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Tips for Catching Lunkers

Article: January, 2008
Lake Fork Pro Guide Tom Redington Here it is January, the start of another year and time for many of us to make our New Year’s Resolutions. If one of your resolutions is to catch your biggest bass ever, or if you’re just looking to catch big fish on a more regular basis, here are a few tips that I’ve learned over the years.

Timing: When planning a trip well in advance, try to schedule your trophy trips for times that have big fish most accessible, while also matching your fishing style. Prespawn is the undisputed best time on most lakes to catch the biggest bass of the year. Running from January through March on Fork, not only are bass at their highest weights for the year, almost all of the fish in the lake are concentrated in 10’ of water or less. This combination of heavy fish in small areas of the lake makes it the shallow water fisherman’s dream, with jigs, spinnerbaits, and swimbaits being top producers. During the spawn is also a great option if you prefer sight fishing or fishing weightless soft plastics like Magic Shads in the shallows. For deep water fishermen, May through July is an ideal time to catch schools of monster bass on deep structure.

When scheduling trips to nearby lakes on short notice, try to pick the days with ideal conditions. While we all know that the day of a big front can result in awesome fishing, I’ve had many of my best lunker days on the cold, rainy, and windy days after severe cold fronts. Although blustery conditions can be unpleasant for anglers after a front, the water usually takes a day to cool considerably, resulting in a good bite until the skies finally clear and the wind lays down. And speaking of sunny and calm, those are comfortable days to be in the boat, but I normally find the bite to be a lot better on windy and cloudy days. Finally, the best scenario for a bass fisherman is stable conditions. If the water and the weather conditions stay the same for several days, normally the best pattern will stay the same. As a result, once you figure out the fish, you can duplicate your results until the conditions change. Big fronts make for great fishing for a few hours, while stable conditions can make for great fishing for days at a time.

Fishing Style: The best advice I can give you when hunting lunkers is to come early and stay late. It sounds rather simplistic, but there is usually a certain time each day when the fish seem to be “on”. Some days the active period last for a long time, other days it is a short window. Regardless, if you’re not fishing when the bass are actively biting, you’ve missed your best window of opportunity.

During your time on the lake, focus on slightly deeper water and fish key areas very thoroughly. Even when I catch big bass in the very backs of creeks, they’re typically near quick access to deep water, or at least holding slightly deeper than the majority of the bass in the area. Especially in the springtime, your odds of catching a true lunker go up dramatically if you remain two casts away from shore, throwing into the area where most of the boats fishing the shore are sitting. And once you find an area that is holding big fish, work it over very thoroughly. In my experience, productive big fish areas produce consistently each season. In my key spots, I’ll check them several times a day with a number of different lures, making repeated casts to likely areas. It never ceases to amaze me that big fish will often bite after you’ve already made 30 or 40 casts in the area. I’m not sure what eventually triggers those fish to bite, but I do know that if you keep your lure in front of big fish long enough, good things happen.

If you’re perceptive, you’re probably wondering how long to commit to a single spot. There’s a very fine line in fishing between persistence and stubbornness. Throwing a big swimbait or pitching a jig all day for a few big bites is being persistent; not getting a single bump all days tells me that I’m being stubborn and not giving the fish what they want. Personally, I’ve never subscribed to the theory that big fish are loners and if you’re going for a trophy bass, you’re fishing for one bite a day. In most cases, I catch my fish over 10 lbs on days when I’m getting regular bites from 5 to 8 lb bass. If you’re catching quality fish of this size or at least getting bites from them every hour or two, it tells me I’m appealing to bigger bass and to stick with the pattern. If I’ve fished for 6 hours on Fork and caught a couple 5s, a 6.5, and an 8, I feel pretty confident that a lunker could come on any cast. Conversely, if I’ve gone that time without a bite or if I’ve caught 25 fish but none have been over 3 lbs, I figure that I’m not appealing to big bass and it’s time to adjust my pattern.

Lures: While there are lots lures and techniques that’ll catch a big bass, I have a few basic lures that catch the lion’s share of my trophies. First and foremost, a Mega Weight jig with a matching Fork Craw trailer produces big fish both shallow and deep, year round. Big bass love heavy cover, and you can bring a jig through the nastiest wood or grass where the lunkers are hiding. On those post frontal days, I often find bass pulling back from the flats and forming tight schools in creek channel bends or on points. Thoroughly work a jig in these areas and you can catch multiple big fish from a tiny area.

When bass are up on the flats and chasing, a big spinnerbait slow rolled around grass and wood allows you to cover more water than a jig, while still appealing to big bass. For lunkers, I prefer big ¾ to 1.5 oz spinnerbaits, with a full-sized trailer like a Baby Fork Creature or a 4.5” Live Magic Shad. If it’s rainy or windy in the spring, spinnerbaits are normally the first bait I’ll grab.

In recent years, big swimbaits have become major lunker producers as well, due to their lifelike swimming motion and large size. Whether I’m shallow or deep, I’ll always give big swimbaits a try when I’m shooting for monster bass. My current favorite is the 5.5” and giant 8” Live Magic Shads from Lake Fork Trophy Lures (www.lftlures.com). By simply adding weight to a large wide gap hook, I can fish these swimbaits super slow to super fast in 1’ of water to 30’.

The common denominator amongst all these lures is the fact that I can fish all of them very slowly and bring them through heavy cover. While the occasional erratic stop-and-go can trigger a bass to strike, in general, slow retrieves and even leaving a bait motionless is the best retrieve for big fish.

Hopefully these few tips stack the odds in your favor for catching a lot of big fish this season.
Good Fishing,
Tom


Fishing Tip by  Lake Fork Pro Tom Redington

 

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