as a fill-in for those days when other gamefish develop a case of lockjaw. They have saved the day on many a smallmouth outing for me on waters such as the James, Potomac, and Rappahannock, not to mention my home water—the Shenandoah River.

But rather than just relegating rock bass to the role of fill-in or “day-saver” when other species are not cooperating, consider this proposition. Try focusing occasionally on this quarry for its own legitimate value as a gamefish. After all, the rock bass is a stubborn, if not spectacular, fighter when an angler uses light tackle.

Often called “goggle eye” or “red eye,” the species is also a handsome fish. Well… in a rugged sort of way! The fish’s Latin name, Ambloplites rupestris, gives a clue to the habitat the rock bass prefers. Rupetris means “of the rocks.” Stone and rubble-covered rivers as well as some rocky lakes are prime rock bass fishing grounds.

Rock bass don’t grow large. A five- to seven-inch fish is typical. Studies have shown it takes six years for a rock bass to reach eight inches. As for weight, a 12-ounce fish is absolutely a trophy. The world record rock bass was a tie between one fish caught in the York River in Ontario, and one taken in Lake Erie, Pennsylvania. Those fish weighed just 3 pounds. The Virginia state record is a 2 lb. 2oz. fish caught in 1986 by Larry Ball in Laurel Bed Lake.

Rock bass can be caught with just about any angling method imaginable. I’ve even caught them when downrigging for stripers with large diving plugs that were almost as big as the rock bass were. That’s certainly not the ideal way to take this diminutive fish, though. Ultralight spin tackle with four- to six-pound line and light fly rods in the four- to six-weight class are much better gear for this quarry.

In lakes, you can find rock bass in coves, around rubble and rock-strewn points, reefs, and any areas where hard bottom is found. In rivers, rock bass favor deep pools, eddies near shore, pockets behind boulders, ledges, and shaded shoreline spots where they often hover within inches of the bank. Besides stones, rock bass also hang around logs, deadfalls, and underwater stumps.

Lure

Top artificials for spin fishing include grubs with plastic twister tails, jigs, in-line spinners, soft-plastic jerkbaits, banana-shaped wobblers, thin-minnow plugs, and small spinnerbaits like the Beetlespin. Four-pound test line is perfect, but opt for six-pound if you might latch onto some black bass as well as the targeted quarry.
Three things are vital for success with rock bass. The first is that your lure falls close to the shoreline on days when fish are holding near the banks. The second important point is to retrieve slowly. Rock bass don’t like to chase down a fast-moving bait. The third rule for rock bass fishing is to keep the offering near the bottom when fish are holed up in deep water. Let your lure nick the lake or river floor occasionally for the most action.

Live Bait

Natural bait works extremely well on rock bass. Hellgrammites, earthworms, and two-inch long minnows are all excellent. Use them with a small bobber and split shot or two for weight. This is a great way to introduce a youngster to fishing. And chances are you’ll pick up some largemouths and smallmouths this way as well.

Fly Fishing

Using flies is another great way to catch rock bass. If fish are hovering near shore they’ll nab a small sponge rubber spider, deer hair bug, or cork popper cast close to the bank. Allow it to rest, then twitch the fly gently. Strikes will be soft and delicate, a lot like a bluegill nails a fly.

Use an eight- to nine-foot rod, four- to six-weight forward floating line and four-  to six-pound tippet. If fish aren’t cooperating on top, go with small sub-surface offerings such as the Hare’s Ear, Montana Stone, or Yuk Bug. Small streamers such as the Zonker, Matuka, Muddler, or Clouser Minnow in sizes 2-8 will also fool rock bass. Keep the rod tip low to the water and fish those minnow-imitating flies with short, sharp strips of line.

Don’t be surprised if a few smallmouths nab these offerings as well. Be ready, or they might just jerk the rod out of your hand!

It would be hard to think of a more fun-packed way to spend a warm, sunny afternoon than floating or wet-wading a shaded stream casting to willing rock bass mixed in with bonus smallmouths. And if your son or granddaughter are free or a neighborhood kid wants to come along, take them, too. This is a great fish to focus on when introducing youngsters to the sport of angling!

– By Gerald Almy

Where When and How To Catch October Bass At Wedowee with Brian Morris and GPS Coordinates for Ten Good Spots

October Bass At Wedowee with Brian Morris

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

St Croix Rods Says We’re Giving Away 75 Premier Rods!

This Saturday, June 14, so register for one of their spinning rods to be given away online!

We’re Giving Away 75 Premier Rods!Thank you, anglers, for supporting St. Croix Rods for 75 years! To celebrate, we’re giving away 75 Premier rods, one day only, online or in person at St. Croix Customer Appreciation Day, Saturday, June 17.

 
Premier has been the top-selling family of American-made fishing rods for over a decade and is the perfect series for us to use in expressing our gratitude to anglers for our 75 years in business. We have 75 medium power, fast action Premier spinning rods — one of the most versatile models in the series — ready to give away at St. Croix Customer Appreciation Day this Saturday, June 17. We’ll give away 35 during the event at our factory in Park Falls, and another 40 to those who register to win online at the St. Croix Factory Store.

We hope to see all of you this Saturday in Park Falls, but those who can’t make it to Customer Appreciation Day in person should make stcroixrodfactorystore.com their first stop for all virtual participation options.
 
#stcroixrods 
About St. Croix Rod
Headquartered in Park Falls, Wisconsin, St. Croix has been proudly producing the “Best Rods on Earth” for 75 years.  Combining state-of-the-art manufacturing processes with skilled craftsmanship, St. Croix is the only major producer to still build rods entirely from design through manufacturing.  The company remains family-owned and operates duplicate manufacturing facilities in Park Falls and Fresnillo, Mexico.  With popular trademarked series such as Legend®, Legend Xtreme®, Avid®, Premier®, Imperial®, Triumph®, Mojo, and BASSX, St. Croix is revered by all types of anglers from around the world.
 
Copyright © 2023 St. Croix Rod, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive information from St. Croix – either online or via your warranty registration. If you no longer wish to receive notices or emails from us, no worries, you can unsubscribe below. Thank you!

Our mailing address is:
St. Croix Rod856 4th Avenue NorthP.O. Box 279Park Falls, WI 54552Add us to your address book

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

How and Where To Catch September Bass at Wheeler Lake

September 10 Bass at Wheeler Lake with Brent Crow

    Like the light at the end of a tunnel, September promises better things ahead for bass fishermen.  Days are finally noticeably shorter and the air is slightly cooler. Bass respond by getting active and feeding in more shallow water as the temperature starts to drop. Wheeler Lake is a great place to take advantage of this improving fishing.

    Wheeler is a TVA lake on the Tennessee River north of Birmingham and is the second biggest lake in the state.  It runs 60 miles from its dam to the Guntersville Dam and covers huge flats starting around Decatur.  Largemouth are the dominate species but smallmouth fishing is good and there are a good many northern strain spotted bass in the lake, too.

    According to the BAIT survey, in tournaments on Wheeler in 2008 average bass size was good at 1.69 pounds and the average big fish was 4.10 pounds.  Over 87 percent of tournament anglers landed at least one keeper and the average number of keepers per angler was 4.14, just short of a limit.

    Wheeler was known for its big bass in the grass a few years ago but the grass seemed to disappear and so did the fantastic catches.  The lake remained good but not up to its past standards. Right now it seems Wheeler is making a comeback in bass population numbers and size although much of the grass is still missing.

    Brent Crow grew up in the area and now lives ten minutes from the lake.  As a youth he fished ponds and creeks with a friend.  When he was a teenager, he got interested in bass fishing and tournament fishing from watching shows on TV and was a charter member of the University of Alabama Bass Association, a tournament club formed of students, faculty and staff. 

    Fishing those club draw tournaments helped Brent learn about bass fishing and gave him his start in tournaments.  He fished the Federation in 2000 then, in his first BFL in 2002, finished second on Guntersville. That fired him up and he went on to fish many more tournaments.

    For three years Brent fished the FLW Tour but this past year he concentrated his fishing on Wheeler and other Tennessee River Lakes as well as Smith Lake.  He guides on all those lakes and fishes many pot, charity and local trail tournaments on them. 

    In June and July Brent landed big fish in a weekly night tournament on Wheeler four weeks in a row, weighing in a seven pounder, then a six pounder, followed by a five pounder then another six pounder.

    “September is the month I go from having two rods on my deck to having ten,” Brent said.  The bass move up and there are several good patterns working every day. Some work better in certain areas of the lake, but there are many ways to catch bass anywhere you want to fish.

    On the lower lake largemouth move into pockets and creeks following shad and feed on them in three to four feet of water.  That is an exciting way to fish because you are seeing activity most of the time and casting topwater baits to the fish.  In the same area, smallmouth bass are feeding very shallow on main lake rocky points, especially later in the month and you can catch them on crankbaits.

    Further up the lake the river ledges on the Decatur Flats hold quality bass as do the humps back off the river on the flats. A somewhat specialized pattern is fishing barge tie-ups in the area since shad get around them and attract bass. And finally, the point at the railroad bridge creates a current break where bass will stack up and feed.

    For the largemouth in the pockets, Brent will throw a Lucky Craft Gunfish topwater lure and a Zoom Super Fluke when the fish are up and feeding, then fan cast the area with a Lavender Shad Norman Baby Deep N and a white and chartreuse War Eagle half-ounce spinnerbait.

    Out on the rocky points Brent likes the Fluke and Gunfish thrown right on the bank. He says you can’t cast too shallow and you will catch some quality smallmouth doing this.  You won’t get as as many bites but the ones you do get will be good fish, and the pattern holds up all day long.

    On the river ledges and humps Brent will throw a three quarter ounce Tight Line football head jig in rusty craw or black and blue and tip it with a Paca Chunk in some brown color.  He will also keep a Netbait 11 inch worm Texas rigged on a three eights to one half ounce lead, depending on the current.

    A Carolina rig will also work on these ledges and humps and a Brush Hog or Baby Brush Hog in Junebug or green pumpkin is a good bet.  Brent uses a three quarters ounce sinker on his Carolina rig.    All these baits are thrown on heavy P-Line fluorocarbon.

    In this area, always keep a Gunfish tied on and ready to throw to schooling fish, too. They will often come up chasing shad on the humps and ledges and a quick cast to the school can produce some good fish.

    On the barge tie-up pilings, Brent rigs a jig head worm on a spinning outfit to fish them.  A crankbait run by them will catch fish, too. Both those baits work well when fishing the railroad bridge, too.

    The following ten spots will all be good this month. Give them a try then look for similar places on the lake.

    1.  N 34 39.189 – W 87 01.871 – If you put in at the big ramp in Decatur, come out of the bay and head downstream.  On your right you will see two big signs out in the middle of the lake, just off the north side of the channel, marking a gas line crossing.  Go to the second green channel marker on your right downstream of those signs, just downstream of the mouth of Bakers Creek on the south side of the river.

    Watch your depthfinder and idle toward the bank. The river will be over 20 feet deep then come up on the river ledge to four or five feet deep.  Keep your boat out in 20 feet of water and work upstream, casting your baits to the top of the ledge and working them back with the current.  Fish for about 100 yards upstream of the channel marker.

    This is a typical river ledge. It runs for a long distance and you want to work along it, probing for a hard bottom. Shell beds are a key and bass will stack up in a small area on the right bottom. That is why a big football head jig is a good bait. You can cover water quickly with it to find the schools of fish.

    2.  N 34 38.918 – 87 01.408 – Run upstream to the last green marker on your left downstream of the signs, the next one upstream.  Stop near the marker and start fishing, working all the way upstream to the gas line signs.  Remember, the channel marker sits off the ledge so you will be inside it toward the bank.  A good depthfinder is a big help in staying just off the ledge.

    When throwing a football head jig Brent cast upstream. He lets it hit bottom then drags it along with a sweeping sideways motion with his rod. He keeps his rod low and immediately sets the hook if he feels a fish.  He says if you “go on point” and try to drop your rod tip then set the hook you will miss the fish.  If the bass knocks slack in your line, coming toward you, reel fast as you sweep your rod tip.

    You can fish a Carolina rig or Texas rig on these ledges, too, but it is faster to cover them with the football head jig. When you catch a bass make repeated casts to the same spot.  Bass will hold on a very small area along a long ledge so concentrate on the spot when you get bit.

    Current really helps make the bass bite on these ledges and you should always work upstream, which gives you better boat control, and work your bait with the current, which is a more natural movement.  If the current is slack sometimes a passing barge will turn the bass on by moving the water, so be aware of them as they go behind you.

    3.  N 34 39.100 – W 87 01.407.  Do not run from the river channel across the ledges, especially if the water is a little low.  With only three or four feet on top and stumps on them, they eat lower units. Idle across the shallow ledge until the water drops off behind them to about eight feet deep. Then go to this hump.  It is about half way between holes 1 and 2 back well off the ledge. There are many humps back on the flats like this one, topping out about five feet deep on top with nine to 10 feet of water around them. Many are shown on maps and on a good GPS chip. Any of them can hold fish so it is a good idea to fish as many as possible to find them.

    When you get to this or other humps circle it throwing a football head jig, Work all the way around it, covering it from all angles. Current helps here, too, so the best angle if from downstream, casting upstream, but it is worth fishing all the way around these humps.

    4.  N 34 38.794 – W 87 00.705 – Stay parallel to the river channel and go upstream until you are just upstream of the gas line signs. You will be behind them and straight across from the big Monsanto Plant on the south side. Brent says this is another good hump to fish. 

    Fish all the way around it but watch for the deepest water as you circle it and concentrate your cast to come from the shallows on the hump down that drop.  Drag your football head, Carolina and Texas rig across it and down the drop. Brent says he almost always keeps his boat in deep water and casts shallow.

    Another bait worth a try here and on other humps and ledges is a crankbait like a Lucky Craft RC 2.5 in the bull bream color.  Cast it to the shallow water and fish it back across the drop.  You can fish it fast.

    Always watch for schooling fish when fishing humps and ledges. A Gunfish is a good lure to throw to fish breaking on top since it is big and you can cast it a long way.  Brent caught a couple of fat hybrids the day we fished but the largemouth were not on top.

    5.  N 34 38.206 – W 87 01.110 – This pattern is a little different but pays off well. There are dozens of barge piling tie-ups along the bank between Fox Creek to the Interstate, about eight miles of river.  Most of these tie-ups are right on the river ledge so their position is perfect, and they create a current break baitfish love.

    Go to the tie-ups just downstream of the mouth of Betty Creek.  The best pilings are like this one where the channel side has 20 feet of water but it is less then ten feet deep on the bank side. Shad draw bass in to feed and Brent says all the tie-ups can be good at some time.

    These are a good place to catch numbers of bass but they also produce some quality fish.  Brent fishes them with a three-sixteenths ounce jig head and a green pumpkin or June bug Trick worm tied on a spinning outfit. He uses 14 pound test braid for his main line with 15 pound P-Line fluorocarbon leader.  A crankbait is good when run by the pilings with the current, too.

    Keep your boat downsream of the round piling and cast your jig head right to the side of it, letting it fall to the bottom.  The shallow side is usually the best since bass hold near the bottom to feed. Work your jig head worm a couple of hops when it hits bottom then reel in and make another cast.

    You will see shad around the best tie-ups and all the activity makes a crankbait work well. Cast it past the piling and run it right beside it.  Make repeated casts at different angles to cover it, especially the shallow side.

    6.  N 34 37.209 – W 86 58.721 – Run up to the railroad bridge and stop on the left side before you get to the bridge. The riprap and point comes out and makes a current break on this side where bass stack up and feed. Brent says he sat here and caught 100 bass one day last year.

    Position your boat downstream and behind the point in about 15 feet of water. You want to cast up toward the point parallel to it where the current comes around and sweeps down the side of it.  Throw your jig head worm up into about two feet of water and work it back with the current to ten feet deep.  Keep a tight line and let the current move your bait like something washing down with the current.

    A Baby Deep N works well fishing this spot, too. Brent likes the lavender shad color and he works it at about the same speed as the current, moving it just fast enough to get it down near the bottom.

    7. N 34 47.750 – W 87 22.644 – You may want to trailer down to this area since it is a long run.  Going toward the dam on your left the last pocket has a warming sign on its point.  Go back into the pocket and watch for activity on top. Shad move back into pockets like this in September and largemouth follow to gorge on them in the shallow water.

    Throw a topwater bait or Fluke to any activity you see.  This pocket has deeper water than some but there is a sunken barge or wall of some kind in the back and the shad will go up against it and the bass will follow.  You will be fishing shallow, only three or four feet deep most of the time.  Bass will hit both the topwater and Fluke while chasing shad.

    Fish all around the back of the cove, watching for activity. If nothing is hitting on top Brent will fan cast  a spinnerbait or shallow running crankbait all around the back of the cove to draw strikes from bass lurking near cover waiting a a passing shad.

    8. N 34 47.478 – W 87 21.900 – Back out on the main river run up to the next cove and stop on the rocky point on it. This point is on the second pocket upstream of the boat ramp on that side of the lake.  It is a double cove that has two arms not far off the river.  This is a good example of the type rocky points Brent looks for in this area.

    The best points are on the main river run and drop off fast.  Keep your boat out as far as you can and still cast right on the bank. Cast a topwater bait or Fluke to the very edge of the water. Brent says you can’t cast too shallow fishing like this.

    On these points current does not make as much difference as it does on ledges and humps, but wind blowing into the point does help.  When fishing the Fluke, fish it fast and make it jump out of the water.  The more wind the more commotion Brent tries to make with his topwater baits.

    9.  N 34 45.466 – W 87 18.857 – Going upstream watch for another double pocket on your right. It is the third pocket downstream of the Champion Mill paper plant.  The rocky point on it is another good one to fish with topwater and Flukes. 

    Brent says you won’t get a lot of hits on each point fishing this pattern, but he catches some good smallmouth on it.  Rocky points like this may have only one bass feeding up real shallow but it is likely to be a good on. Run the rocky points in this area and work as many as you can.

    10.  N 34 44.317 – W 87 14.743 – Run up to Goldfield Branch and go back to the causeway in it.  Water near it will be five feet deep or so and it is a good area to find schooling largemouth chasing shad.  You will be fishing in the middle of these pockets, not the bank. Bass will hold out in any cover like stumps in the middle of the pocket and wait on shad.

    Fish this area with topwater for fish you see then try a spinnerbait or crankbait for others you don’t see.  I asked Brent why he picked certain pockets and points in this area and he said he used to net shad for bait and realized certain places held them consistently. When asked what brought the shad to these places, he said “only the shad know.”

    Check out these patterns and spots. There are many similar places all over this big lake to catch bass this month.  Use these as a guide to find similar places to catch them.

    For a guide trip on Wheeler or other area lakes to see first hand how Brent catches bass, you can call him at 256-466-9965 or visit his web site at http://northalabamabass.wordpress.com/reports/ for contact info and fishing reports.

Northland Fishing Tackle PRO SLINGS NEW PLASTICS TO WALLEYE TOURNAMENT SUCCESS

PRO SLINGS NEW PLASTICS TO TOURNAMENT SUCCESS

Pro Slings New Plastics to Tournament Success

from The Fishing Wire

BEMIDJI, Minn. – Recent exposure via tournament websites, social media, and TV has created a wildfire of interest in a brand-new line of walleye soft plastics from Northland Fishing Tackle. Aptly-named “Eye Candy™,” an extensive team of tournament pros, guides, influencers, and product designers put the paces through countless iterations of shapes and actions to provide walleye anglers with the best new soft plastics on the walleye scene.

Fact: Northland Tackle’s Eye Candy™ wasn’t intended to launch yet. However, given the success Northland team pros have been fishing the baits, the company decided to ramp up production to provide anglers of all walks with the winning walleye baits.

“We’ve been fishing the snot out of these plastics for over a year and feel super confident in the designs. Given what Tom Hunyh has been doing with them on the NWT and AIM trails and Jason Mitchell is doing via TV and social on the waters he visits, what Brad Hawthorne, Bro, and Nick Lindner are doing with them between Mille Lacs and the north, we knew we had to get them into the hands of walleye anglers everywhere now,” says Northland Fishing Tackle’s Marketing Director, Mike Anselmo.

Huynh Dials In Winnebago NWT Bite with NEW Northland Eye Candy™

Case in point, top-placing NWT/AIM tournament and Northland Tackle walleye pro, Tom Huynh, has been using Eye Candy™ since the first NWT event on the Illinois River this past March. Since, he’s used the new soft plastics to top-finishing tournament success.

“The recent NWT tournament on Lake Winnebago was my first introduction to the lake. The day before I got there I looked at my maps and put a plan together, but my plan to fish the big lake soon changed. Our Airbnb was on one of the upper lakes and there was a little two-boat launch right across the street, so I used that during pre-fishing,” says Huynh.

“Rather than trek over to Winnebago, I got sidetracked in a shallow, tea-colored lake attached to Winnebago by a river—and decided to look around. I caught a few random fish here and there without a pattern until I found an old river channel that looked almost like a shell bed on my SideVu. I was marking fish like crazy: catfish, drum, white bass, walleyes, and sturgeon. With that many species, running LiveScope wasn’t easy. I had to cast at every single fish I saw to gauge their reaction and figure out what they were,” notes Huynh.

“After a couple of days, I learned to recognize the reactions of the white bass and drum. The two species that seemed to act about the same were catfish and walleyes. So, for every two or three 10-12 pound catfish I’d catch, I’d hook a 3-pound or better walleye. After I figured that out I was catching 5 or 6 walleyes a day during pre-fish without even entering the big lake. I knew the historical weights for Winnebago tournaments, and since what I was catching were good fish, we decided to stay there. On the Monday and Tuesday before the tournament we had between 13 and 15 pounds each day, so we figured if we could do that in the tournament we’d make the top 10,” adds Huynh.

Huynh says it took him until the last day of pre-fishing to really dial in his presentation.

“Basically, I used the same black Northland Eye Candy™ Grub I used on the Illinois River—actually still the same bag of baits—and threaded it on a 1/8-ounce black Northland Tungsten Jig. It just seemed to cast the right silhouette in the stained water to get bit,” divulges Huynh.

This isn’t the first tournament that Tom has relied on black to either win or place in the Top 10.

“Every single fish I’ve caught in a tournament this year casting has been on a solid black Northland Tungsten Jig—either regular shank or short-shank. Not one fish has come on anything else. For Winnebago, I paired that Northland Eye Candy Grub in black with a black Northland Tungsten. I thought I had an extra bag of the plastics in my boat, but I left them in another tote at home, so I had to rely on the few baits I had. Luckily, they’re made of a super-tough and spongy TPE plastic that holds up to dozens of fish on just one plastic. You don’t burn through ‘em. So I had just enough to do the job. I also caught a couple fish on a minnow and Northland Tungsten, too,” laughs Huynh.

“However, if it hadn’t been for the Eye Candy™ plastics and their crazy ability to hold the scent I use, I don’t think I would have been able to dial in the first two good bites of the tournament that put us into 2nd place,” adds Huynh.

Huynh adds that the Winnebago NWT tournament May 17-18 was the first event this year where he and a partner were able to catch decent-size walleyes.

“I ended up catching two 4’s and a 5-pounder with my other fish. It all came down to the entire system—a black Northland Tungsten jighead, the new Northland Eye Candy™ Grub in black, 10-pound high-vis Daiwa J-Braid Grand X8 to 8-pound Daiwa fluorocarbon, and a Daiwa Kage 1000 spinning reel on a Rosemore rod. The 1000 size reel keeps me from horsing big walleyes in on small jigs and hooks.”

Huynh says he “couldn’t be happier” with the 2nd Place NWT finish that he ended up with, especially considering he figured out a system with no prior knowledge or experience on the Winnebago system coming into the event. Huynh cashed a $24,122 check plus a Garmin contingency award.

Northland Short-Shank Tungstens Crack Leech Lake ‘Eyes

Following the Winnebago NWT, Huynh bee-lined to Leech Lake, Minnesota, to fish an AIM Tournament—and admits the timing was “completely out of his element” although he and co-angler Nate Wolske have a history of top finishes there.

“We’d never fished Leech that early in the season,” says Hunyh. “We’d won there in the summer and knew how to seasonally pattern those fish, but cold water was completely out of our wheelhouse.”

“The water was 48-49 degrees in the morning so I knew our chance of fishing plastics was fairly slim, but we did get a few bites on Eye Candy. So we switched to minnows tipped on 1/8-ounce Northland Short-Shank Jigs—again, in black,” says Huynh.

Huynh notes that partner Nate Wolske hadn’t fished black Short-Shank Tungsten Jigs to date and was mystified by what happened with a simple change in jig color.

“Nate turned to me and said, ‘I just don’t get it. They’ll hit these black jigs a lot quicker and way more often.’ So, we both used black Short-Shank Tungsten Jigs for every single cast of the Leech Lake Tournament—and it put us in 2nd place at the end of the event,” shares Huynh.

Hunyh says the difficulty was getting the big females to bite, which had been squirting eggs only a few days prior to the event.

“The big girls were in a funk,” says Huynh. “They don’t come off the spawn and just start eating. They’re exhausted. So they go and stage somewhere. If something comes right at them and it’s convenient, they’ll eat it, but they’re not going to chase anything down.”

Huynh explains: “So we had to slow our presentations way-way down. And the fish weren’t positioned on our electronics like they typically are. They were really close to the bottom making it hard to differentiate walleyes from rocks. Then you’d see a rock move on the screen and we’d get bit and set the hook, but a lot times the jig came back clean, no fish, even though we were fishing our typical routine. They were biting and eating so light that the dense Short-Shank Tungsten was absolutely critical, especially considering we were casting 40- to 50-feet out. With the tungsten you could actually feel the walleyes put the bait in their mouth, a sensation that would carry up through our fluoro leaders, braid, through our rods, into our reels, and up into our hands. With the tungsten—as well as the rest of our gear—we could feel those subtle bites 50 feet away,” concludes Hunyh.

Currently, Northland Pro Tom Huynh is pre-fishing in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, for the AIM National Championship Shootout to be held on Friday, June 2. You can bet Northland Tackle Eye Candy™ and Tungsten Jigs will be very much in play…

ABOUT Northland® Fishing Tackle

In 1975, a young Northwoods fishing guide named John Peterson started pouring jigs and tying tackle for his clients in a small remote cabin in northern Minnesota. The lures were innovative, made with high quality components, and most importantly, were catching fish when no other baits were working! Word spread like wildfire, the phone started ringing… and the Northland Fishing Tackle® brand was in hot demand! For 40 years now, John and the Northland® team have been designing, testing and perfecting an exclusive line of products that catch fish like no other brand on the market today. Manufactured in the heart of Minnesota’s finest fishing waters, Northland® is one of the country’s leading producers of premium quality jigs, live bait rigs, spinnerbaits and spoons for crappies, bluegills, perch, walleyes, bass, trout, northern pike and muskies.

POTENTIAL WORLD RECORD CATFISH LANDED

POTENTIAL WORLD RECORD CATFISH LANDED

Wels Catfish


from The Fishing Wire
Unbelievable! MADCAT Pro Staff Alessandro Biancardi (ITA) shocks the whole catfish world with a monster caught in river Po a few days ago! Alessandro’s huge kitten beats the previous world record by 4cm and the fish is a result of 23 years of hard work! We’re sooo proud of you, Alessandro! Grazie! You have written history in the world of catfish angling! You situated the MADCAT brand on the top! Read how Alessandro described his incredible adventure below!

“Hi everyone, I’m Alessandro Biancardi from MADCAT ITALY team, I’m here to describe with trembling voice and eyes full of joy, what happened just few days ago, after 23 years of intense catfishing!

Everything started as a normal day of fishing, I went to the great river Po. Before leaving I checked knots, hooks, each connection, because I’m extremely meticulous. I always need to be 100% sure that everything is in place if a dream fish decide to bite my lure.

I was alone on my boat, the water level was starting to drop after a big flood, I decided to fish with spinning technic so I started casting my lure in the muddy water… I used to start with a crank bait to quickly understand if fish are active or not, this time I had a different feeling and I started with a Savage Gear Cannibal Shad on a 12/0 (40 gram) jig head.

In silence I approached the first spot and after few casts a powerful bite arrived, the fish stood still some seconds before starting a very complicated fight, between strong currents and a lot of submerged obstacles. I calmly managed to fight what I felt to be a prehistoric fish. I followed it for 40 endless minutes, when it surfaced for the first time, I really realized that I hooked a monster, adrenaline started pumping hard and the fear of losing it almost sent me into a panic, I was alone facing the biggest catfish I ever seen in 23 years.

I tried gloving its mouth 2-3 times, but it was still too strong, I decided to go in shallow water trying to land it from shore and after few tries, I managed to land it!
I tied the fish to let him recover from the long fight then I suddenly realized that the boat was not anchored, and it was going away in the current, I was forced to have a swim to recover it with all my stuff.

I called my friend Marco to reach me and to warn the guys at the near WELS-CAMP AM PO, I was sure that the fish I caught was special, but I never imagined what would happen next when we measured the fish on the mat. Under the incredulous eyes of many anglers, the meter stopped at 285 cm, it was the new WORLD RECORD catfish!
I was very curious about the weight but I feared to stress too much that rare specimen so I decided to safely release it, hoping it could give another angler the same joy he gave to me.”
Gear used to catch this world record monster:

World Record Catifh Jig

• Rod: MADCAT XTAAZ Spin 2.70m
• Reel: Savage Gear SGS8 8000
• Line: MADCAT prototype braid
• Lure: Savage Gear Cannibal 15cm
• Jig head: MADCAT (12/0) 40g

Alessandro, you have the respect and hearty congratulations of the whole MADCAT team! You’re simply the best!
Please give Alessandro an applause and a follow:

https://www.facebook.com/alessandro.biancardi.18
https://www.instagram.com/alebiancardi_catfishing_madcat/

: In the presence of 10 witnesses, an official measurement that was thorough was done. Additionally, documentation was sent to the IGFA so they could officially record this large fish! Although this procedure takes some time, what matters to us is that our consultant captured the largest catfish ever— catfish world record!

Where and How To Catch August Bass On the Alabama River

August Bass at Alabama River with Mike Presley

     The singing bass that was so popular a few years ago begged you to “Take me to the river.”  Maybe it knew something.  In the heat of August you would be wise to take yourself to the Alabama River for some fast action for largemouth and spotted bass.

     Officially named R.E. Bob Woodruff Lake but also known at Jones Bluff, most locals simply call the long, winding backwaters above the Robert F. Henry Lock and Dam “the river” or “the Alabama River.” 

     Starting near Prattville, the lake runs through Montgomery all the way to its headwaters where the Coosa and Tallapoosa join.  It is a narrow river lake so any power generation at the dam quickly creates current that puts bass in a feeding mood and positions them on structure and cover the whole length of the lake.

     As the uppermost of the Alabama River Lakes, Woodruff is the most river-like lake and winds its way for 80 miles and covers about 12,800 acres.  There are 11 Corps of Engineers parks with various facilities like campgrounds and boat ramps as well as several other private and public facilities on the water, so the lake is readily accessible for all of its length.  Last year there were over 2 million visitors to Woodruff.

     There are some good largemouth in Woodruff but spotted bass will make up most of your catch.  In the 2008 Bass Anglers Information Team (BAIT) report there were only three club tournaments reported on Woodruff but the success rate was very good at 89.80 percent. Club anglers averaged just over four bass a day in tournaments. That does not sound high, but it was one of only seven out of 29 lakes over four fish per day in the survey.  The average bass weigh was 1.63 pounds, respectable for a lake with a 12 inch limit, and about two thirds of the bass weighed in were spots.

     Mike Presley has lived in the area most of his life and loves bass fishing. He was hooked on the river when, at five years old, he caught a 4.5 pound spotted bass while fishing with his dad.  Until they moved to Florida Mike was Tournament Manager for the Bass Angler’s Sportsman Society. Now he works in the area and fishes as many tournaments as he can on the river.

     In early summer Mike had a streak going of two first place wins, a second and two third place finishes in six tournaments on the river.  He fishes the Fishers Of Men trail, the Weekend Angler Tournament Trail, the BASS Weekend Series and as many local tournaments on the river as he can.

     “In August you can average a 2.5 pound per bass stinger pretty easily,” Mike said.  It takes a string of 16 of 18 pounds to win most tournaments, so you need a couple of kicker four to five pound bass to do well.  And the river can produce big fish. Mike’s best spot from the river weighed six pounds, he landed a 7.5 pound largemouth there, and his best tournament catch of five bass pulled the scales down to 24 pounds.

     “In August most of the bass are set up on deep structure and relate to the current,” Mike told me.  You can always catch a few good bass shallow by flipping heavy cover, and many times your kicker fish will come that way, but for numbers you will be fishing the main river structure.

     Mike has a wide variety of baits rigged and ready to cover any situation he finds on the water each day in August. He will have a half to three quarters ounce football head jig in green pumpkin with a green pumpkin trailer, a deep diving crankbait, a shaky head jig and finesse worm tied on his rods.  Those baits allow him to cover the deep structure quickly.  He also keeps a flipping jig on a heavy rod ready to probe shallow cover for a kicker fish.

     Fluorocarbon line is a key to getting bites in clear water and Mike rigs all his plastics and jigs on it, even when flipping pads.  He also runs his deep diving crankbaits on it since it will allow them to run a little deeper and the lack of stretch makes them work better.

     We fished the following ten spots a few weeks ago and bass were on them.  Most of the morning we tried smaller baits and got a couple of small bass, but, as predicted, the bigger fish started hitting after the current turned on at noon.  Within an hour we put three largemouth in the boat that would have pulled the scales to about 12 pounds. That shows how important the current can be.

     Check the following places Mike likes to fish on the upper river. You can put in a Cooter’s Pond and fish them without too much running. There are similar spots all over the river but if you want to fish the lower lake it would be easier to trailer down to Swift Creek since it is a long run in a boat.

     1.  N 32 23.590 – W 86 19.132 – Just north of the amphitheater on the river in Montgomery, Northern Boulevard crosses the river and the bridge pilings on the right going upstream are usually good for a keeper fish, according to Mike.  Fish around the pilings with a jig head worm and a jig and pig.  Work the eddies behind each piling carefully. There was a tree hung up at the upstream piling when we fished and wood cover there can be a key, so fish any you see from different angles.

     Mike throws his Davis Shaky Head on a spinning rod loaded with eight to ten pound test fluorocarbon line.  He likes a one-eight ounce head and puts a Finesse or Trick worm on it.  Green pumpkin, Bama Bug or June Bug are all good colors.  He will also flip a black and blue Arkie style  jig and pig around the pilings, letting it fall and move with the current.

     2.   N 32 22.997 – W 85 18.811 – In front of the amphitheater in Montgomery the river makes a bend and there is a ledge out from the seawall.  It is on your left going downstream.  This was a some-what secret hot spot for local fishermen until a pro was filmed catching fish on it in a big tournament. Mike says it produces good catches at times and you should fish it when in the area.

     Stop out in front of the seawall about even with the end of the walkway part and keep your boat out in 18 feet of water or so. Cast up toward the seawall and you will be casting into six feet or less about 20 feet off the bank.  There is lots of rocks and rubble here on the flat out to the drop and fish hold all in it.

     Work from the pier out to the end of the point.  Try your big crankbiat then follow it up with a jig head worm. You will get hung up a good bit here but the bass hold in the cover so you need to get into it.  Cover on spots like this is important and you should always probe for sweet spots where the bass hold.  Once you hit the cover on structure, concentrate your casts to that area.

     3.  N 32 24.517 – W 86 21.920 – Running down the river, go under the I-65 Bridge and you will see powerlines crossing way ahead of you after the river straightens out. Watch for a small opening on your right about half way down this straight-away.  The opening goes back into an old oxbow lake.  There is a water depth post on the upstream point and you can see the sand on it when the river is down a little.

     Mike says you can pull up on this point and catch 50 bass when the current is right. Sit out in 15 feet of water and cast up toward the point on the upstream side of the cut.  Work a football head jig, jig head worm and big crankbait across the drop. There is some good cover out on the point and it drops into the river. Fan cast all the way around the point.

     When fishing a football head jig, Mike goes as light as the current allows.  He starts with a half-ounce jig with a green pumpkin Netbait chunk on it and dies the tips of the chunk tails chartreuse with JJ’s Magic.  Go to a three quarter ounce jig if the current is strong and fish the jig on the bottom with a sliding motion, much like fishing a Carolina rig. 

     4.  N 32 24.837 – W 86 22.071 – Run down to the power line pilings on the left and fish them.   Mike says this vertical structure holds bass and the depth of the water around the pilings means they stay here all summer. Wood hung up on the pilings provides additional cover and makes them better.

     You will be in 25 feet of water on the river side of the pilings.  Throw your jig head worm up to the pilings and let it fall down the face of them. Count it down – if you get hit at a certain depth there is a good chance other bass are holding at that depth.  Run a crankbait across the face of the pilings, too. Try to bump it as it works along the concrete.

     Fish all the way around the pilings, hitting them at different angles with jig head worm and crankbait. When the current is strong work your bait from the current into the eddies like a baitfish moving with the current. Bass will usually hold in the eddies waiting on an easy meal.

     5.  N 32 25.868 – 86 22/071 – Run downstream to where the big opening going back into Cooters Pond starts on your right. Stop on the upstream point of this opening. There is a ledge that runs all the way across the mouth of this big opening and bass hold all along it.  Mike says you will catch a lot of keeper size bass here.

     On the upstream point there is a danger marker sitting downstream of the point and Mike will start at the bank and work out past the danger marker.  Stay out in the deeper water in the river channel and cast up onto the ledge, working your bait from shallow to deep. Mike likes to run his Fat Free shad so it bumps the bottom shallow then runs off the bottom at the drop.   Citrus Shad and white are his favorite colors in this bait.

     If the crankbait doesn’t draw a strike work the area again with a slower moving bait like a jig head worm or football head jig. Current makes this spot much better and you can catch fish all the way across it. Mike likes the upstream point best but if bass are hitting keep working the ledge all the way across.

     6.  N 32 24.971 – W 86 26.601 – Running downstream the river is fairly straight below the Highway 31 bridge.  Before you get to the bend you will see a pasture on your right and a small creek enters the river at the end of the pasture.  Stop and fish the upstream point of this small creek.  There are a couple of big stumps on it that usually hold bass. Then fish the downsteam side, working the flatter point with the sandbar on it on that side.

     Fish both sides with a crankbait then work your jigs across them.  With the jig head worm, Mike likes to shake it in one place with his rod tip. This often makes sluggish bass hit.  Try to keep your bait in one spot and make it wiggle and shake there. This action is where the name “shaky head” came from and it works well, especially on spotted bass.

     7.  N 32 24.416 – W 86 27.399 – Right in the bend of the river not far downstream of hole 6 Autauga Creek enters on the right going downstream.  It is just downstream of a water intake tower on the edge of the river.  Mike likes to fish the downstream point of this creek. There is a big dead tree on the point.

     A good ledge forms here from the river and the creek mouth with good drops to fish and mike says bass stack up on this point.  He fishes it with a jig head worm.  If you like to throw a Caroliana Rig, this is a great spot for that, too. Mike says right a finesse or Trick worm in the same colors as you use on the jig head and drag it along the bottom. Fan  cast the point, covering it from different angles and work you bait down the drops.

     8.  N 32 23.224 – W 86 27.680 – Downstream of the mouth of Autauga Creek the river runs straight and there is some water off the river channel on your left going downstream.  You will pass a small island then see an opening across a shallow flat that goes into a small creek.  A river ledge runs from downstream of that island downstream.  Further downstream is a red channel marker.

     Start fishing near the island, staying out in the river and casting up onto the ledge with crankbaits, jig head worms and football head jigs.  Work the area probing for cover.  If the current is running strong it will be easier to start down past the mouth of the ditch near the red buoy and work up toward the island. Fishing into the current helps you control the boat and allows you to angle your casts upstream so your bait has a more natural movement with the current.

     Mike says he found this placed accidentally when idling across the river ledge going into the small creek. It was a good accident – he caught enough bass here to come in second in a tournament.   This is a long ledge and the bass may be holding anywhere along it, so work it thoroughly.

     9. N 32 22.555 – W 86 27.810 – Further downstream Catoma Creek enters the river on your left going downstream.  Mike says bass stack up on the points of this creek since it is the biggest creek on the river.  The downstream point comes almost straight up out of the river and tops out at about 7 feet well off the bank.  This is the side where Mike expects to catch the most bass.

     Stay out in 20 feet of water and cast up onto the point. There are stumps on it to hold the bass. Work a crankbait across it then follow up with slower moving baits.  When you hit a stump, make several casts to it with different baits.  Mike checks this point every time he is near it during the day since current may start moving and turn the bass on.\

     10. N 32 26.415 – W 86 23.406 – For a change of pace for a kicker fish, go all the way back into Cooters Pond.  Be careful running once you get off the river, there are stumps and shallows, but you want to get back and go under the golf cart bridge.  Past it the water is full of lily pads, cypress trees and grass and several islands break up the area. 

     Mike likes to flip a big jig and pig into the pads. He says you won’t get many bites but the ones you do get will be from grown bass. One or two bass in here after you get a limit on the river ledges will give you the kickers you need to win tournaments.

     Flip a black and blue jig with a blue twin tail trailer on a heavy rod.  Mike sticks with fluorocarbon line even in heavy cover like this. He thinks the invisible line gives you a slight edge in getting strikes, even when flipping.

     Work all around the islands and fish as many of the pads as you can. The water in the channels is deep enough to keep bass in here all year long, and big largemouth love this kind of cover.

     These spots give you an idea of the kinds of places Mike fishes in tournaments. Check them out and see how they look, then you can find many other similar spots all over the river.

     To give you an idea how important current is, Mike told me we needed current to turn on the fish. He called 334-682-4896 and found out they were turning on one generator at noon.  Sure enough, within 15 minutes Mike got a solid 4.5 pound bass, then I got a three pounder, then Mike got another four pound plus fish.  We left soon after that to get out of the heat. You can call and plan your trip around the generation schedule.

THEY CAN’T ALL BE BIG ONES

THEY CAN’T ALL BE BIG ONES so enjoy every one you catch, no matter how big

People go fishing for varied reasons. Some want to be outside; others want to spend time with family or friends. Anyone who goes fishing wants to catch a few, and some want to catch a really big fish. Some of those goals are easily accomplished, some are more difficult.

It’s easy to spend time outdoors when you’re fishing. Fishing is done outdoors. If your interest is spending time with family or friends, you just have to invite them to join you. Another easy task. If you’re not concerned about species or size, you can usually catch a few fish. But the big fish goal, that’s an entirely different deal. The reality is the chances of catching an enormously big fish of a certain species every time you go fishing are minimal. However, there are things that an angler can do to increase the odds of catching a gigantic fish of the targeted species more often.

First off, if your primary goal is to catch a lunker of a particular species, you need to go fishing where the lunkers live. Some bodies of water are home to lots of fish, others are known as big fish lakes. For instance, the biggest walleyes usually are found in lakes that have oily baitfish as a primary source of walleye food. Do some research to learn which bodies of water have a history of turning out big fish.

The next thing to do to catch a trophy is to use baits or techniques that will appeal to the larger fish. Much of the time, big baits catch big fish. A trophy can certainly be caught on a small bait, but for most of the open water fishing season, big fish want a big meal. If you want to catch a bunch of bass in the summer, find a deep weedline and tie on an eighth ounce jig head and thread on a four- or five-inch Ocho worm. You’re going to catch’em. Maybe not the biggest ones, but you’ll probably get bass-thumb, and every now and then, a lunker will eat your jig-worm. But if big ones are the goal, find the heaviest vegetation, tie on a Hack Attack Heavy Cover Swim Jig, attach a KVD Rodent plastic, and work it in and around that heavy cover. You won’t get as many bites as you would on the weedline with a jig-worm, but your big bass odds are going to go up.

Last thing: Remember that big is relative. A five-pound bass in some locales is a big one. In other places an eight pounder is needed to turn heads. And, in a few regions or bodies of water, it takes a ten pounder to get a bass-chaser’s attention.

Really the last thing: Fishing is supposed to be fun. If a lunker is your goal, go for it. But also remember that with some luck, that little fish that you just caught will one day be a big fish. Also remember that it’s just fun to catch fish. Many, many fishing guides and tournament anglers have had successful and profitable careers by catching lots of smallish to medium sized fish. If you are set on catching the biggest fish of a particular species, use big fish baits and techniques in big fish waters. But never forget, they can’t all be big ones. It’s fun to catch fish of any size any time, and fun is the best reason to go fishing.

How To Catch May Bass at Wedowee with Eric Morris

May Bass at Wedowee

with Eric Morris, Wedowee Marine owner

    May is an amazing month for bass fishermen.  Many big bass are hungry after the spawn and feed heavily. Some are still on the beds early in the month so you can sight fish if you like that. And males are guarding fry, making them aggressive and easy to catch.  This is a good month for catching lots of bass as well as landing one big enough to brag about.  You would be hard pressed to find a better May lake than Wedowee.

    May bass fishing on Lake Wedowee is a pleasant surprise to many who have not tried it.  Limited access keeps big tournaments off the lake so it is not real crowded.  The lake is full of good sized spots that are very aggressive.  And you can catch some big largemouth if you target them.

    Dammed in 1983, Wedowee is the newest Alabama Power Lake and is officially known as R.L.Harris Reservoir.  It is on the Tallapoosa River and covers just less than 11,000 acres on it and the Little Tallapoosa River and has 270 miles of shoreline.

    The steep, rocky banks and clear water favor spotted bass and they are the predominate species on the lake.  Wedowee is not a real fertile lake so the Alabama DNR set a slot limit, requiring the release of all bass between 13 and 16 inches long to give that group of bass a chance to grow.  Spots became so common that they are no longer included in the slot and fishermen are encouraged to keep spots to eat. You are also encouraged to keep largemouth under the 13 inch limit to give more food for the bigger bass.

    In the 2008 Bass Angler Information Team (BAIT) survey, Wedowee ranked first in angler success in club tournaments.  That means club anglers caught more bass per fisherman on Wedowee than any other lake in Alabama.  It ranked third in bass per angler day and a surprising fourth in the amount of time it took to catch a bass weighing over five pound.  So, you will catch a lot of bass and have an excellent chance at landing a five pound plus fish.

    Due to all those factors, Wedowee was ranked as the best lake in Alabama for bass fishermen in 2008, and it seems to be getting better and better.  Plan a trip in May to take advantage of some excellent bass fishing.

    Eric Morris loves bass fishing. Right now Eric is service manager of All Pro Auto Group in LaGrange. A few years ago he, his father and brother bought and now operate Wedowee Marina on Highway 431 right at the bridge on the Little Tallapoosa River.  They are taking on Legend Bass Boats this year and Eric is on the Legend Pro Staff. He is also sponsored by Falcon Rods.  He visits a wide variety of lakes and fishes more than 40 tournaments a year but Wedowee is his favorite lake.

    Although he never fished a tournament until he was 25 years old, the first one his father took him to got him hooked to the point of addiction.  He loved it and now fishes tournaments every chance he gets. He has fished with a couple of bass clubs and now competes with the Harrelson Hawg Hunters bass club in Georgia, where he won the point standings two years. He also fishes every pot and charity tournament he can enter on Wedowee. 

    Eric has won four straight January club tournaments on the lake, but May is his favorite time to fish Wedowee.  He loves topwater fishing and it is excellent this month, and he catches some big fish on Spooks and Zell Pops all month long. And he can catch numbers of bass on a variety of baits.

    We fished Wedowee on a rainy day the second week of April and some bass were already on the beds.  There should be a big wave of bass moving onto beds in late April around the full moon on the 28th, and some will bed even after that. So, for the next few weeks, you can catch bedding bass, a few pre spawn fish, and a lot of hungry post spawn bass.

    An 8.5 pound largemouth is Eric’s best from Wedowee, and he has landed a 4.45 pound spot there. His best tournament catch on Wedowee was five bass weighing 21.36 pounds and, surprisingly, included three largemouth and two spots.  And that weigh gave him third place in the tournament. It often takes well over 20 pounds to win on Wedowee.

    Largemouth are Eric’s target in tournaments since they get bigger and weigh more, but he may fish all day for five or six bites to win.  For fun catching lots of bass, Eric will go after spots, especially when taking kids and inexperienced fishermen out.  He separates the methods and areas of the lake to catch each although you can catch some bass of each species on either pattern.

    For largemouth, Eric says fish the upper stretches of either the Tallapoosa or Little Tallapoosa Rivers.  There is a higher percentage of largemouth to spots up the rivers so you are more likely to catch them.  And Eric uses baits that bigger largemouth eat, like a full size Spook.

    In late April and early May Eric will fish back in the pockets, looking for fish around the bedding areas. Any small pocket is likely to hold bedding bass on Wedowee since there are not many creeks for them to go to.  Work every inch of the bank with your Foxy Shad or chrome and blue Spook or a ghost pattern Zell Pop with a feather trailer since there is a lot of underwater wood you can’t see that will hold fish. Make repeated casts to wood you can see.

    As the water warms and it gets later in May, Eric will work more toward the outer banks of the pockets and the main points at their mouths. Post spawn bass will migrate out of the backs of the pockets and feed as they work their way out to the main channel.

    Early mornings are best for topwater baits but Eric will fish them any time there is low light.  If the day is overcast he will throw a Spook or popper all day long. On sunny days, anytime there is a patch of shade on the water he will work it with the topwater baits, too.

    A spinnerbait is another good bait for big largemouth, especially during the shad spawn. Watch for shad on the rocky banks early in the morning and throw a double willow leaf bladed white spinnerbait right on the bank. If there is no activity, slow roll it from the bank back to the boat. Eric says he will reel four or five turns of his reel handle then stop the bait and start it moving again with a twitch of the bait to give it more action.

    If the bite is slow and the largemouth sluggish, Eric will pull out a green pumpkin Senko and work it weightless around all wood cover in the pockets.  A big Senko works best and he lets if fall slowly by any cover he spots. 

    Watch your line carefully for any twitches as a bass inhales the bait, and tighten up your line very slowly before moving it. If you feel weight, set the hook. Bass will often take the Senko and not move, and the first thing you feel when you move it is them spitting it out!

    The main lake below the Highway 48 Bridge is the area to fish for spotted bass.  The water is clear, most banks are rocky and it is ideal spot habitat.  A wide variety of baits will catch fish down the lake.

    First thing in the morning a small topwater bait like the Zell Pop will draw strikes when cast close to rocky bluff banks.  The strike will usually come within two feet of the rocks, so get in close and make parallel casts to the rocks, keeping your bait it the strike zone longer.

    A jig head worm is Eric’s “go-to” bait and he uses it to catch, in his words, a “whole lotta numbers” of spots on the lower lake. He fishes a one-eight ounce jig head on eight pound fluorocarbon line and puts a green pumpkin or Bama Bug color Trick worm on it.  He says the lower lake is full of rocky points that hold large numbers of spots.

    The best points are flat points at the end of a bluff wall, where the vertical rocks change to a flatter, gravel and rock area.  Eric will sit out in the channel with his boat in 20 feet of water, but near the end of the bluff, and cast up onto the flat point, working his bait from the shallows out and down the drop.

    Cast your jig head right against the bank and make sure it goes to the bottom. Eric says too many fishermen keep their line tight and that makes the bait swing away from the edge of the rocks, and many start moving the worm before it hits bottom. Eric says he makes sure the jig is on the bottom then starts moving it “a half-inch” at a time, shaking his rod tip to make the tail of the worm dance.

    Bass will often hit as the bait falls, so be ready as soon as your jig hits the water.  And move the bait slowly. Some of these points drop off steeply and if you pull your bait too far it will drop right past the fish holding on the bottom.

    Jig head worms are great baits to let a kid use to learn to catch bass. They will get a lot of bites on this bait fished on this pattern so they don’t lose interest, and they will catch some hard pulling fish.

    If the wind is strong, making it difficult to fish a light jig head worm, Eric will throw a Carolina rig in the same areas.  Fish the same worm or a green pumpkin lizard on a three-foot leader behind a heavy enough sinker to keep your bait near the bottom.   He fishes Carolina rigs on 12 pound Segar Fluorocarbon line, his choice of brand of line for all his fishing.

    Also ride the points on the lower lake and watch your depthfinder for brush piles. Eric says every point on the lake seems to have a man made brush pile. Look for them where you would make one and there is probably one there.  Back off them and fish them with the jig head worm or a Carolina rigged worm.  Brush from 15 to 20 feet deep will hold bass best, in Eric’s opinion.

    By the middle of May night tournaments start on Wedowee and night time is a great time to catch fish there. Eric fishes as many of the night tournaments as he can, and enjoys the change from daytime fishing.  He says by early June the lake will be on fire at night, with lots of bass feeding in the dark.

    Dock lights attract bait and bass in the dark and Eric will fish any lights he can find with a small light colored crankbait. He tries to match the shad swimming around the lights and works the edges of the light first, then under them in the brighter light.

    Spinnerbaits work well at night when fished on the down-lake points, too. Eric surprised me when he said he uses a white spinnerbait with silver blades in the dark. He does use a black or sapphire blue trailer on his white spinnerbait.  Make long casts across the points and reel the bait back steadily to give the bass an easier target in the dark.

    You can catch bass at night on the points and brush piles, too. Fish them like you do during the day, but fish even slower.  When you hit brush or a rock, jiggle your bait in one place longer to let the bass find it in the dark.

    Wedowee is a great lake for catching bass right now and will just bet better and better over the next several weeks.  Give Eric’s patterns a try and see how he catches them. These tactics will work for you.