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Where do bass go after a cold spring day? 2024


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 

I'm going fishing in a small pond today, (55 degrees at the time I'm going to get there) but it was only 45 for the high yesterday, which is much colder than the average high temperature recently. Will the bass still be active? And how should I fish for them? I would usually fish a frog because of all the shallow cover, but I'm wondering if they're deeper because of the weather. 


fishing user avatarsully420 reply : 

Maby fish a jig on the bottom or slowroll a chatter bait. Then try the frog late in the day where the sun warmed the water the most ie west side of the pond.


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/9/2018 at 1:54 AM, sully420 said:

Maby fish a jig on the bottom or slowroll a chatter bait. Then try the frog late in the day where the sun warmed the water the most ie west side of the pond.

Thanks. How do you find the west side of the pond? Using a compass, or what?


fishing user avatarsully420 reply : 

Sun rises in the east and sets in the west. If you can fish the whole pond. Top water gets good for me in the spring late in the day after the sun has warmed the water a bit.


fishing user avatarthe reel ess reply : 

Let us know how you did. Conventional wisdom says that if they had been shallow (like, really shallow) they would head back to deeper water until some warmer weather comes along. They wouldn't go back to the deepest part of the pond, but the closest "deeper water" to the spawning flats. And it might seem that they're just gone, but more likely, they got lockjaw. We got the same weather pattern here and it was a cold front, small warming trend, then another colder front.


fishing user avatarfrogflogger reply : 

They may just get dormant and tough to get to bite - in a pond a situation made for a 1/32 oz ned rig and some patience.


fishing user avatarBassWhole! reply : 
  On 4/9/2018 at 1:58 AM, EGbassing said:

Thanks. How do you find the west side of the pond? Using a compass, or what?

Yes a compass will work, or pull it up on line, up is North, down is South, left is West, right is East. Its also a good way to figure out what the wind is doing on an unfamiliar spot (winds are labeled per their direction of origin)

 

Oh, and I don't know if it holds up further south, but here, one cold day may make them a bit lethargic (not always) but usually they don't move around much, I find that they tend to hug the bottom, and won't be as willing to chase a bait up. YMMV.


fishing user avatarBCline reply : 
  On 4/9/2018 at 1:58 AM, EGbassing said:

Thanks. How do you find the west side of the pond? Using a compass, or what?

Really?!?!


fishing user avatarBassWhole! reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 8:25 PM, BCline said:

Really?!?!

Yeah, it's bad. But you can no longer point out ignorance as a bad thing, just encourage, smile, and hand out the participation trophies, gluten free snacks, and flat earth maps...


fishing user avatarBCline reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 8:56 PM, reason said:

Yeah, it's bad. But you can no longer point out ignorance as a bad thing, just encourage, smile, and hand out the participation trophies, gluten free snacks, and flat earth maps...

I agree with the trophies and snacks, but handing out maps will be a waste.  Within the next few years there will be no one left alive who can read them.


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 8:25 PM, BCline said:

Really?!?!

I was just confused, because somebody told me to "fish the west bank, (whichever bank the wind was blowing towards)" 


fishing user avatarthe reel ess reply : 

I'd fish the north bank (located by compass or Google Maps). That's the one getting the most sun in a day. Is that correct?


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 8:56 PM, reason said:

Yeah, it's bad. But you can no longer point out ignorance as a bad thing, just encourage, smile, and hand out the participation trophies, gluten free snacks, and flat earth maps...

As I said to BCline, I was confused, as someone told me to "fish the west bank, (whichever bank the wind was blowing towards)" or something like that. ;)


fishing user avatarscaleface reply : 
  On 4/8/2018 at 11:31 PM, EGbassing said:

I'm going fishing in a small pond today,

They cant go far .  The  question is hard to answer but you ought to be able  to fish it all relatively fast .


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 10:07 PM, scaleface said:

They cant go far .  The  question is hard to answer but you ought to be able  to fish it all relatively fast .

Thanks, I ended up watching a bass smack my lure from the side without getting hooked. (Less than a foot off the shore) The exact same thing happened to me last week, in the same spot... :huh: 


fishing user avatarBCline reply : 

I can understand the confusion.  The west bank of a pond will always be the western side.  If you also have a west wind, then the wind will be at your back.  If you fish the west bank of a pond with an east wind, then the wind will be in your face.


fishing user avatarscaleface reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 10:11 PM, EGbassing said:

Thanks, I ended up watching a bass smack my lure from the side without getting hooked. (Less than a foot off the shore) The exact same thing happened to me last week, in the same spot... :huh: 

  No one can really tell you how to catch those bass but you were close  . Either those bass followed your lure or they were there when the lure came by . You'll just have to figure it out . Sounds like they hit near the surface   , maybe a shallow , suspending jerk bait ? 


fishing user avatarBCline reply : 

By the Way, how did you do?


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 10:17 PM, scaleface said:

  No one can really tell you how to catch those bass but you were close  . Either those bass followed your lure or they were there when the lure came by . You'll just have to figure it out . Sounds like they hit near the surface   , maybe a shallow , suspending jerk bait ? 

Yeah, I've been thinking about a jerkbait but I haven't found one that would be shallow enough for the pond I fish. I was fishing a 4' - 6' diving crankbait yesterday and it was snagging leaves/weeds/sticks even on my slowest retrieve. 


fishing user avatarscaleface reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 10:20 PM, EGbassing said:

Yeah, I've been thinking about a jerkbait but I haven't found one that would be shallow enough for the pond I fish. I was fishing a 4' - 6' diving crankbait yesterday and it was snagging leaves/weeds/sticks even on my slowest retrieve. 

Hold the rod  tip high to keep them shallower .


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 10:18 PM, BCline said:

By the Way, how did you do?

I ended up fishing a frog most of the time and didn't get any strikes. I saw something swimming behind it for a few seconds once though...

  On 4/11/2018 at 10:22 PM, scaleface said:

Hold the rod  tip high to keep them shallower .

I tried that, but it was still hitting the bottom every time. I'm guessing it's about 3' to 4' deep in the middle.

  On 4/11/2018 at 10:22 PM, scaleface said:

Hold the rod  tip high to keep them shallower .

Oh, sorry, I thought you were referring to crankbaits. 


fishing user avatarscaleface reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 10:23 PM, EGbassing said:

 

I tried that, but it was still hitting the bottom every time. I'm guessing it's about 3' to 4' deep in the middle.

What  lure ?


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 10:28 PM, scaleface said:

What  lure ?

See above reply. I think we commented at the same time so my reply was first. ;) 


fishing user avatarKoz reply : 

Try a couple of different sized spinnerbaits. First throw them parallel to the shore starting a foot or so out, then 5 feet out, then 10 feet out. Both sides. Then cast 30 degrees, 60 degrees, and 90 degrees from the shoreline, again both sides.

 

When I do this I can see if anything is hitting along the shore or if the bass are following in from deeper water.

 

There was a time when spinnerbaits were just about the last thing out of my tackle bag, but in the last year I've had a lot of luck with them and caught 5-6 pounders on them. I fish the medium and larger sized spinnerbaits (white/gray and white/chartreuse and white/pumpkin).

 

Instead of throwing a small spinnerbait I'll throw a white or black beetlespin. I never caught anything big on those (1-2 pounds) but it's another lure that lets me know if there's bass, crappie, or bluegill in the area.


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/12/2018 at 1:42 AM, Koz said:

Try a couple of different sized spinnerbaits. First throw them parallel to the shore starting a foot or so out, then 5 feet out, then 10 feet out. Both sides. Then cast 30 degrees, 60 degrees, and 90 degrees from the shoreline, again both sides.

 

When I do this I can see if anything is hitting along the shore or if the bass are following in from deeper water.

 

There was a time when spinnerbaits were just about the last thing out of my tackle bag, but in the last year I've had a lot of luck with them and caught 5-6 pounders on them. I fish the medium and larger sized spinnerbaits (white/gray and white/chartreuse and white/pumpkin).

 

Instead of throwing a small spinnerbait I'll throw a white or black beetlespin. I never caught anything big on those (1-2 pounds) but it's another lure that lets me know if there's bass, crappie, or bluegill in the area.

Thanks. I was literally tying a spinnerbait on while reading this, so I'll try that technique out today. ;) Also, how do you generally fish willow leaf spinnerbaits when it's about 65 degrees? 


fishing user avatarGraham reply : 
  On 4/11/2018 at 10:23 PM, EGbassing said:

I tried that, but it was still hitting the bottom every time. I'm guessing it's about 3' to 4' deep in the middle.

I'd suggest using a lipless, something like a Bagley Rattlin B Minus. I can run those in like 6 inches of water with no issue.


fishing user avatarKoz reply : 
  On 4/12/2018 at 1:48 AM, EGbassing said:

Thanks. I was literally tying a spinnerbait on while reading this, so I'll try that technique out today. ;) Also, how do you generally fish willow leaf spinnerbaits when it's about 65 degrees? 

 

Most of my hits come on a straight retrieve. I'll try a few casts at one speed, then try speeding up or slowing down for a few casts. Occasionally I may rip it for a crank or two.

 

But around here our lagoons are all soft, muddy bottoms. Most have thick algae along the basin or thick, "soupy" type weeds. In other words, we don't have rocky bottoms or a lot of rock structure to bounce lures off of. When a lure hits bottom here you either lose it or you're pulling in chunks of algae and weeds.

 

If I were in an area with a hard bottom or rocky surfaces I'd probably also add a stop and go retrieve and let it bounce off of the bottom. But the idea of a spinnerbait is to get those blades going so the fish are attracted to the vibration in the water.


fishing user avatarStrikePrince reply : 

Cast them and reel them I'm about 6inxhes to a foot under the surface. It feels like you're kind of over complicating things and just need to go fish


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/12/2018 at 2:00 AM, Koz said:

 

Most of my hits come on a straight retrieve. I'll try a few casts at one speed, then try speeding up or slowing down for a few casts. Occasionally I may rip it for a crank or two.

 

But around here our lagoons are all soft, muddy bottoms. Most have thick algae along the basin or thick, "soupy" type weeds. In other words, we don't have rocky bottoms or a lot of rock structure to bounce lures off of. When a lure hits bottom here you either lose it or you're pulling in chunks of algae and weeds.

 

If I were in an area with a hard bottom or rocky surfaces I'd probably also add a stop and go retrieve and let it bounce off of the bottom. But the idea of a spinnerbait is to get those blades going so the fish are attracted to the vibration in the water.

Thanks, I'll try that. I think I'm going to start out with a willow blade and fast retrieve, and then switch to a Colorado and a slower retrieve if that's not working. :) 


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/12/2018 at 2:00 AM, Koz said:

 

Most of my hits come on a straight retrieve. I'll try a few casts at one speed, then try speeding up or slowing down for a few casts. Occasionally I may rip it for a crank or two.

 

But around here our lagoons are all soft, muddy bottoms. Most have thick algae along the basin or thick, "soupy" type weeds. In other words, we don't have rocky bottoms or a lot of rock structure to bounce lures off of. When a lure hits bottom here you either lose it or you're pulling in chunks of algae and weeds.

 

If I were in an area with a hard bottom or rocky surfaces I'd probably also add a stop and go retrieve and let it bounce off of the bottom. But the idea of a spinnerbait is to get those blades going so the fish are attracted to the vibration in the water.

Well, as soon as I got there, I stepped in a hole and fell onto the concrete. I scraped my entire left arm from the shoulder down pretty badly. I can't even use my left arm to type this... :mellow:




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