Fork Tournament
Fishing in the Fall
By Tom Redington
Fall
is tournament season on Lake Fork, with thousands of anglers in several
big bass tournaments, as well as a number of regional trail events. Due
to the restrictive 16” to 24” slot limit on Fork that remains in effect
for all tournaments, anglers’ strategies are a little different on Fork
than on most lakes. Since the vast majority of prizes for Fork
tournaments are won by anglers with fish under 16”, I’ll focus on those
patterns.
During the fall tournament season (Sep-early Nov), numbers of bass are
available in both the shallow and deep sections of Fork. As the water
cools, many bass move back into creeks and onto the flats near creek
channels chasing shad. At the same time, shallow main lake grassbeds and
timber hold lots of bass, too. After spending most of the summer fishing
deep water structure, the shallow fisherman can consistently catch bass
in the fall, so begin your fishing there.
Start your search for productive areas with moving baits, and then
switch to soft plastics to catch numbers from those areas. Keeping in
mind that you’re looking for bass that are 16” and smaller, downsized
lures typically work best. Topwaters are a great starting lure, and the
smaller sizes of poppers and walking baits like Lucky Craft’s Sammy,
G-Splash, and Gunfish are very productive. The G-Splash is a popper that
works best on calm days, while the walking and spitting Sammys and
Gunfish work great when there is more chop. With the G-Splash, you can
work it very slowly like a regular popper, or work it fast and it will
spit while walking side-to-side. Depending on the mood of the fish,
they’ll prefer one retrieve over the other. Remember to cast these on a
floating line like with low memory PowerSilk mono so you can cast these
baits a long ways and still keep them on the surface. A long rod with a
soft tip helps a lot too, with the Dobyns Champion 7’ long 704CB being a
good example. After the sun gets up and bass won’t commit to surface
baits, shallow crankbaits and lipless crankbaits work best. Bass are
keying on small shad now, so chrome or shad colors of LVR Mini lipless
crankbaits work all fall long. While the water stays warm, wider
wobbling crankbaits like RC 0.5 or BDS 0 and BDS 1 square bill cranks
move a lot of water and catch fish. Once water temps cool into the lower
60s, tighter wiggling cranks like the SKT Mini MR will garner more
attention. And certainly don’t forget spinnerbaits. A ¼ oz Redemption
spinnerbait with two silver blades and a translucent white skirt fools
many bass in the fall, especially on windy banks. Cover water with these
baits until you get a couple of bites in an area and locate a school.
Once
you’ve found a few fish in an area, soft plastics will normally produce
more bass from the spot. The #1 option is a wacky worm. Rig a Hyper
Finesse Worm on the weedless wacky weight system from Lake Fork Trophy
Lures and cast it to the edge of grass, concentrating on points or along
creek channels. If conditions are a little windier, the Hyper Finesse
Worms and 4” Hyper Worms work great on a 1/8 oz jighead, fished shaky
style. Fish these very slowly around areas where you’ve picked up fish
with the moving baits and you’ll be able to seine out more bass. When
the bite is off and bass bury up in the grass a little more, or when
they’re holding in deeper water just off the edge of the grass, a
finesse Carolina rig with 12 lb FluoroHybrid Pro on a 7’4” Dobyns
Extreme DX743 rod, a ¼ oz sinker and a 12” leader can be dynamite. Rig a
Fork Baby Creature, Baby Ring Fry, or the Hyper Finesse Worm on the hook
and you’ll be in business. Finally, a 3.5” Live Magic Shad rigged on a
weighted 3/0 Ultimate Swimbait Hook will catch neutral bass that are
suspended around the grass. I primarily like shades of green for these
lures in clearer sections of the lake, with green pumpkin and watermelon
shades being consistent producers. In murkier water, June bug does well
on Fork.
For a shot at a 24”+ over the slot bass, normally the largest bass are
caught very first thing in the morning before the fish become pressured.
Try a 10” Fork Worm on a TX or Carolina rig, or a ½ oz MPack Jig with a
matching Fork Craw or Pig Claw trailer early in the morning along the
deep grass edge on main lake points.
Best of luck to those of you tourney fishing Fork this fall. If I can be
of assistance, please contact me at 214-683-9572 or e-mail me through my
website, www.LakeForkGuideTrips.com.
|