Spring is coming and it will soon be time to start throwing one of my favorite baits, the soft stick bait!
To me, the versatility in rigging methods and retrieves used with the soft stickbait makes it one of the most effective baits throughout the season starting in early spring 🙂
As spring progresses, bass move shallower and shallower in search of the perfect mating spot often in close proximity to cover. The soft stickbait especially shines around cover since the bait can be rigged snagless and dropped right in front of their sometimes finicky noses…
Take a moment and watch how former Classic champ, Randy Howell uses the grand-daddy of all soft stickbaits, the Senko, to lure bass from their shallow-water haunts in this short video…
Do you have your soft stickbaits ready for the spring bite?
Most bass anglers search the shoreline regions of the waterway being fished for prime surface cover potentially harboring the biggest bass in an area…
Personally, I get very excited each time I find a tree that has crashed from its former place on the bank sending the trunk and radiating array of branches into the depths creating a myriad of bass-holding ambush points beneath the surface!
Recently I came across a video from a well-known bass fishing celebrity, Bill Dance offering his approach for fishing fallen trees he finds in his favorite honey-holes.
Take a moment and watch this short video from BD and hear what he has to say…
Like Mr. Dance says, in our excitement to get hooked up quickly, we often fire our baits into the heart of the lay-down and probably miss many more bass catching opportunities around the outer edges and unseen deeper branches…
There are probably been more big bass taken from small bodies of water across the nation each year than most major reservoirs.
Though fishing principles are basically the same, there are several tips that can help target big bass in small waters as highlighted in the following video from Angling Edge…
So next time you head out to your favorite pond remember to consider the main forage bass and how bass position themselves to take advantage of their prey…
Adjusting your presentation accordingly will not only result in catching more bass, but bigger fish as well!
One of the newest soft plastic bait rigs hitting the bass fishing scene like a storm is the Neko Rig!
Though many bass anglers consider the Neko Rig a deep-water presentation most suitable to summertime fishing situations, truth be old it's also very deadly during the winter to spring transition period!
Take a moment and watch this short video from the folks at Lucky Tackle Box detailing the ins and outs of Neko rig fishing for early spring bass...
This is definitely a presentation to try this spring when our favorite finny friends are making their ways to the shallows!
Head to any developed lake in your area and one of the most common types of bass-holding cover you'll find... boat docks!
Each season I catch numerous bass of all sizes off boat docks and there are a few tips to keep in mind that helps identify the best biss hiding spots around many docks...
So take a moment and listen as long-time bass pro Denny Brauer explain how he identifies the "spot on the spot" when fishing boat docks!
Remember ... make note of the depth bass are using around each dock and look for visual clues on the dock for fish-holding cover like subsurface brush piles...
There are several times each season (post-spawn, summer, winter) when bass will gravitate to open water, suspend and enter a neutral to negative mood...
Sometimes swimming jigs, grubs, or small swimbaits through these lethargic bass will trigger strikes but other times standard presentations get ignored. In the past, Japanese bass anglers developed a new type of presentation using a slow-sinking dual prop baits with a very enticing motion when faced with tough conditions or highly pressured fish.
What's the technique you ask?
Spybaiting!
Take a moment and listen to pro angler Jacob Wheeler provide a detailed overview of the method and gear needed to effectively employ it...
A few take-aways...
Use the appropriate type of rod, reel and line combo;
Though a spybait may look like a topwater prop bait, it's slow sinking and meant to be worked on a slow steady retrieve most of the time;
Remember to pick colors that "match the hatch" for the prevalent baitfish in your waters; &
Don't be afraid to experiment with the bait in other situations (such as employing a faster retrieve across shallow flats.
Get ready and try fishing spybaits for bass this coming season to combat days when the bass are being excessively finicky!
Chatterbaits, A.K.A. bladed swim jigs, are probably best known as a cool water bait or one that is most effective when fishing around submerged vegetation…
When used around soft forms of cover, many if not most bass anglers employ a straight or pulsed retrieve in the upper to middle part of the water column. More sophisticated chatterbait anglers may also use a “slow-rolling” retrieve to work the bait through bottom cover…
But did you realize that fluttering or bottom bouncing a chatterbait off the bottom can be highly effective too?
Take a moment and listen to FLW pro Brian Latimer explain why a bottom fluttering retrieve is rapidly becoming one of his favorite presentations when fishing a chatterbait...
Definitely a new chatterbait presentation I will use the next time I am on the water … how about you?
Buzzbaits can be a great power fishing tool both for searching and catching bass throughout most of the year…
Though a few basic tweaks to the blade can often help catch more bass, there are a couple of specific tricks you can use to make your buzzbait more enticing when they are up chasing schools of baitfish!
Check out this short video by Mark Menendez and see how to apply these subtle changes to your buzzbaits…
Swimbaits, flukes, buzzing frogs, double-tail grubs and beavers are all excellent skirt replacements, dont you agree? :)
Though today’s artificial baits are equipped with quality hardware, the hooks on most crankbaits can be upgraded to increase hook-up percentages…
In this video, B.A.S.S. Elite Pro, Greg Vinson, gives the low down on how important it can be to swap out crankbait trebles when targeting big bass…
Upgrading hardware such as up-sizing plus switching the style of the hooks along with changing to heavier-duty split rings can make all the difference when battling big bass on a crankbaits!
Spinnerbaits can be one of the most versatile fishing lures in your tacklebox...
You can...
Use them as a search bait on long casts using a medium to fast retrieve...
Burn them with the blades periodically breaking the surface for schooling bass...
Pitch them into cover using any retrieve appropriate for conditions...
Use a yo-yo retrieve for suspending fish... and even
Slow roll the bait working it along the bottom for lethargic or bass rooting the depths for a meal...
Though slow rolling is usually thought of as a winter or early spring presentation, truth is it can be effective whenever the fish are relating to bottom cover and structure...
In the following video, Bassmaster Elite Pro, Casey Ashley talks about his favorite approach to slow rolling spinnerbaits using a modified tandem blade bait;
One that is a tad different than mine since I typically use a single Colorado or Mag Willow for my slow roll lures...
There is a school of thought in the bass fishing world stating that a decent percentage of the bass population in most waters lives around cover in shallow water. I know from extensive personal experience that most of the bass I catch from ice-out until ice-in were enticed from cover in less than 5 or 6 feet of water!
Though there are many baits used to fish shallow water cover, one of the best is the squarebill crankbait...
Unlike other shallow cranks with rounded lips, the design of the squarebill's lip allows it to contact different types of cover like rocks and branches and still deflect away from it rather than hanging. A definite advantage since many anglers will opt for other types of baits like spinnerbaits, weedless-rigged soft plastics and jigs. This means shallow bass hanging around those types of cover do not see as many crankbaits and maybe less gun shy when your bait suddenly bounces by...
Take a moment and watch the following short video where B.A.S.S. Elite Series pro, Randall Tharp discusses the basics of fishing squarebills around shallow cover...
Ask many bass angler's about their feelings regarding jet-skis (A.K.A. personal watercraft or PWC) and the response is often less than favorable.
Though most PWC operators may be respectful of anglers, those that prefer to ride "too close" to our boats or fishing areas are the ones that tend to stick in our minds...
There is also a certain population of anglers that own/operate jet-skis for the enjoyment they get buzzing them across the waves! But what if there is an up-grade to your PWC that would allow you to take advantage of a hot bass bite while out running the waves on it?
It just so happens there is as pointed out via this great infographic presented by the folks at Fix.com!
Many bass anglers living in the northern half of the country are starting to see the first signs of waning ice, mostly on rivers and streams. Since many of these water courses are smaller rivers, streams and creeks, they afford the small boat bass angler the perfect opportunity to get in the earliest shot at open water bassin’ for the new year.
Once on the river, the target species .. the feisty smallmouth bass!
Wintering smallies usually congregate in the deeper pools in their area, striving to find the calmest waters available. Once the winter to spring transition kicks into gear, those bass move to specific funnel points to feed in prep for the forthcoming spawn…
In this video, river smallie angler Jeff Little of Blue Ridge Kayak Fishingdescribes how smallmiouths respond to the transition taking positions to “put on the feed bag” before the spawning ritual takes hold…
Getting anxious to prep the boat and hit the water? I know I am