After work smallies
Got out for a few hours today and caught this nice one on a white swim jig. It’s a good start for the June SUF tournament.
I'll be in Florida June 23-27 filming for the school and tv. Anyone in here from the Kissimmee chain of lakes?
What knots are you using for your frog fishing? This is the one I use...
Are You Using This Knot Whe...
Guess what.... BOBBY BARRACK IS DOING LIVE WITH US THURSDAY. 8pm you better be there or driver's licenses could be iin jeopardy... I'm just saying
someone asked a really good question that I didn't have the answer for today. At least I didn't immediately have the answer. " How can you tell fish are in a summer pattern?" What are you guys thinking?
Here's what I look for..
Most of the time I notice most of the bass vacate bank structure and isolated cover. (generally speaking)
fish seem to be in groups near main lake intersections. ex. Main lake points, humps , grass lines brush etc.
Water temps over 80 ( I don't like this metric because there's so many metrics to consider)
The way the fish looks. This could be beat up tails. The fish can be a little skinnier, and sometimes if we're further into the season the fish can actually be fatter.
schooling activity on the main lake
The hard part about this is that often time depending on the species these "triggers" could be any time of the year. Namely spotted bass and smallmouth. THATS WHERE IT GETS HARD TO EXPLAIN.
If you're fishing isolated cover in creeks and all of a sudden you notice it hard to get bit, most likely your fishery has transitioned to a "summer" stage. Move to the main lake or river and look for schools of fish near any main lake intersection. A intersection would be somewhere a creek meets the main river. Anywhere a a hump or high spot, or ledge is near or on the main river. It may take longer to get bit but once you do there's usually more fish in those areas.
If you're having a shad spawn right now... try this!!! Line through for me eliminates losing bass once they're hooked. Caught two in 15 min.. #secretjuice
This part one of my blueback herring workshop. If you're from the Carolina's or Georgia this should really give some insight. Also I've noticed that some shad lakes, and alewives from northern fisheries behave very similar. There's something in there for you too.
Blueback Herring Part 1