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Bass Fishing Opinion | Lasting Implications of the Alabama Rig

  
  
  
  
  
  
How long with the Alabama Rig craze last?
Photo by Shaye Baker

By Jason Sealock

Are you sick of hearing about the Alabama Rig yet? Either way the rig is not going away. In fact, we suspect there’s going to be a lot more about it before the rumble dies down a little bit and we go about our normal lives in the bass fishing world. But since the firestorm that has exploded with Paul Elias and pretty much the majority of the top 10 anglers in the FLW Tour Open on Lake Guntersville last week, TheAlabamaRig.com has been one of the hottest fishing destinations on the internet with some reports putting it as high as 52,000 visits in just a four day span.  

It’s fun when a new lure or rig takes off in the fishing world. But it’s not nearly the first time there has been a storm around a bass fishing lure, technique or rig. Just a few years ago there was this crazy wobbling jig called a Chatterbait catching huge limits of bass on Lake Okeechobee. I was down there while it was unfolding, first in the Everstart Series tournament Bryan Thrift unleashed it on. Then the next week was an FLW Tour event.

Scott Martin was smart enough to stock his store with pretty much the inventory of then Rad Lure’s Chatterbait. Before the event started, his shelves were bare. Those of us that bought a bunch could have, and many probably did, sold these Chatterbaits for upwards of $150 a piece on EBay as word spread like wildfire.  

Then this crazy swimbait called a Basstrix hit the market and spontaneously combusted into a wildfire when Steve Kennedy whacked a bunch of huge Clear Lake bass on those and other swimbaits. Suddenly the stocks of Basstrix swimbaits were depleted and the demand drove prices up. Some retailers demanded minimum monetary orders to even be considered for buying some of the hot swimbaits.  

The Alabama Rig is already started down the same path as these two baits. A big tournament is won on the rig and now there is a long backlog to even get one in your hands. Like both of these baits before it, this rig is hand made by a small operation, and they are working night and day to try to stay somewhere in the general vicinity of the orders pouring in.  

Unfortunately where we see this headed is into the dreaded dark corner of the fishing tackle industry – knockoffs. Unfortunately several companies are probably already working on their versions of TAR. It’s the ugly truth that supply hardly ever meets demand in these situations, and everyone looks to capitalize on the latest and greatest.  Not to mention mass production will drive prices down.

Patents, especially design patents are great and can protect your intellectual property, but that’s if you’re willing to defend it with time and money through the legal system. Most of these companies struggle there because they are doing all they can to meet the overwhelming demand and certainly don’t have time to go to courts to defend what everyone knows they created.  

The next little buzz shooting off the side of this firestorm is the legality of the rig from state to state. In Minnesota, it would be illegal per DNR laws. In Alabama, it’s completely legal. In Tennessee there is a conference meeting going on and a decision is being made as early as today on whether to allow it. There is a bit of grey area in Tennessee, as is probably the case in several states. There is a rule in the books limiting umbrella rigs for trolling to one hook if the hooks are larger than size No. 6. The umbrella rig is defined as any array of 3 lures or baits or more on one rod. But that was made for trolling.

No one ever considered casting an umbrella rig that can weigh more than 5 ounces.  

Another discussion we’ve had the last several days argues whether tournament organizations are going to continue to allow the rigs in their tournaments. This is where there is a tremendous fracture of opinions from the pros, weekend anglers, industry folks and biologists we’ve talked to already. For the sake of keeping this our opinion, we won’t name any names. Again these are just topics to consider spurring some friendly conversation over what is going on here with this new rig.

On the one hand, folks are excited about what the rig has done thus far. A BFL Regional was won the week before on it. Now a major professional bass fishing tournament has been won on it. In both cases, the talk before the tournament was how tough the fishing would be. At Guntersville, many of the top pros thought going into the event that 12-14 pounds a day would be good. Then the winner averages 25 pounds a day. Guys go from catching 11 pounds on the first day to catching 20-plus-pound stringers the last two days. 

That excitement around tournaments can be hard to come by at times. However, what will be the opportunity cost? What are we giving up as a tournament fishing community by doing this? Some have argued that the sport of it goes away when guys can throw as many as they want and just seine the bass off of locations. It’s not quite that simple though. You’re not going to just tie one on and all of the sudden catch loads of bass everywhere you cast it.  

It’s a situational bait. Our theory, and many of the pros have backed us up on this, is that the bigger bass are suspending off of shallow areas and breaks on a lot of fisheries where it’s working. These bass are ordinarily hard to catch because they don’t respond well to “one lure” coming through that suspended area. They have been conditioned through pressure and catches to avoid those single lures in their suspended zone. However it’s almost like those fish that are programmed not to chase that one bait, accept that the Alabama rig is a school of baitfish. It’s like it removes their inhibitions because there is no way that many fake lures can be coming by at one time.  

Trolling was removed from tournament bass fishing long ago. We’ve often said the same should be done for walleye. Live bait as well. But that’s a topic for another day. But the essence of the removal of trolling was to pit skilled anglers against the bass with nothing but one bait and line between them. Not just riding around until they happened onto a group of willing fish. It forced guys to lock onto spots more, run patterns more and develop casting abilities to reach places others missed.

It takes determination to cast TAR all day with five 3/4-ounce jigheads, swimbait bodies, and the rig hanging at the end of your line. The baits weigh more than 4 ounces together, the rig weighs 3/8 ounce. Just getting it out there is a chore. Then doing that hundreds of times throughout the day is like chopping wood for 8 hours. That is a test of conditioning and skill in and of itself.  

And it’s not going to work everywhere in all situations. One angler had an astute observation today that he shared.

“I’m sure the buzzbait caught a sick amount of bass when it first hit the scene,” he said. “Guys were probably mopping up the fisheries with it and just pillaging all the bass around for a time. But eventually the fish got somewhat conditioned and it’s not nearly as easy to fool them on a buzzbait as I’m sure it once was.”  

So how long will this be THE WAY to catch them? Who knows. As soon as other methods out produce it when a bunch of the field was employing it will be unique to see. That may signal the fire is finally under control.  

The final problem that often comes with rigs that work so well like this for a time is you’ve given folks a better tool to rape and pillage fisheries, especially those who would poach. We can remember seeing videos of some guys piling up bass and filleting them in sickening amounts on fisheries like Guntersville, Falcon and Amistad. We hate to think a rig that has had so much great positive energy for the sport right now would go that direction, but it’s fair to at least consider it.  

What we did see as a spark of positive energy for the tackle industry is that you’ve got to buy an awful lot of baits to keep that thing rigged right and running true. Elias was going through the shad tails, other anglers reported catching 50 or more keepers a day on it when they thought 12 pounds was going to be good in practice.  

One angler told me today, “Jason, if I had tested it and thrown it in practice and figured it out earlier, I guarantee I would have had 100 pounds for four days. It made that big of a difference.”  

Strong testimony for the hottest rig going in bass fishing.

We hope Andy Poss gets his just deserve in this whole process and that we’re privy to another great situational tool, in this case bass suspending around shad, for a while to come. Hopefully no one will make snap and rash judgments, and we can all enjoy fishing as we always have with new lures and techniques while they’re hot without fear of damaging our fisheries or our sport’s great integrity.



Bass Fishing Feature | The Alabama Rig Comes into the Limelight

  
  
  
  
  
  
Paul Elias introduced the bass fishing world to The Alabama Rig

Story and photos by Shaye Baker

Paul Elias’ Triton emerged from the fog on the final morning of the FLW Tour Open on Lake Guntersville like a pirate ship in some Hollywood blockbuster. The sound of his massive assortment of swimbaits hitting the water was like the “ploosh” of a cannon ball – the shot heard round the bass fishing world so to speak. As Elias heaved the massive mess of wire and rubber that is now known to us all as The Alabama Rig, the bass fishing world was changed forever.

With striking similarities to the standard umbrella rig that is used to troll for all sorts of game fish, one wonders how a castable umbrella rig wasn’t thought of before. In an industry where almost everything has been done, sometimes, redoing it is the best option.

Andy Poss, the creator of The Alabama Rig, admits that the finished product is a far cry from what he started tinkering with 14 months ago.

Weighing about 3/8 ounce, the rig alone is made up of five metal rods extending from a plastic head that is anchored to a single metal rod running in the opposite direction that is used to make an eyelet for the main line to be tied to.

At the end of each of the five rods, Poss formed an eyelet that a heavy duty clip is attached. From here, it’s up to you.

“You can throw anything you want to throw on it,” Poss said. “You can take The Alabama Rig and throw five topwater baits on it or put your lead heads on it and fish it as deep as you want to fish it.”

Having only been on the market since the first of July, Poss explained his expectations for the rig.

“I knew as soon as the water started cooling off on the Tennessee River and the fish started suspending and primarily feeding on shad, it was just a matter of time before one of these first few tournaments in the fall would be won on it. That’s how much confidence I had in it.”

Though The Alabama Rig currently comes only with five rods, Poss did hint at the possibility of some different versions on the horizon. He wouldn’t elaborate on the exact details of the bait but when asked if he would name these different versions of the bait the ‘Georgia Rig’ or ‘Tennessee Rig’, he smirked and said, “It’ll be all Alabama.”


If you want proof that the Alabama Rig can catch fish then look no further than the FLW Tour Open on Lake Guntersville and Paul Elias’ near record breaking performance. Jumping out to an early 5 pound lead on day one with more than 26 pounds on the toughest Lake Guntersville in recent years, it was apparent that Elias was on to something. That something was the Alabama Rig.

The next day it was learned that a few others in the top 10 were also throwing the rig. By the morning of day three, the Alabama Rig had made its way to the front deck of over 3/4 of the top 20 anglers’ boats. Casey Martin caught 20 pounds, 9 ounces behind Elias to win the co-angler championship on the rig as well on day three. On the final day, nearly everyone in the top 10 was using it.

Weights drastically grew throughout the tournament as the Alabama Rig ran rampant through the field. On day one around 16 pounds was in fifth place out of 146 pros. By day four, 5 of the 10 that went out had more than 20 pounds, all on the rig.

Never has a tournament been dominated and so drastically changed by the introduction of a single bait. The Chatterbait, Senko and other instant mainstays all made catching fish easier but the Alabama Rig seemed to trigger a class of bigger, older and more educated fish that simply wouldn’t bite anything else.


The man that figured out the Alabama Rig and how to catch these G-ville giants better than anyone else was Paul Elias. Averaging more than 25 pounds a day, Elias put together a perfect game plan that consisted of the Alabama Rig, current, a variety of baits, various retrieves and his Hydrowave.
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Elias fished primarily two bridges during the event. These worked as funnels to maximize the effect of whatever current ran during the four days. Once he had the general areas picked out he proceeded to find sweet spots, ambush points that the bass could use as they waited for the current to bring bait by.
“Most of the fish were relating to big rocks and high spots in the middle of the bridges. I also caught a few off the bridge pilings,” said Elias.

The weight of his lead heads varied depending on the depth and speed that he was fishing. Throughout the week, he used rigs with 1/4, 3/8 and 3/4-ounce heads. His soft plastic of choice was a Mann’s Hard Nosed 5 ½-inch swimbait.

Bass in the fall tend to suspend as they feed on shad that aren’t relating to the surface or the bottom. These fish are typically hard to catch and another key reason that the Alabama Rig played such an important role in the event. The trick was letting the bait fall to where the fish were and keeping it in the strike zone all the way to the boat.

“All the fish I caught were suspended off the bottom and I was counting down on almost every cast,” said Elias. “I had to vary my retrieve to trigger them sometimes. I learned something new every day.”

“Counting down” means that Elias was able to calculate a rate of fall for the rig depending on what size heads he was using at the time. Once he knew how far the bait would fall per second he could then count his bait down to the desired depth.


One of the most interesting aspects of the new found technique is the equipment necessary just to present the bait to the fish. Elias used an 8-foot flipping stick as did the majority of the anglers that fished the rig throughout the event. His rod of choice was a Pinnacle Perfecta 7-foot, 11-inch heavy-action flipping rod. The astonishing part though is the exaggerated bend of the rod in the back cast that is reminiscent of a glass cranking rod, almost parabolic, bending all the way to the reel seat.

He used 65-pound test Spiderwire Ultracast Fluorobraid. One of the reasons for such heavy line, the bait would hang multiple hooks on bottom and the line needed to be strong enough to straighten the hooks so as not to lose the entire rig. There was also the real risk of hooking multiple fish in the 5 to 8 pound class that would likely snap lesser line in an attempt to bring them in.

His reel of choice was a Pinnacle Optimus 6.4:1 gear ratio reel. The importance of a smooth reel was ever present with the possibility that a backlash could result in the line catching and the weight of the rig snatching the entire rod out of his hand. A large spool was also necessary since the diameter of the line only allowed a certain amount to fit on the reel.

Perhaps the most influential piece of equipment, with the exception of the Alabama Rig itself, was his Hydrowave.

“I really believe the Hydrowave helped me catch more fish,” Elias said. “I kept changing the sound on it all day on the final day. Several times on camera I said ‘I haven’t had a bite in 30 minutes. Let’s change the sound and see if we can get something going.’ And within 5 minutes I’d catch one.”

The Alabama Rig may very well change the entire sport of bass fishing modifying how we approach bass fishing year round. It is really too early to say. However one thing is certain, it has given us a new technique that is deadly for suspended fall bass that are feeding on shad.

So if you want to try this out in your neck of the woods, go to thealabamarig.com and check the bait out for yourself. Their site received more than 40,000 hits in four days last week, so needless to say they are a little backed up. If there is a waiting list to be on in the world of bass fishing right now, however, The Alabama Rig is the one.  

Editors Note: Stay tuned for our opinion on the impact of the rig, it’s legalities in different states, the world of knockoffs set to descend on it, and whether it should have a place in competitive bass fishing or not. For more photos, visit Baker Fishing Fanpage on Facebook.


Bass Fishing Feature | The One Two Punch

  
  
  
  
  
  
KVD with a nice Caffeine Shad bass

Kevin VanDam shares how he catches apprehensive bass  

Any of us that have bass fished for a number of years like to think we're a pretty good stick. Then we get in the boat with someone well beyond just being a good stick, and we're humbled. If you're a smart angler and you want to improve, then the best thing to do is tuck the ego and ask the angler to open up.

We've spent some time fishing with Kevin VanDam recently and picked his brain about how he is so much better at catching fish than your average angler. He decided to give us a quick lesson on triggering and reacting to fish as much as they react to an angler's baits.

We motored around into a bay, quickly scouting the area. VanDam buzzed through the bay, looking at other anglers. One boat had a bead on some school bass busting the surface. VanDam scanned the scene intently and then turned to me and said, "I'd catch those fish."

I have no doubt he was right.

We motored down the lake and pulled into another creek mouth with a large flat in the mouth of it. In a couple brisk strides he was on the bow, seemingly lowering the trolling motor while picking up a rod and casting and turning on his Hydrowave with a foot control. Effortless and fast, he was working a topwater bait, a prototype for Strike King he's been helping develop for a couple of years.


He works the bait across the flat and quickly reels it in and fires another cast just a few feet over. This time a big smallmouth bass comes up and rolls underneath the bait. He works the bait a few more feet and reels it in quickly. Then fires another cast. He works it rapidly, the bait jumping across the surface at times because it's moving so fast. He kills it. Then starts walking it again. Another bass swirls under it and again doesn't break the surface.

He reels in fast and drops that rod to pick up another. This rod has what he calls one of the most overlooked baits in fishing. His Quantum EXO reel was spooled with fluorocarbon and his EXO rod was bowed as he fired a Strike King Caffeine Shad into the fray. He jerked it quickly on the surface to move it into the area where the smallmouth had been striking. Then he killed it. Then he reeled his handle 5 fast cranks and killed it again. As the bait paused and began to sink slowly, a smallmouth flashed and rolled on the bait taking it down.

"People work baits too slow when the fish are aggressive," VanDam said with that tone that makes you embarrassed thinking you've done it before. "They can't stand it when you fire it through there fast and then just kill it."


VanDam had a hand in the making of the Caffeine Shad, and while it's not the first jerkbait ever made, it's not like any other according to the all-time B.A.S.S. wins leader. And he was quick to demonstrate and prove his point, as he often likes to do.

“Watch how the bait swims when you crank it real fast,” VanDam said as he reeled the bait just under the surface. “See how it swims more like a swimbait. You can do that and kill it and really trigger the bass into striking.”

VanDam sticks with natural shad patterns on the Caffeine Shad but didn’t discount how effective colors like Watermelon Red can be in certain situations. He fishes the bait most of the time on a weightless Mustad KVD Grip Pin hook. That hook holds it tight in place while he works it really fast and erratic.

Because the bait is made of the Perfect Plastic and weighted heavily with salt, it casts amazingly well on baitcasting tackle, and a bit further if your initials are KVD.

VanDam continued alternating between the topwater and the soft jerkbait, and continued to force bass to show themselves. In moments he had fired the fish up and figured out how to make them bite where he could catch them. He ignored fish splashing and carrying on over deep water as they chased shad, instead focusing on those shallower fish that were chasing bait up onto the flat.

“Those fish over deep water are wandering and generally aren’t the better fish,” VanDam said. “I keep working the shallower area where the bigger fish have showed themselves and trigger them with fast erratic retrieves. I don’t want them to get a great look at it until I kill it.”

Speed and erratic retrieves are aspects many anglers miss. As we watched him work the fish, it was like he was two steps ahead of them, playing to their impulses. Where many anglers are just casting and winding, he seemed to will them to bite with the fast stop and go tease. It was like he was telling the fish to bite or he was going to take it away from them. And it seemed as he intersected one particular high spot on the flat he could draw a good fish to come in a take a swing at the bait.

If you’re out fishing and the fish are showing themselves but not taking the baits, try the one two punch. A subtle change in color, action, depth can often be what was holding a fish back. Speed up the baits and play a game of cat and mouse with the bass. Tease them with the baits moving it over their heads quickly and the follow it up with a slightly different bait and stop and go and pause it. And then let us know how and when it works for you.


Bass Fishing Feature | No Need for a Fat Lip

  
  
  
  
  
  
Scroggins with a nice bass on his lipless crank the Xcalibur XR50

Throughout the history of bass fishing, there have been a handful of baits that have become essential to every angler’s arsenal. A bait that you just can’t leave home without. One that catches fish throughout the year. A bait that falls in the same category with the jig, spinnerbait  and plastic worm. One such bait that produces tons of bites, especially in the fall, is the lipless crankbait.

The versatility of the bait is no doubt the reason it has such a strong following with anglers all over the country. It can be fished throughout the water column and around all types of cover. Available in a plethora of shapes, sizes, colors, and sounds, just selecting the right rattle bait can be a daunting task. Pair this with the different lines, rods and various cover scenarios and fishing a lipless crankbait becomes a lot more complicated than just chunking and winding.

For Toyota Tundra pro and Florida native Terry Scroggins, the first factor is geographical. 

“It really all depends on what part of the country you’re in,” said Scroggins.

For grass lakes like Lake Guntersville, Scroggins likes to throw an Excalibur Xr50 with braided line. The braid may cost you a few bites, but overall it will increase your hook-up ratio. Also when fishing the grass, braided line is a must since its low stretch allows Scroggins to rip the bait out of the grass. This triggers many of the strikes in this style fishery.

The same pattern of reeling the bait right along the grass can be used down in Florida on lakes like Toho and Okeechobee. One way to garner more bass when fishing an area for multiple days is by changing up the sound of your bait. In situations where Scroggins feels there are still bass in an area, he’ll swap to an Excalibur One Knocker, a bait with the same profile but a much more defined singular sound.

“There are a lot of lipless crankbaits on the market, but the One Knocker is extremely different. The sound that it offers is unique. That alone will get you a lot more bites sometimes,” Scroggins said.  

With lakes in the south that have shell beds, Scroggins will move up a size to the 3/4-ounce Excalibur Xr75. Using a “yo-yo” retrieve, he will simply throw the bait out and let it sink to the bottom, lifting it once it hits bottom then letting the bait fall again.

“Keep your rod in about a 10 o’clock position and lift it to about a 12 o’clock position, just pumping it up off the bottom and letting it fall,” said Scroggins.

When employing this technique, most of the strikes will come on the fall. Both braid and fluorocarbon have their advantages with this technique, though the fluorocarbon is easier to use and may allow more bites. The braid definitely increases the hookup ratio since most of the bites come on the fall, and the hookset has to be extremely quick.

When the shell beds are along ledges on lakes like Kentucky and Wheeler, Scoggins will parallel the ledge and throw at a 45-degree angle on top of the ledge where he can work the bait back along the ledge gradually letting it fall into deeper water. Most of the bites will come right when the bait makes the initial drop from the top of the ledge.


Small modifications to the presentation can increase the number of bites and hookups, especially when fishing grass and yo-yoing the bait. Scroggins always moves up a hook size when fishing these two patterns. He’ll also attach a 15’ fluorocarbon leader to his braid.

“I think it’s important to have a fluorocarbon leader tied on to your braid. To me I think it gets you a few more bites,” Scroggins said.

Scroggins uses 15-pound High Seas Fluorocarbon and 30- to 40-pound braid.

Once the baitfish reach the pockets, Scroggins will follow suit. He’ll cover water with either a Xr25 or Xr50 depending on the size of the particular baitfish. This is as simplistic as the retrieve gets for him but a little inconsistency still goes along way.

“Just like you would do with a diving crankbait, with the stop and go retrieve, I’ll do the same with that lipless,” said Scroggins.  

This stop-and-go method will often trigger fish that have located the bait and are trailing it. A falling rattle bait looks a lot like a dying shad. When the bait suddenly stops right in front of their face, they basically run into it and will often go ahead and strike.

Scroggins relies heavily on the “anything different” pattern when targeting bass in the fall. The basic principal that keys fishermen in on stumps, docks, brush or any other cover is that what they’re fishing is different from the surrounding habitat. So when Scroggins is targeting fish on a flat he will look for a ditch running through it. This ditch or channel will group fish up just like a ledge will farther offshore.

Scroggins keeps his color choice pretty simple in the fall. Water clarity is the determining factor. If the water is stained, he’ll throw a blue back chrome, a light gold or ghost which is a clear brown. In dirty water he reverts to a Lemon Lime color which won him a BASS Open back in 2007 on Lake Toho.

Rod choice is dependent on the particular employment of his lipless crankbait.

“I use a little stiffer rod than most people do, especially if I am yo-yoing an Xr75,” Scroggins said.

For this technique he’ll use a Duckett Micro Magic 7’ 3” Medium Heavy. Length is important because it allows you to pull back and hook the fish when you feel that bite on the fall.

When covering water with an Xr25 or Xr50, he will typically go with a 7’ Medium action Duckett Micro Magic rod. He uses straight 12- to 15-pound High Seas fluorocarbon with this technique.

Remember in the fall, even though the main focus is moving shallow with the bait, there are still fish to be had on the ledges, shell beds and grass lines of the main lake. Experimenting with different locations and retrieves is the best way to locate fish and trigger strikes. Don’t give up on the lipless crankbait too soon. If the bass aren’t reacting to a steady retrieve, try pausing, pumping or yo-yoing the bait.

When offshore or in the grass, use braid and bigger hooks for an increase in hookups. For more bites, try incorporating a fluorocarbon leader. Match the hatch with size and color when covering water shallow but look to do something a little different if the fish are heavily pressured.

Fall bass fishing can be some of the best all year, and the lipless crankbait should always be rigged and ready to be a part of it.  These tips and time covering water with a productive bait like the lipless crankbait will make your search for the right bass more fruitful.


Bass Fishing Feature | Vibrate the Four Corners

  
  
  
  
  
  
Andy Montgomery holds up a nice bass he caught fishing a vibrating jig on dock corners

Fishing for bass around docks with bladed jigs can yield big catches

Covering the “four corners of the earth” was always a funny phrase growing up, bass fishing notwithstanding. The fact that the earth is a sphere and thus has no corners, always made that phrase peculiar. Granted when the phrase was uttered the first time, man still thought the earth was flat like a map and thus it had four corners. But the phrase itself means to cover the entire thing from every end, corner or point on it.

In bass fishing, covering water or a piece of cover thoroughly is the name of the game, especially when the bass aren’t really aggressive and feeding. That four corner philosophy really separates casual anglers from very successful professional anglers.

Common pieces of cover found on most lakes and reservoirs from every corner of the country are manmade docks. There is a lot to be said about for fishing docks. And fishing a lake covered in docks can seem like a nightmare to a bass angler trying to break down a lake. The fact is the more method you can put to the madness of trying to narrow down which docks and which parts of which docks, the more success you’re going to have on a fishery and as a fisherman in general.

There are some names that come to mind when you mention different techniques. Biffle and Brauer pop into mind when you hear the phrase flipping and pitching. Kevin Van Dam and David Fritts come to mind when you mention crankbaits and fishing jigs around docks a few names come to mind there. But one name really wowed us a few years ago on the tournament trail fishing around docks.

Andy Montgomery of Grover, N.C. is a rising star on the Bassmaster Elite Series. He already has a B.A.S.S. Open win to his credit not to mention his recent 8th place finish in the FLW Forrest Wood Cup this past August. Montgomery belongs in the conversation with best ever around docks. Trust us. We’ve seen him work first hand in tournaments. But he humbly shies away from all the attention around his fishing.

“Guys get in the boat with me and immediately they want me to go fish docks and show them how I do it,” Montgomery said. “I don’t really know why. I like to catch them around docks, but I like to fish other ways too. The funniest time was when Rob Newell followed me at an FLW Tournament and he had another newspaper guy with him. I heard that guy utter an expletive after I slid a chatterbait up under a dock several casts in a row. Newell told him to sit down because he was ‘fixin’ to get schooled.’”

Montgomery just shrugs it off, but his prowess around docks comes from a surprising simple approach and a heck of a lot of time spent perfecting his casts and presentations around docks, having grown up around Lake Norman, which is literally covered in docks.


His approach often revolves around three sorts of jigs – a standard flipping jig, a swimming jig and a vibrating bladed jig. The latter is what we were most intrigued about, but knowing his system involves all three is interesting.

“Basically if the dock is in shallow water, I will fish a flipping jig on the bottom because the band of the water column is much narrower,” Montgomery said. “But as the water gets deeper on the docks, the fish might not come up or down as far and the fish have more of a tendency to suspend under the floats. That’s when I get a swim jig or a vibrating jig and fish around the floats more. The shallower docks get the bottom bouncing jig and the deeper docks get the more horizontal jigs.”

We talked targeting the docks with bottom bouncing jigs earlier this year with Gerald Swindle, so the focus of this discussion will stick with attacking docks while bass fishing with vibrating bladed jigs.

Montgomery, like his long-time friend and former fishing partner, Bryan Thrift, was fortunate to come up fishing around the area where the original Chatterbait was developed. So he’s been throwing the productive bass fishing longer than most people have known about it. He had the original owners pour him up a lifetime supply of heads and blades and he puts his own together now with skirts of his choice and his own keeper that locks trailers onto the lure so that he can do what he loves best with it.

“I get asked all the time why a Chatterbait and not a spinnerbait around docks,” Montgomery said. “It’s simple. I use a vibrating jig because it skips. Skipping is sometimes the only way to get the lure where I want to fish it. So I get a thumping active lure in a place where a lot of bass haven’t seen it.”

Montgomery’s skipping prowess is far beyond that of the average casting ability of most anglers. But with practice, everyone can get to the level of master skipper like Montgomery. But the learned skill is necessary to cover all the angles efficiently on a dock. Montgomery considers it imperative that you cover all four corners of a floating dock.

“The bass will often suspend right under the floats on the corners. So if you can bring a bait real close to each corner, you can find where they are positioned on each dock. If there is current present, it can position the fish in the same places on every dock in a stretch. So you want to make multiple casts to each corner to help establish the position of the fish relative to the docks and the surroundings.”

There are generally four corners to every dock. The back left, front left, front right and back right. Obviously they will have more slips in some than others and that can give you additional corners to target. The key is to bring the vibrating jig across the corners from various angles. The skipping comes into play when you want to get back behind the float, under a support beam and work the bait just under the corner.

Montgomery demonstrated this in a recent outing. He ran a series of docks. They were pulling current that day, and the stretch of docks were mostly single slip docks with 4 corners or just mooring docks with no slips. As he approached the dock from the left he hit the back corner. Then the front corner. Then he repositioned in front and hit the left front corner again. Then the right corner, then he positioned on the downstream right side of the dock and skipped up under a support beam. Just as the Chatterbait reached the dock, a 3-pound bass jumped out from under the dock and grabbed the bait.

He hit several more docks and caught a few more fish. In one stretch in 20 minutes, he had patterned the fish on docks suspending on the back, down current floats. Dialing in a pattern that specific can allow you to run a lot more water a lot faster.

Montgomery advises using a rod that matches your height for making the low roll cast you need to slide the bait into tight places. He’s a tall angler at 6-foot, 4-inches, so he can get away with a 7-foot, 2-inch Fetha Styx rod. But we’ve found that a 6-foot, 6-inch to 6-foot, 10-inch rod makes shooting a bait at a low angle with some velocity a lot easier if you’re legs aren’t quite as long. He also cautions anglers to focus on a rod that is 80 percent backbone and 20 percent tip. That way you can really load and sling shot a bait with a small wrist action.

Montgomery fishes it on 20-pound line opting for either monofilament or fluorocarbon. He’s thrown a lot of vibrating jigs. He still likes the Original Chatterbait heads he got from Rad Lures. It’s now made by Z-Man. One thing he likes about that head and the design is that when it contacts grass or some sort of cover, he can “bully whip” hard to free it and then start cranking again. Because the head and blade are not too separated, the Chatterbait will immediately start running true again. That often triggers fish to bite.

If the vibrating jig is made differently and the blade has too much play, he often finds when he snaps the rod hard, the blade will rotate and catch and cause the jig to sort of just snag through the water without vibrating anymore. As a result you miss the key moment in the retrieve when the fish is often trigger and ready to pounce but the bait no longer looks and swims like something alive.

He also has learned to tie Hitchhikers onto the shanks of the hooks with thread. He locks this onto his hook to hold his keeper tightly in place. Most keepers on vibrating jigs won’t hold the plastic in place after repeated skipping of the bait.  The hitchhiker can really make the difference. The plastic actually aids with skipping the bait with it threaded all the way up the shank.

It’s always good to share a boat with someone who has mastered a certain technique or approach to bass fishing.  And after seeing Montgomery work a stretch of docks, we had an uncontrollable itch to fish docks ourselves. How about you? How effective has your fall dock fishing been this season?



More Great Fall Fishing Articles from Wired2Fish:

Fishing Crankbaits for Bass on the Last Drops
Fishing for Schooling Bass in the Fall
Flat Out Topwaters
Burning Spinnerbaits and Churning Vibrating Jigs
Docktor G Operates - Fishing Docks for Bass

Five for 5 | Five Must Have Bass Fishing Boat Tools

  
  
  
  
  
  
Wired2Fish Plano Toolbox for bass fishing boats


Buying a boat should include tools. Not because a boat isn’t built well, but because anything can happen on the water.

A while back while riding in an unnamed Elite Series pro’s boat for practice for the Bassmaster Classic, we needed some tools for a minor repair.

“They are in the back compartment,” he said.

While digging in an old tackle box in that compartment, I found a rusted mess of “tools” that were welded together, gummed up and in a condition that even Royal Purple Maxfilm couldn’t repair. They were sitting in a puddle of water in the bottom of the box.  The pliers we needed were in such bad shape that both of us pulling on either handle couldn’t open them.

It was right then I made a commitment to build a Plano Dry box with the proper tools and to keep them in a dry compartment. I have them in both my little boat and my big boat and will not leave the dock without them.

There are 5 tools that are mandatory in that kit.

1.    An adjustable wrench - We call them  Crescent wrenches here in the Midwest, and it’s a tool that can be used on a variety of sizes of nuts and bolts. They can be used to both tighten and loosen depending on the need and a good one should have tight adjustments to keep from slipping.

2.    A multi-bit screwdriver or cordless screwdriver - There are all sorts of screwdrivers that feature replaceable bits to give you a phillips head, flat head or even allen or star head for tightenting loose screws, removing equipment, replacing broken equipment and more. We found that a handy battery powered screwdriver that accepts other bits is invaluable at times on the water.

3.    A pair of needle nose pliers - multiple sets of these pliers should be on every boat. They can be used to cut and repair wire, bend a hook, tighten or loosen a part or get into a tight space to fix something. Not to mention they are handy for unhooking fish.

4.    A set of Allen wrenches - These are handy all over the boat and include both regular Allen sizes and star shapes used on many bass boats today. Many people call these torques. Both sets should be included.

5.    A pair of cutters - These should be of the heavy duty variety and can be used to crimp as well. I have a set that cut and crimp and they too have rubberized handles. They are handy for tightening connections, repairing them and also great for cutting errant hooks and wires that could be tangled in you or the boat prop. I have seen crab traps, fence, rope, old line  and other wire get tangled in a prop and they work perfectly to remove it.

Take the time, build the kit and throw in some electrical tape, fuses and connectors too. Use one of the variety of Plano waterproof boxes to store it all. They fit nicely in the boat and don’t leak.


Bass Fishing Feature | Frogs of a Different Feather

  
  
  
  
  
  
Shaw Grigsby loves bass fishing with a frog
Frogs and grass go together like peanut butter and jelly, caramel and apples, burgers and fries. Now that we’re all hungry on the thought of food, we can probably relate to the bass and their affection for hollow bodied frogs. We’re not even sure if the bass thinks a hollow bodied frog is a frog, but he knows it’s something good to eat.

But what several savvy pros know trips up anglers too much is where they opt to throw a frog. Most anglers pigeon-hole their frogs like vegetarian friends. They only reach for them when there is some green leafy stuff present. The fact is it’s not the cover that makes bass eat a frog. It’s the way the frog looks that makes them eat it.

“I think a frog is a topwater jig,” said Strike King pro and avid shallow water expert, Greg Hackney of Gonzalez, La. “A frog gets you big bites, just like a jig does. It’s a big meal for a big bass, and what’s nice is that it gives me the opportunity to fish a jig slowly on the bottom and on the top with a similar result.”

Obviously Hackney doesn’t think the frog looks like a jig or a crawfish, but the profile is something the bass likes and reacts to with a vengeance. The key is putting it in front of a bass. That’s where most guys limit themselves. They think a frog is just a grass lure. But it is that and so much more.


Veteran Bassmaster Elite Series angler and television personality Shaw Grigsby of Florida, knows a thing or two about fishing a frog. He lives in a prime area to practice and study a frog's effectiveness as it’s a very natural forage for fish in his neck of the woods. But he’s found it works in many other places as well.

“Any time there is a topwater bite going, I will have a frog on the deck,” he said. “It’s not just for grass, and on tour, I’ve probably caught more bass on frogs away from grass than around it because a lot of the fisheries we visit don’t have any grass.”

The magic of a good hollow bodied frog in water other than matted grass is its ability to walk. If a frog can’t walk or even just hop along, slapping its nose on the surface to create an attractor for the bass, then it’s not worth much to an angler. You need to be able to move it and give off almost a waking appearance to the bass. It’s more like a buzzbait than say a popper in more open water situations.

Speaking of situations, there are several that really stood out to both of these pros.

“I really like it around docks,” Hackney said. “I’ve caught some really big bass fishing it around docks. It’s so good because you can throw it as hard as you want under pontoons, walkways, floats and more and most of the time it won’t get hung up because it’s so snagless.”


Hackney demonstrated for us in a marina on Kentucky Lake. And wouldn’t you know it, he proved his point when a big bass blew up all over his frog and stripped drag before pulling off. Hackney shrugged it off as punishment for not checking that his drag was backed off.

“That’s what I get for not checking my drag,” he said. “But you can see how effective it is in this situation now.”

He was applying the same principals he does with a jig around cover. Trying to hit corners, angles, ambush points with frog to give the bass the best chance to pounce.

Grigsby echoed what he said about other pieces of cover.

“I fish it around wood, rock, man made cover and more,” Grigsby said. “It doesn’t matter what’s there. It just matters that the bass is there and feeding on top.”

Both anglers like a heavy power rod with a little tip action for casting the frogs and heavy 65-pound braid. Both anglers opt for Quantum rods and reels for their fishing. Hackney was fishing his frog on a Quantum Smoke rod with a Quantum Energy PT reel. While Grigsby opted for a Quantum Smoke reel and an older Quantum rod he’s had for a long time. He also likes the Smoke rods and Tour PT Rods for frog fishing.


Hackney pays close attention to the frog and makes slight alterations to make it work like he wants. For getting the frog to walk like he likes, he will trim a few strands off each leg. Rather than shortening the legs, he likes to make less of them on each side.

Many anglers don’t realize that frogs float flat with more buoyancy from their legs in the back. So the more you remove the more the rear end weight will sit down in the water. So he starts slow, trimming just one or two strands and then checking how the frog walks. He cautions anglers to go slow because once you remove legs you can’t add them back.

Both Hackney and Grigsby love the new KVD Sexy Frog from Strike King. The frog walks really well and looks good sitting in the water. They are also hard at work designing a bunch of new colors.

“The more you cut off the frog legs the more the frog will roll and walk,” Hackney said. “That’s good around more open cover but you don’t want to trip too much off around grass because it will roll on it’s side a little more and become more snag prone. But allowing it to roll and walk lets the bass see those paint jobs on the sides and top better and gives them more to react to around other forms of cover and open water.”

Hackney and Shaw have a lot of confidence with frogs around other cover because of how many big bass they’ve caught fishing for bass with it. They work the frog with very small twitches of the rod tip in a downward angle, making sure to give the frog slack to let it do its thing. The nice thing is a frog works in dirty water as well as clear water because it has a real natural presentation. It can be cast hard and fast or pitched into tight places making it versatile in many more situations than most bass fishermen realize.

Fall is a frog weather and the bass are feeding up for a long winter. Now is a good chance to  catch some big bass on topwater lures. And if there is some sort of cover, a frog can give you an advantage without all the treble hooks to cause problems. Laydowns, stump, docks and even rip rap can be productive frog water. It’s not just for grass. It’s big profile and a natural presentation can attract some big bites for anglers bass fishing this fall.

New Tackle Announcement | Hag's Undertaker Jr. Released

  
  
  
  
  
  
Hag's Tornado Undertaker Junior new craw fish bass fishing lure


Tommy Hagler sent us some of his new Undertaker Junior soft baits. We liked the original Undertaker, but the profile is made for much larger bass. In some fisheries the profile of a bait can limit your bites and options if the fish are keyed in on certain profiles. Sometimes big baits catch big bass. And sometimes big baits catch no bass.

Hagler listened to the feedback his new Undertaker Junior is the "perfect" profile in our opinion for flipping and pitching and even maybe better as a jig trailer. We really like the texture and softness of the baits, the curved legs that really move water and the ring body. The size is perfect at about 2 to 4 inches. The body is about 2 inches then another inch for the claws and maybe another inch for the antennae.

The bait is pretty verasatile as well. We pulled the top two pinchers off and gave it more of the typical craw worm profile and think it could be dynamite on a jighead for ultra clear water as well. The baits offer 8 per pack.


New Tackle Announcement | Reaction Innovations Kinky Beaver

  
  
  
  
  
  
KinkyBeaverLoResAndre Moore and the team at Reaction Innovations have come up with some of the most innovative designs in bass fishing. The Sweet Beaver has won numerous tournaments and millions of dollars in tournament winnings. The Skinny Dipper too has won many tournaments and caught many large bass around the spawn and grass. The Vixen was a cult classic of topwater walking baits. Even the Swamp Donkey was a uniquely different frog.

Now they've taken the success of their Sweet Beaver and built from that frame a new craw that adds a lot of action to an already dynamite flipping and pitching bait. The new Kinky Beaver features the same unique ribbed spade of a body but the tails are completely new.

Two large profile flappers extend out from the body at opposing anglers, but the flappers themselves feature unique edges that grab the water and force the legs to kick. In the center of the body extends two skinny hooked antennae. These four appendages along with the two tear drops made famous on the original Beaver really give this new Kinky Beaver a lot of action and water displacement.

The baits are same basic size as the original Sweet Beaver and will be available in all the same great colors with new ones in the works.

The first shipments of the Kinky Beaver should leave the factory in the upcoming week or two so be on the lookout for these baits from your local retailers and online retailers like TackleWarehouse.com very soon.


Fishing Crankbaits for Bass on the Last Drops

  
  
  
  
  
  


Speed can be your greatest weapon and knowing where to employ it for fall bass fishing

So we’re continuing our feature series on tips to help you catch more bass while fishing in the fall. We’ve talked about bass fishing with spinnerbaits and vibrating skirted jigs. Then we took you through some great tips for walking topwaters in the fall. Then we followed it up with some great advice about being smart with schooling bass in the fall.

One approach that is very effective is working backwards out and speed fishing some specific crankbaits on the last breaks in a creek arm. Sounds like a mouthful when you read it or speak it. But burning crankbaits has been effective for fall bass for since anglers first started fishing for bass with them.

Bassmaster Elite Series pro and well-schooled crankbait aficionado Russ Lane loves this time of year.

“The fall is all about bait,” said Lane. “Mostly on the lakes in the south, the primary forage is shad. Now not all shad will do this, but a lot of them will migrate all the way to the backs of the creek arms with well defined creeks for the freshwater influxes. As the water cools more, there will be schools of bass that setup on the last drops heading to the back of the creeks. Then as they come further back out they will stage on channel swing banks.”

Obviously the bass move a lot in the fall. This isn’t the time of the year to sit on one spot all day. You’re looking in key areas, and often going to the backs of the creeks and idling out looking for those last drops can be a great place to start. By going to those big flats in the backs of the bays and then looking for the first key drop, you can often find the better fish staying away from the schools of bass chasing the little schoolers around the flats.

Lane seeks bays and creek arms that have well-defined creeks in them because they will have the most defined breaks in the backs of their bays. But he also wants there to be shallow flats. The combination of these two things will make one creek arm more attractive to another for this bass fishing stick. With the breaks and flats he can find the fish regardless of what mood or conditions present themselves by just moving from one area to another once he finds schools as conditions change, especially in tournament situations.



What Lane has found is the better fish are on the secondary locations, in those mid-range 8 to 12-foot zones. While schools of 2-pounders might be raiding shad and other forage up on the flats and points, he often finds better groups of bass staging on those last breaks. It may only be a few feet difference on the last channel edge in the back of a bay. It often is the last channel swing before the end of the bay. A good map, map chip and GPS can make the search for these swings a lot easier.

Once he finds the right area he has a handful of baits he’ll attack these schools with from his bass fishing arsenal. But his newest weapon might be his best.

“I actually designed a bait for fishing what I call those secondary locations,” Lane said. “Fish often hang in that 8 to 12-foot range because they are chased off the bank by angling pressure and they aren’t all the way out on the main breaks from summer anymore. So they are in between. The new Spro Big Daddy Strike was made just for fishing these types of situations.”

The Spro Big Daddy Strike will run 8-12 feet deep. A few unique characteristics separate this bait from some of its competitors. It was designed to have a wide wobble, which you want for the fall fishing season. But sometimes fishing a wide-wobbling, hard-pulling crankbait can wear out the best bass fishing anglers.

So Lane and the Spro designers went through several iterations of the bait to get one that had a great smooth roll, that you could burn all day and not wear yourself out. Lane uses the extra fast retrieves to trigger fish and elicit a competitive response from the bass.

He sticks with the shad patterns like Nasty Shad and Nasty Herring on the bright and calmer days and goes with brighter and white colors on darker days. When the bass quit reacting to his speed offering, he’ll drop it down in 4-wheel drive and put a reverse move on the bass. When a school quits biting and before going to his backup baits, he’ll completely change colors to a bright chartreuse colored bait, and he’ll just crawl the crankbait through the area.

“I have some amazing catches when I throw the change-up on them like that,” Lane said. “I’ll have the fish biting like crazy on a real natural pattern burning through the school. Then they seem to shut off and I start crawling a bright colored crank through there and they fire off again.”

Lane controls the depth of his bait with his line choices. When he wants to keep it up high in 8 feet of water, he’ll go with 14-pound Sunline monofilament. When he wants to tick the bottom in 12 feet of water, he’ll go with 12-pound Sunline Sniper. He’ll carry several rods rigged for fishing various depths.

The last thing he’ll do before he leaves one of those schools he finds on those breaks and swings is cast a few backup baits on them. His two backup baits of choice are a Buckeye Lures Football Jig with a Big Bite Baits Yo Daddy trailer and a Carolina-rigged Big Bite Baits Kriet Tail worm.

“I’ve really cleaned up in the fall with these baits,” Lane said. “I hit them fast and hard with the crankbaits and then mix it up at the end with the slower bottom bouncers. The temperatures aren’t the dictating factors as much as the shorter days and the bait movements. If I find a school of fish, I’m going to hit them with all three baits until I feel like I’ve exhausted the school and then I’ll move off and look for another and let those fish rest. But it can be a lot of fun when they are eating that crankbait zipping by really fast!”



Fishing for Schooling Bass in the Fall

  
  
  
  
  
  



These tips will help you find and trick more bass into biting this fall with over abundances of forage


Fall is finally here. As the air temperatures plummet so too does the warmth of the water. And with cooler water come shad. Big balls of beautiful shad running for their life just below the surface. But it’s what lurks a few feet beneath that light ripple that builds anticipation with anglers. When a bass’s mouth meets the top of the water and snaps shut around a shad, it’s pure music to an angler’s ears.

The sudden eruption of a busting bass has turned many an anglers’ head with a sudden jolt. This reflex is known well by Straight Talk pro Scott Canterbury. He cut his fishing teeth capitalizing on these frantic feeders along the shad infested shores of Logan Martin. Fishing for both spots and largemouth feasting on this forage in the fall, he’s found there are times when catching them isn’t as easy as one might think.

Matching the hatch is something that anglers have done for years in order to catch fish whether they are relating to bream, crawfish, shad or some other forage. This approach, however, is not always best when targeting schooling fish early in the fall.

As the fall begins, shad will often out run the bass to the shallows. This creates a bit of a problem. When there’s a ton of shad shallow and only a handful of predatory fish, matching the hatch is not the best bet. There is no reason for a bass to eat something that looks almost like the real thing when the real deal is so prevalent. Instead Canterbury will go with something a little different.


“You can’t compete with the real thing when they can get it that easily so I’ll use a lot of the same shad imitating baits but I might go with an off the wall color like chartreuse.”

At times like these, the best bait to catch fish relating to shad may not be a shad imitating bait at all.

“There’s times when you can actually catch schooling fish by throwing something like a Carolina rig with a finesse worm on it better than you can catch them on a shad imitating bait,” Canterbury said.

Wind, or the lack there of, will also play into Canterbury’s decision to use more of a finesse approach. Calm conditions make bass more likely to second guess an angler’s offering. Canterbury not only opts for the Carolina rig to catch the more wary bass but may also employ a fluke or scrounger. These baits offer a less intimidating option and an easier target for an already stuffed bass.

One might think of these finesse baits as the “cheese puff” of a bass’s diet. Bass are opportunists by nature, a lot like humans. It doesn’t matter if I just had a 16-ounce ribeye, if someone offers me a cheese puff, I’ll typically take it because you never know when that next cheese puff will come along. If you’re not a fan of cheese puffs, then feel free to plug your favorite delectable vice into this analogy.

There comes a time, however, when steaks, shad, become a little less available. More and more bass move shallow as the fall progresses. Once more bass find the shad, they become a little easier to catch. This is when matching the hatch with moving baits takes precedence. The larger number of bass creates competition and suddenly bass are a lot less picky.

Lipless crankbaits, shallow running crankbaits, topwaters and jerkbaits all offer viable options for bringing in bass when they are feeding below the surface.
 
Chasing schooling fish on a flat or in open water can drive an angler mad and burn up a set of trolling motor batteries. A lipless crankbait offers a great option when the bass are popping up in several locations.

Not only does it have the profile of a shad but it can also be fished at a constant level helping pick apart the strike zone. But the most appealing characteristic of these baits is their ability to reach the fish. For this reason Canterbury prefers the Jackall TN60 and TN70. These baits have a built in tungsten lip and this little variation helps him fire the bait even further which can really make a difference with hard to reach fish.

Flat sided, shallow running square bills like the Jackall Bling 55, Strike King 1.5 and Spro Fat John are also great options. Not only do they mirror the profile of a shad but they also offer the erratic action of fleeing baitfish. These are great baits to use when the shad are around cover like laydowns, stumps and rocks. They do a great job of bouncing off the cover and imitating an injured shad.

Whether Canterbury is fishing lipped or lipless cranks, one thing he always varies his retrieve. Pumping, twitching and pausing the bait can add to that erratic action and make the bait stand out from the other shad. However the most important part of the retrieve is the speed.

“Speed is crucial in the fall,” Canterbury said. “Sometimes fish can see your bait too well. A lot of people think they are fishing it too fast, and they’ll slow down and can’t get bit. You’re not fishing it fast enough a lot of times.”

Canterbury will also throw a jerkbait much earlier in the year than many anglers. It’s something that he has a lot of confidence in and is another great shad imitation.

Sometimes there can be hundreds of fish in an area. Although this offers a lot of excitement for the weekend angler, it can become an issue in a tournament situation where so much time is wasted digging treble hooks out of non-culls.

There are a few baits that can be used to pick the bigger fish out of a school. Targeting the schools with a 5-inch swimbait or spinnerbait can deter some of the smaller fish. This approach may result in fewer bites but can produce some of the better fish.

When targeting schooling bass in the fall, it’s best to remember that matching the hatch isn’t always the best bet, especially early on when the number of bass pales in comparison to the number of shad. Sometimes bass fishing with something a little different or a little more subtle like a Carolina rig or a soft plastic jerkbait can be just enough to entice the more finicky bass. Once more bass find the shad, your moving baits are a great option but shouldn’t be simply cast and reeled. Experimenting with the retrieve will help determine exactly how the bass want the bait that day.


More fall bass fishing articles from Wired2Fish.com:

Cover Class | Bass Fishing around Culverts and Drains

  
  
  
  
  
  
bass fishing around drains and culverts can yield some huge catches

Bass Fishing, or any type of fishing for that matter, is all about understanding fish, understanding the habitat around them and how they relate to it and understanding the best tools for each situation that arise surrounding said habitat.  Outside of that, we often make fishing harder than it really is. It can be as simple as finding some cover and fishing it effectively at the right time.

In the last Cover Class, we talked about stake beds, a man-made structure that often attracts baitfish which in turn attracts bass, crappie and various other species of fish. These pieces of cover are placed in lakes manually for the sole purpose of attracting fish. Another man-made structure serves a more practical purpose but can attract fish even better at times.

A culvert or a concrete drain is also a man-made structure on various fisheries. Sometimes it’s nothing more than a way to funnel runoff rains into a body of water from different areas where you don’t water pooling. Other times it’s used to control over filling and refilling of backwater areas. Some guys have fished through them to the other side to reach a promise land of bass, like John Cox showed us in the FLW Tour event on the Red River this year.

But the actual drain itself can be a bass magnet at various times of the year.

In the spring, warm rains can send much warmer water into the lake and the bass will roam around the drains staying closer to the warmer water and chasing forage that often congregates. During the summer, the current can put fresh oxygen into the water and create an easy feeding zone for the bass. In the fall, these hard structures can often create ambush points and running water is usually not as prevalent in the fall, but they can be very attractive fish holders when they are flowing water into a bay or creek.

Understanding how the fish will position on these structures leads anglers to better catches. Often depth is the critical factor in how you should fish them. If they are in shallow water, moving baits can work well. If they are on steeper backs as they often are, they can provide great cover, fresh water and are perfect for more contact oriented baits like jigs and Senkos.

The first 20 pound limit I ever caught on Kentucky Lake was fishing a runoff area with the majority of the fish coming from a hard concrete drain. We were catching the fish leading up to the concrete structure and going away from it with shallow crankbaits in very cool water in early spring. Some 60-70 degree days brought warm rains that brought an influx of very warm water into the lake. Each time we made a pass by the concrete drain, we would pitch jigs and shaky heads into it and let them tumble away from it. Nearly every pass we connected with good fish. From nice spotted bass to big largemouths to very thick smallmouths, every type of bass seemed to be feeding in and around the drain.

Vic Vatalaro won his first tour level bass fishing tournament on Lake Dardanelle in August of 2009. He used his side imaging to scan along flooded banks in a few bays and found where the drains and culverts were completely submerged in the muddy water. The water was coming out of the backwater areas and was actually a little cleaner and refreshed than the mud-filled rest of the fishery. The current was pushing the mud away from the structures. He was able to pitch tubes and shaky heads around the structures to catch enough bass in one of the toughest FLW Series tournaments on record.

The biggest stringer of bass I’ve personally ever caught weigh 29 pounds, 5 ounces. I caught all of the bass pitching a senko in and around the current that was blowing out of a concrete drain in a small lake in Northern Arkansas. The lake was cold but was warming and the fish were grouped up waiting for the water to get warmer so they could move shallow. The drain had 20 to 30 feet of water out in front of it. I tried fishing a drop shot out in front of it, but it wasn’t until I started pitching a Senko next to the current of the drain and just letting it sink slowly that I started catching big bass.

My theory is the current was coming out of the drain so hard that the baitfish would get disoriented and sort of spin out of the current into the slack water next to it and the bass were waiting with their mouths open in the slack water. I caught six bass weighing more than 5 pounds that day. My five biggest were 29 pounds and change; all caught on light line and a Yamamoto Senkos rigged weightless. It was a painful way to fish, letting that bait fall sometimes 20 feet before seeing my line jump or start tightening up.  But understanding how the fish were relating to the drain and the current from the drain was the key to the big catch.

Jigs are a great tool around culverts and drains, as are soft plastics and crankbaits.  You can deflect and ricochet off the structures themselves and tumble around in the current often found near them. Be sure to check your line often, especially when fishing around the metal variety. These places often have rebar, rip rap rock, rusted metal and other line destroying obstacles to be concerned with when fighting bass.

We love to fish drains and culverts when the timing is right. Current can often be key but even slack water can hold fish because the hard structure is a regular feeding area for bass. A Rapala Shad Rap, a small Eakins Jig, a shaky head and a Zoom Trick worm and a Strike King 1.5 Square Bill are some of our favorites. How about you? What baits have you found that are real drain and culvert killers for you?



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