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"Dog Days of Summer" 2024


fishing user avatarMike Boitnott reply : 

 Dog days of summer are upon us – what is a tip someone gave you that helps you catch more fish in the heat?


fishing user avatarJ Francho reply : 

Fish at night.


fishing user avatarCatt reply : 
  On 8/14/2018 at 11:40 PM, J Francho said:

Fish at night.

 

And deep water structure ????


fishing user avatarjbmaine reply : 

It's been a weird summer up here in Maine. I try for LM, but have had the most consistent luck with deep water SM.


fishing user avatarDerek1 reply : 

Dido on night time


fishing user avatarscaleface reply : 

The problem with classic deep water structure [ honey holes]   by now they have been hammered to death . At least on the waters I fish . I've been catching some suspended bass with crankbaits and sometimes they are a long cast from the point . The better fishing has been in shallow shoreline cover with buzzbaits and Texas rigs .


fishing user avatarohboyitsrobby reply : 

For sure night time. I throw a 7/8 oz war eagle spoon a lot also.


fishing user avatarlo n slo reply : 

i make every effort to be on the water at first light. now, that doesn’t always translate to better fishing, but it’s more comfortable for the fisherman. in fact, i’ve done pretty darn good in the middle of the day during the summer. like catt, i prefer the deeper structure (15’+ for me), but a thermocline could dictate otherwise, depending on where you fish. right now (and this is ALWAYS subject to change) i’m finding most of my fish in the 10-15’ zone, along with schools of bait fish, and some surface schooling activity. fwiw surface water temps are in the lower to mid 80’s and we’ve had mucho rainfall lately.


fishing user avatarTBAG reply : 

Ned rig


fishing user avatargreentrout reply : 

Image result for mdwfp

 

https://www.mdwfp.com/media/news/fishing-boating/mississippi-outdoors-fishing-in-the-dark/

 

good fishing...

 

 


fishing user avatarMike L reply : 

No one has to tell me to Punch everything I can find 

 

 

 

 

 

Mike


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 8/14/2018 at 11:40 PM, J Francho said:

Fish at night.

I've fished at night for an hour almost every night for the past several weeks. I haven't had a single bite on anything. Spinnerbaits, jigs, ned rigs, chatterbaits, etc. I can go out in when it's 95 degrees in the middle of the afternoon and catch a few though. I just don't understand it.


fishing user avatarMobasser reply : 

Plastic worm fishing. Works best for me in the hottest time of year


fishing user avatarburrows reply : 

Big TRD weedless 


fishing user avatarsoflabasser reply : 

Fish at night or during low light conditions such as dawn,dusk,cloudy days,etc.


fishing user avatarRuss E reply : 

years ago an old veteran fisherman told me, in the heat of summer fish big baits in the early afternoon, on structure close to shallow feeding areas. 

His reasoning for this was, the Bass fed in the early morning and are getting hungry again by early afternoon.

they are not yet feeding, but they will hit an easy meal dropped on their nose.

 

Not sure how much of that is true, but looking back at all of the bigger fish I have caught, a lot of them were in the middle of summer. Usually between noon and 3pm. In deeper water next to feeding areas. On big worms or jigs.


fishing user avatarDerek1 reply : 

With the water being so warm I seem to have to thoroughly fish every we’re I try,sometimes I get a few sometimes I don’t. At night bank fishing I should add. They seem to be randomly patrolling,the ones I’m getting. I caught a two pounder right at my feet with a whopper plopper last night on my tenth cast right when I was about to pick it up. Like they swam right into each other at my feet. 

  On 8/15/2018 at 7:29 AM, Russ E said:

years ago an old veteran fisherman told me, in the heat of summer fish big baits in the early afternoon, on structure close to shallow feeding areas. 

His reasoning for this was, the Bass fed in the early morning and are getting hungry again by early afternoon.

they are not yet feeding, but they will hit an easy meal dropped on their nose.

 

Not sure how much of that is true, but looking back at all of the bigger fish I have caught, a lot of them were in the middle of summer. Usually between noon and 3pm. In deeper water next to feeding areas. On big worms or jigs.

That makes sense I have caught a few good ones on lunch break with the 7” senco s and 10” worms 


fishing user avatarTeam9nine reply : 

Best 'tip' I ever got - "There's no such thing as, 'The fish aren't biting!'" 

 

It puts the onus on the angler, where it should be. Doesn't matter what the weather has been like this year - I'm still catching plenty. Accept that if you aren't, you just need to keep trying alternatives until you come across the right combination of location, timing, and presentation for your waters. 

 


fishing user avatarMottel reply : 

Can bass even see at night?


fishing user avatarburrows reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 7:59 AM, Mottel said:

Can bass even see at night?

They see shadows and they can feel with their lateral line.


fishing user avatarsoflabasser reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 7:59 AM, Mottel said:

Can bass even see at night?

Have you fished for bass at night and how long have you been doing it for? Bass can indeed see at night and they have a lateral line that helps them track their prey at night. Night fishing is not for everyone but those who are willing to put in their time at night bass fishing are often rewarded with bass most people dream of catching.


fishing user avatarBluebasser86 reply : 

Slow down


fishing user avatarBass_Fishing_Socal reply : 

try this ^^^ if you have weedy area to fish. I went out the day I saw this video in 104 degree right at noon time fishing shallow weedy area and caught about a dozen bass. 


fishing user avatarMike L reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 7:44 AM, Team9nine said:

Best 'tip' I ever got - "There's no such thing as, 'The fish aren't biting!'" 

 

It puts the onus on the angler, where it should be. Doesn't matter what the weather has been like this year - I'm still catching plenty. Accept that if you aren't, you just need to keep trying alternatives until you come across the right combination of location, timing, and presentation for your waters. 

 

 

Ditto

 

 

 

 

 

Mike


fishing user avatarCatt reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 1:07 AM, EGbassing said:

I've fished at night for an hour almost every night for the past several weeks

 

Wow! A whole hour! ????

 

  On 8/15/2018 at 7:44 AM, Team9nine said:

Best 'tip' I ever got - "There's no such thing as, 'The fish aren't biting

 

The bass are always biting somewhere...it's our job to find somewhere!


fishing user avatarBrad in Texas reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 1:58 PM, Bluebasser86 said:

Slow down

Night fishing, too, when and where it works . . . most places, it does.

 

But, regardless of the time, night or day, slowing way down is my best advice. For so many, especially anglers in bigger boats and especially with a second angler aboard, that often means dropping from super fast to fast. While that could help a bit, the bigger pay-off is much, much slower.

 

I wonder if it is my age (66) or how I fish (from a kayak or canoe) or my general preference (finesse over power), but gosh I can fish so slowly compared to most. It makes many people fidgety, I think, but I can toss out a drop shot, tension the line to my liking, then just sit on it and soak up the scenery.

 

And, taking what would normally be a faster presentation and slowing it way down is effective. Number 1 example below has been a favorite for me this year.

 

Examples:

 

1) a soft jerk bait - instead of casting it, then jerking it back on well-paced retrieve, try casting or pitching it, letting it sink like a dying minnow, let it sit on bottom, fish it like a T-Rig bouncing it back in. Or, cast it on top of lilies, let it sit on a pad, then nudge it slowly off the side to drop into the water as slowly as you can (between pads) letting it plunge a few feet. before pulling it up on the next pad to repeat. If there is a bass down there napping in the shade, you have a good chance of getting bitten.

 

2) same thing with a spinnerbait/etc. - instead of a typical, normal-paced retrieve, let it occasionally hit bottom and leave it alone for, say, 15 seconds, then retrieve it in little hops hard enough to spin the blades. In essence, fish it a bit like a jig.

 

I could go on but the general idea is to take things that normally are fished faster and if they "convert" to slower methods, do so. Not all presentations work but several do.

 

Brad

 

 


fishing user avatarkenmitch reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 1:07 AM, EGbassing said:

I've fished at night for an hour almost every night for the past several weeks. I haven't had a single bite on anything. Spinnerbaits, jigs, ned rigs, chatterbaits, etc. I can go out in when it's 95 degrees in the middle of the afternoon and catch a few though. I just don't understand it.

I took the yak out yesterday AM for the 1st time in over a month. CA weather has been too dang hot lately to even think about fishing. I didn't figure it was going to be a good day but wanted to at least get on the water for a few hours to try out some new gear. 

 

I wound up catching 1 dink 1.25lb bass on a lipless. Didn't have any other luck trying out other stuff. Missed a couple on the ned rig. I haven't really done much finesse type fishing yet as it's boring too me. 

 

There was another kayak angler fishing the area around me. We were about 40-50yds apart from each other at times. He wound up hooking into a 10.69lb bass which I at least got to see the him fight and land. I peddled over to him check out the beast. I think it was around 10:15AM when he hooked into it. He hooked it on a jig/trailer rig it looked like. So I guess big offering for a big bass came thru for him. I took some photos for him on his phone as the solo kayak fisherman doesn't really get the photo opportunities that the boaters get. 

 

It was also the 1st time I've seen a Slayer 10 on the water besides mine. It lived up to it's name for him....I'm patiently waiting for my turn!

 

I guess it's the if your in the right place, at the right time, and throw the right bait they'll eat it up for the win.

 

 


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 5:56 PM, Catt said:

 

Wow! A whole hour! ????

 

Well, it's probably been around 20 hours added up. I'm averaging about 1 - 2 per hour in the mid-morning. I have noticed that the water temperature is considerably warmer at 9:00 PM or so when I usually go. Probably 10+ degrees warmer than at 7:00 AM. I'm wondering if they mainly just feed in the morning since it's a pond, and ponds warm up really quickly.


fishing user avatarRatherbfishing reply : 

Troll (but not on the internet).


fishing user avatarKsam1234 reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 1:07 AM, EGbassing said:

I've fished at night for an hour almost every night for the past several weeks. I haven't had a single bite on anything. Spinnerbaits, jigs, ned rigs, chatterbaits, etc. I can go out in when it's 95 degrees in the middle of the afternoon and catch a few though. I just don't understand it.

An hour isn’t long at all.. at night it’s not about numbers but more quality as I have found. I have fished overnight a few times , started around 7 pm and fished till sunup.  You won’t hsve 50+fish but you will have a few quality ones. Last time I went night fishing I caught maybe 10 fish but nothing under 2 pounds.  Biggest was over 5. 


fishing user avatarthe reel ess reply : 
  On 8/14/2018 at 11:36 PM, Mike Boitnott said:

 Dog days of summer are upon us – what is a tip someone gave you that helps you catch more fish in the heat?

Go early or late if you can't go at night. My buddy told me lately that the bass were doing NOTHING at our local reservoir and he's been catching some crappie instead. I got on the water before 7:00 and caught 8 bass on three different baits, including a couple big'uns. 5 of them came on a Pop R. All but one were in shallow shade and the bite was over by 9:30. Even if bass are really not into it, there are usually a couple windows a day for some bites.


fishing user avatarrejesterd reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 11:05 PM, EGbassing said:

Well, it's probably been around 20 hours added up. I'm averaging about 1 - 2 per hour in the mid-morning. I have noticed that the water temperature is considerably warmer at 9:00 PM or so when I usually go. Probably 10+ degrees warmer than at 7:00 AM. I'm wondering if they mainly just feed in the morning since it's a pond, and ponds warm up really quickly.

The problem is you think you have to go at a time when they're feeding.  Not true.  You'll generally catch more when they're feeding, but they don't go grocery shopping.  They're still fighting to survive in the wild, so there are plenty of ways to trigger them to bite even if they're not currently looking for food.  Fish very fast and very erratic.  If you get nothing, slow way way down.  If you still get nothing, start over with different colors.


fishing user avatargeo g reply : 

In the swamps of south Florida the summer dull drums are here.  With 90* water temps, the O2 levels deeper then 5 feet are usually poor quality.  Bass will get under the thick cover because it blocks the sunlight, provides ambush points, is where the bait fish, frogs, snakes, small birds, and bugs hang out.  The most important aspect is the weeds produce O2, especially when the sun is high.  Its like an O2 tank in the ER.  It is a life saver for their comfortable existence, and quality of life.  In these Hot summer days, look for the thick green weeds.  Two different kinds of green weeds is better then the same kind, and an isolated clump of green stuff in an open flat is a magnet for the surrounding flat, during the bright sun.  You may catch more then one bass off an isolated clump.  I hope this helps if you have similar surroundings.


fishing user avatarDogfish_Jones reply : 

In fishing the lakes here in Alabama, it seems that you will not do any good until your get current flowing, (I fish the Coosa River chain), so I need the dams to be flowing. The water is hovering between 89 to 92 degrees in the lakes I am fishing. It's been hard for me and most everyone I have talked to around here.

Now, what I am doing is fishing the Ned Rig, C-Rig of Texas Rig. I am having so-so luck on the Shaky heads but some will say that is all they are catching them on.

I'm finding deep pockets right off the banks that lead into the channel that seems to produce a few right now. But they are coming hard to find.


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 8/16/2018 at 2:02 AM, Ksam1234 said:

An hour isn’t long at all.. at night it’s not about numbers but more quality as I have found. I have fished overnight a few times , started around 7 pm and fished till sunup.  You won’t hsve 50+fish but you will have a few quality ones. Last time I went night fishing I caught maybe 10 fish but nothing under 2 pounds.  Biggest was over 5. 

But an hour a night for weeks is a lot. If you fished from sunrise to sunup without stopping two times, (around 20 total hours) without a bite, whouldn't you say something is wrong?


fishing user avatarJ Francho reply : 
  On 8/16/2018 at 3:44 AM, EGbassing said:

But an hour a night for weeks is a lot. If you fished from sunrise to sunup without stopping two times, (around 20 total hours) without a bite, whouldn't you say something is wrong?

Is it the same hour every night?


fishing user avatarKsam1234 reply : 
  On 8/16/2018 at 3:44 AM, EGbassing said:

But an hour a night for weeks is a lot. If you fished from sunrise to sunup without stopping two times, (around 20 total hours) without a bite, whouldn't you say something is wrong?

As J Francho asked.  Is it the same hour? Sometimes the fish don’t bite that hour. There is different times when a lake turns on.  When I fished at night 7-10 was great fishing. Lots of topwater activity but then it died out for couple hours.  Then around 12-1 am it picked back up threwout the night.   Maybe your lake you fish is active later at night or just different times.  Try staying a little longer if you can.  Black buzzbaits work amazing. Black worms and frogs I used in slop.  


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 8/16/2018 at 3:46 AM, J Francho said:

Is it the same hour every night?

Yep. About 8:00 - 9:00.


fishing user avatarCatt reply : 
  On 8/16/2018 at 3:44 AM, EGbassing said:

But an hour a night for weeks is a lot. If you fished from sunrise to sunup without stopping two times, (around 20 total hours) without a bite, whouldn't you say something is wrong?

 

How long do you fish during daylight?

 

An hour at a time (day or night) aint long enough to locate fish, establish a pattern, determine anything!

 

Dog days of summer 

 

Think deep; deep is relative to the surrounding area

 

Think bottom; I aint looking for a topwater bite

 

Think big; bigger lures give off more vibration which allows bass to zero in.

 

Think slow; biological fact; minimum output maximum intake!


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 8/16/2018 at 10:00 AM, Catt said:

 

How long do you fish during daylight?

 

An hour at a time (day or night) aint long enough to locate fish, establish a pattern, determine anything!

 

Dog days of summer 

 

Think deep; deep is relative to the surrounding area

 

Think bottom; I aint looking for a topwater bite

 

Think big; bigger lures give off more vibration which allows bass to zero in.

 

Think slow; biological fact; minimum output maximum intake!

Usually between 1 - 2 hours in the summertime. I would probably fish longer but it just ain't too enjoyable to stand out under the sun when it's 96 degrees unless the fish are really cooperating. ???? I fish a little longer in the fall though because the weather is just perfect.

  On 8/16/2018 at 6:49 AM, Ksam1234 said:

As J Francho asked.  Is it the same hour? Sometimes the fish don’t bite that hour. There is different times when a lake turns on.  When I fished at night 7-10 was great fishing. Lots of topwater activity but then it died out for couple hours.  Then around 12-1 am it picked back up threwout the night.   Maybe your lake you fish is active later at night or just different times.  Try staying a little longer if you can.  Black buzzbaits work amazing. Black worms and frogs I used in slop.  

Yup. 8 to 9 usually. I've fished a lot of buzzbaits but the fish in that pond always seem to ignore topwaters for some reason. Thanks for the help.


fishing user avatarMobasser reply : 

I agree with most of this. I do best with 7-10 inch plastic worms, fished slowly on the bottom. I use mostly Texas rig, but split shot and shakey heads work well too. Make it easy for them to get. Bigger fish are probably not in a chasing mood.


fishing user avatarMike Boitnott reply : 

We have a few tournaments here in VA that are night tournaments although I have never tried it I know a lot of folks like it.  At least at night the temps are better and the pleasure boaters are off the water.  Our club usually doesn't have tournaments in August just simply because of the heat and high percentage of fish kills in the live well regardless of all the tricks with frozen bottles and such.  Heading out over the next couple of days to work on some summer tactics, wish me luck with both the heat and the Thunder storms.


fishing user avatarTroy85 reply : 

If you don't want to fish at night, I'd say your next best bet is to fish tidal waters if possible.  Even in the dog days of summer, when the tidal conditions are right, the bass will bite, even during the heat of the day.  You will still want to target deeper water.  I know where I've been fishing the water temps are 89-91, during slack tide its tough, but once the water starts moving, the bass start eating.


fishing user avatarBig Rick reply : 

In the short time I've been around this forum I've noticed the advice varies greatly depending on the locale of the advice giver.  So, it would make the most sense to look at the poster's location to determine if it is valuable info.  Case in point, here in the Deep South the water is averaging 90 degrees and the humidity is very high.  Our best oxygen is in less than 5 ft of water.  My biggest bass this summer have come from skinny water. And I mean SKINNY. Less than 3 ft. I've caught them all on topwater baits.  Namely, Rico's and Don Iovino's Splash It in the larger size.  It seems down here the "middle" water is pretty dead.  Either fish DEEP and SLOW or SHALLOW and FAST.  In the South shad stay right near the surface and "school up" causing a great reaction bite in the heat of the day.  My biggest and best catches all came on Bluebird Sky days with the sun high.  Early light produces more bites, but mid-day produces BIGGER bites.

 

Of course, that's my story in my neck of the country.  I'm sure the northern fisheries are all together different. And to oppose my own view point above, I've taken "Northern patterns" and used them with great success in "Southern lakes" because fish have never seen it before. So, there's that angle as well....


fishing user avatarMike Boitnott reply : 

Good point about the different areas, I agree its really cool to learn some new techniques to try locally that haven't been seen.  Went out yesterday and had a good day!  Nothing big but solid numbers.  Utilized my electronics and shading to isolate docs with 10 ft or more of water.  Fun day on the water and spent some time with my Grandson which always makes for an awesome day!

IMG_4637.JPG


fishing user avatarBrew City Bass reply : 
  On 8/16/2018 at 9:57 AM, EGbassing said:

Yep. About 8:00 - 9:00.

May be the issue. 

I night fish 3 days a week all spring, and summer. I get to the lake around 9pm and get off around 4-5am. Usually from 9-11pm it's pretty dead. I'll usually be lucky to catch 2 fish in those two hours. But right around midnight the fish turn into animals and nail everything and anything. It dies down around 2am for an hour, then picks up again til the sun is over the trees. 
 


fishing user avatarMike Boitnott reply : 

Great video Kicker!  Also seen a couple of the guys mention a TRD or Ned Rig which I think may help sometimes when the bite gets slow.  However, I have a hard time throwing either.  Not sure why guess I just need to make myself give it a chance.  I also read an article which has helped some when fishing grass or pads when the bite gets tough and that is switching from my normal top water baits like a frog to a speed tail worm.  smaller presentation and it comes through the grass and pads very well.  It has really helped when the bite slows down.  I have also been targeting more productive docks by using my electronics to identify docks with deeper water.  its hard to beat skipping a Senko type bait far up under into the shady areas on a hot day.

Dock Shading.jpg


fishing user avatarGlenn reply : 
  On 8/15/2018 at 3:42 PM, JustJames said:

try this ^^^ if you have weedy area to fish. I went out the day I saw this video in 104 degree right at noon time fishing shallow weedy area and caught about a dozen bass. 

That's awesome! Glad I can help!


fishing user avatarschplurg reply : 

Cold beer.

 

J/K I actually rarely drink when I fish. I haven't fished enough yet to really use such advice so <shrug>. I've caught every bass this summer (100 degree days) off my Dad's dock with a popper at dusk. I'm sure I learned that here from the man who posted above me. :)

 

 




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