Fishing Articles
Tom Redington's
Lake Fork Bass Guide Service
214-683-9572
(Evenings) 972-635-6027
tom@LakeForkGuideTrips.com
Full Time Licensed
Professional Bass Guide
Serving Lake Fork and Lake Monticello
|
Spring Bassin’ for the Non-Sight Fisherman Historically, April is a month when a large number of the bass spawn on Lake Fork. Sight fishing is sometimes the most effective way to catch numbers of big bass, especially when the winds are light and a big wave of females move onto beds. However, I’m often asked if good bass can still be caught by techniques other than sight fishing in April. For those of you who don’t care for sight fishing, have trouble seeing bass on beds, or face windy and cloudy conditions, take heart. Following are three patterns for catching springtime bass without sight fishing—muddy water, deeper water, and windy flats—and these technique produce some of Fork’s largest bass each year. If water temps are in the 60s or warmer, muddy water is typically the first area I will try, especially if it is sunny and calm. Bass will be spawning in these areas but are often overlooked because sight fishermen cannot see them. Perpetually muddy areas, typically the upper ends of the lake and the very back ends of the largest creeks have the muddiest water. In addition, banks that receive the brunt of strong winds for several days or the backs of creeks after big rains are two locations in normally clearer areas that can also contain muddy water. Catching spring bass in muddy water is usually pretty simple. Bass will be holding shallow, especially around hard cover like stumps, laydowns, and docks. Shallow submerged and emergent vegetation will also hold them, with holes in the grass being the key areas. Even the tiniest of sticks often holds a big fish and bass typically won’t move far to chase a bait, so fish thoroughly by making repeated casts to every piece of cover near the bank. I pitch black neon or blue bruiser colored Lake Fork Tackle Flippers or Top Dog lizards with a ¼ oz tungsten sinker, Texas rigged on 65 lb P-Line Spectrex braid. Normally, you’ll only feel a little pressure or see your line move off on bigger fish. If your bait feels any lighter or heavier than ¼ oz, let her have it! While fishing very shallow works well in muddy water, fishing slightly deeper works best for lunkers in clearer water. In most areas of Fork, it’s hard to see bass on beds in water deeper than 4’ to 6’. Fishing slightly deeper in the 6’ to 12’ zone, approximately 2 casts off the shoreline in most areas, will give you access to large unpressured bass. Many females stage in slightly deeper water before spawning in 2’ to 4’ and I’ve seen bass on beds as deep as 10’ on Fork; therefore, 6’ to 12’ is the magic depth in most areas. Premier structures in the 6’ to 12’ depth range include creek channels running through spawning flats, ledges along the edge of flats, and points near the mouth of spawning flats. A lightweight Carolina rig, with an 18” leader and a ¼ to 3/8 oz weight on 20 lb P-Line Fluorocarbon line and leader is a great option for these bass. Tip your Carolina rig with a green pumpkin or watermelon colored Top Dog Lizard, Baby Creature, or Magic Shad and you’ll be set. For areas with thick grass and heavy timber, a 3/8 oz Mega Weight jig in green pumpkin/black or watermelon with a matching Fork Craw will produce some real toads. I suggest you step up to 50 or 65 lb braid with the jig or you may get your heart broken.
Finally, shallow spawning flats in clear water can produce fantastic
fishing on windy and overcast days. Big bass that are shy of boats in
shallow water will often hold tight to their beds while spawning or feed
actively before and after spawning on the nastiest of days. Big shallow
flats with lots of grass are my favorite areas. For late prespawn and
spawning fish, soft plastic jerkbaits are my top option. Magic Shads,
Live Magic Shads and Ring Frys rigged weightless Texas style and dead-sticked
are deadly. If the bass are shy of these bigger baits, a wacky rigged
Twitch Worm will produce when nothing else works. The low visibility and
sinking characteristics of fluorocarbon make it the ideal line for these
lures. I use 20 lb P-Line fluorocarbon for soft plastic jerkbaits and 15
lb test for wacky worming. Meanwhile, fishing for postspawn fry guarding
males and actively feeding females make for some great numbers days in
later April on windblown flats. For these bass, cover lots of water with
popper style topwaters and floating jerkbaits in shad or chrome color
schemes. To help keep these baits up high and to muscle fish out of the
brush and grass, use an abrasion resistant mono like 20 lb P-Line CXX X-tra
Strong.
|
|
Book Your Lake Fork or Monticello
bass fishing trip with Tom Redington today!
To ensure the best dates, please book your trip early. Contact us: Tom Redington's Lake Fork Bass Guide Service Tom & Jennifer Redington 2407 Shooting Star Drive Royse City, TX 75189 Day: 214-683-9572 Evening: 972-635-6027 Email: tom@LakeForkGuideTrips.com |
| Fishing Report | Trip Info | Rates | Home |
| Fishing Photos | Pay Your Deposit On Line | Links and Directions | Articles, Podcasts & Videos |