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Deep water bass fishing
Posted on 6/25/15 at 8:18 am
Posted on 6/25/15 at 8:18 am
My family has a new camp on the north side of Lake Bistineau. We are right along the channel and the deepest part of the lake (around 25 feet). Even fishing on off the dock, you can cast into about 20 feet of water. With the water temp up, I would assume the larger bass will be moving deeper.
What are your go-to deeper water lurers? I was thinking a 7 or 8 inch weighted worm but haven't fished in water this deep regularly. Thoughts or suggestions are appreciated.
What are your go-to deeper water lurers? I was thinking a 7 or 8 inch weighted worm but haven't fished in water this deep regularly. Thoughts or suggestions are appreciated.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 8:20 am to stevengtiger
Texas rigged worm or carolina rigged if there's grass on the bottom
Posted on 6/25/15 at 8:20 am to stevengtiger
i like cranks for deep
water also
water also
Posted on 6/25/15 at 8:29 am to stevengtiger
Strike King 6XD's and Carolina Rigged Speed craws can be pretty effective in deep water.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 8:33 am to stevengtiger
DD22, you can catch some fish & work out at the same time
Posted on 6/25/15 at 8:36 am to stevengtiger
You should still be able to catch them shallow, especially in the mornings, all throughout the summer. I think the idea that all the big fish move deep is more myth than fact. Punching grass, fishing frogs early, and finding shallow feeding areas near deep water are all sure-fire shallow water tactics even in the dead of summer.
That said, sometimes you want to head deep so load up on 6xds, C-rigs, football jigs (if the grass isn't too thick), and jigging spoons. Also, you can punch submerged grass in 20' of water - you just need super heavy weights and a LOT of patience but you can fill the boat when you find them.
That said, sometimes you want to head deep so load up on 6xds, C-rigs, football jigs (if the grass isn't too thick), and jigging spoons. Also, you can punch submerged grass in 20' of water - you just need super heavy weights and a LOT of patience but you can fill the boat when you find them.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:06 am to stevengtiger
If you can find them in singles or stacked on your electronics, then drop-shots, jigging spoons and jigs can be VERY effective. But if you're just searching, I would stick with c-rigs (yes you absolutely need a swivel) or cranks.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:24 am to stevengtiger
quote:
I would assume the larger bass will be moving deeper
Not always the case.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:38 am to stevengtiger
I fish the TN River system almost exclusively, and you can get into some deep water on those lakes. We C-rig humps that are surrounded by deeper water and try to find areas with a good amount of current in the Summer. If you can find a channel with shallow water or structure close to deep water, you are onto something. We also switch to night fishing Jun-Aug. Fish move up shallow and feed at night. Usually go with big baits in deep water. I rig worms and use the old pig & jig combo a lot. Dark colors, like black and blue work best on anything but a bluebird day. If Sunny, I go with more natural colors like watermelon seed and other greens. Coolest thing about it is you don't know what you will hook, spots, smallmouth and largemouth all in similar areas.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 11:47 am to stevengtiger
Not trying to hijack your thread, but what's the salvania situation around y'alls camp, or Bistineau in general?
Been years since I've been to/on Bistineau. Back in the day, I considered it the most beautiful, tranquil, peaceful, scenic, good for nothing, God forsaken, can't catch a decent bass or kill a decent mess of ducks body of water in the Continental US of A.
Actually though, I think it's just a hard lake to fish/one has to know what one is doing, and since we could make ourselves believe we could out fish Bill Dance Parker on our "little" (was 7 miles long) "private" (others had access but we rarely saw folks) Red River Oxbow, we never "had" to learn.
Anyway, I'd heard the salvania has made it almost impenetrable these days. That the case?
Been years since I've been to/on Bistineau. Back in the day, I considered it the most beautiful, tranquil, peaceful, scenic, good for nothing, God forsaken, can't catch a decent bass or kill a decent mess of ducks body of water in the Continental US of A.
Actually though, I think it's just a hard lake to fish/one has to know what one is doing, and since we could make ourselves believe we could out fish Bill Dance Parker on our "little" (was 7 miles long) "private" (others had access but we rarely saw folks) Red River Oxbow, we never "had" to learn.
Anyway, I'd heard the salvania has made it almost impenetrable these days. That the case?
Posted on 6/25/15 at 11:56 am to stevengtiger
C-rigs and Cranks work good. I also like dropshots cast and worked the same way you would a texas rig especially from your dock. If you can get electronics look for humps, points and sharp bends or sand bars in the main channel where bass can move vertically and still find structure to ambush baitfish from. If your lake has grass find the depth where it stops growing and fish the edges. Seems most creatures like edges where habit changes for some reason. Also fish both ways, sit shallow cast deep and sit deep and cast shallow. Sometimes it makes a difference, I usually use the depth of the grass line as my target depth unless theres a lot of fish holding structure like tops and stumps showing up on the electronics then I try to work both depths at same time. Congrats on the new camp.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 12:47 pm to stevengtiger
Where we fish I like to used a Tiger Stipe Bandit 200. It good for 7 to 8 feet deep.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 2:46 pm to stevengtiger
Killer grass flats on Bistineau.
One of my favorite lakes to fish around here.
One of my favorite lakes to fish around here.
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