*****SCROLL DOWN FOR THE LATEST SPAWN MAP UPDATE!****
Bass Spawn Map 4-21 thru 4-27
Weekly Reports
21-27 April
Spring has arrived and warm weather punctuated by brief and minor cold fronts will be the rule rather than the exception. The spawn band has moved little from last week, but warm and stable weather coupled with increasing daylength should light up the bass, and the pre-spawn activity will rapidly advance northward. While some spawning activity will continue, anglers fishing in the southern half of southeastern Atlantic and Gulf coast states will do better focusing on post-spawn bass.
check here each week for updates on what the bass are doing, where they are, and what the pros are catching em on:
http://www.versus.com/blogs/bass-spawn-map/
**Here's what's going on right now!
Maryland and Northeastern Virginia: Potomac River
Robert Pierson reported the bass are spawning in marinas, and this spawning activity should peak this week. The enthusiastic FLW Tour pro from nearby Herndon, Virginia expects the spawn in the bays and pockets off the river to begin this week and be at full throttle with the full moon. Pierson advises anglers fishing the marinas to toss Senkos or a slowly sinking worm to any target that has 6 inches to 4 feet of water around it. For pre-spawn bass in the river pockets and bays, fish spinnerbaits, chatterbaits, and wide-wobbling crankbaits around chunk rock. Slow roll those baits to let the bass kill them. Spots with wood on rock is golden.
Pro's Edge: To catch that important kicker fish, Pierson pitches a black-blue jig with a 3" crawfish trailer to every piece of cover he can find. Use stout line and hold on!
Eastern Tennessee: Fort Loudon
The FLW Tour event is at Fort Loudon and Tellico reservoirs this week. Tour veteran David Walker of nearby Sevierville, Tennessee shared his forecast for the week. The black bass spawn is on. Smallmouth bass are spawning, and many are post spawn. Spotted bass are in the middle of their spawn. The largemouth spawn is just starting. Bed fishing for spots and largemouth can be effective. Check out pockets and bays with the clearest water to see the deeper fish; the best pockets will be in still water at the backs of creeks and bays. Some largemouth and spots will also spawn along main channel banks; Walker advised targeting rocks, trees, and docks on 45 degree banks. Walker pitches lizards, tubes, and compact jigs with shortened trailers to trip the trigger of bedding bass. For transition fish, Walker looks where stretches of bluffs/large rock change to gradual banks with smaller rock. He advises anglers to quickly cover a lot of water with crankbaits, spinnerbaits, and jerkbaits to locate fish, then slow down and thoroughly fish the area with jigs and Texas-rigged or Carolina-rigged soft plastics.
Pro's Edge: When the fishing is tough, Walker fishes weightless soft plastics on banks and around docks. The weightless worms give fish something to look at and, at the same time, makes anglers slow down.
Southwestern Missouri: Table Rock Lake
FLW Tour newcomer Eric Olliverson reported that water temperature is just climbing into the 60s in the lower part of this Ozark Mountains lake. Olliverson prefers to fish in the clearer water in the main lake. He fishes Damiki Striker jerkbaits and single-tail grubs along chunk rock and gravel main-lake banks for smallies and spots and always selects windy banks over calm banks. Olliverson targets largemouths at the mouths of feeder creeks and pockets off the creeks with gravel and chunk rock bottom. Again, preference is always for the windy banks. Lacking wind, Olliverson backs off the bank and points. He holds his boat in 28-30 feet of water and casts a Damiki Miki finesse worm on a split-shot rig or shakey head toward points and gravel banks.
Pro's Edge: Table Rock is clear. When bites are hard to find, downsizing line is a common tactic. Olliverson takes it to an extreme-he uses fluorocarbon line as light as 4 pound test. To get good hook sets and control the fish on such a delicate set up, he tightens the drag but is always prepared to back reel to avoid breaking off a surging fish.
Northeastern Oklahoma: Grand Lake
FLW Tour pro Edwin Evers forecasts the bass to start spawning on Grand Lake this week. You won't be able to see fish on the beds. In the lower lake, Evers fishes a Carolina rig with a Yum Wooly Hawg Tail or a shakey head on pea gravel banks and in pockets of coves and the main lake. Concentrate your search in water 5 to 10 feet deep. In the upper lake, Evers casts and pitches a black/blue shadow Yum Wooly Bug to wood or anything that will hold a bass in 1 to 4 feet of water. Anywhere in the lake, fish the backside of the numerous docks.
Pro's Edge: Evers advises anglers to fish very slowly-visualize a fish on a bed and fish your bait to temp the rascal.
Central Arizona: Roosevelt Lake
This lake is full of bass and they're spawning big time right now. The water is up and there is lots of flooded brush. With so many fish and so much cover, FLW Tour pro Clifford Pirch advised that there is no need to do anything but fish shallow. Good spawning banks have rock, boulder, and gravel bottom; and the bass will spawn at the bases of the brush and trees. The beds are hard to see through the brush. Fish a Senko or weightless worm in the bushes and tops of trees and pitch a worm to the bases of the bushes and trees to catch fish on the beds. Topwater poppers, like a Rico, and walking baits can draw fish.
Pro's Edge: Don't abandon shallow water. Even if the shallow bite is slow in the morning, the afternoon sun can warm the water and the fish will move.
***Someone might think, "I live in Massachusetts, what do I care what bass are doing in south Georgia?" Except for some climate/habitat differences, A BASS IS A BASS. Use what you learn from the
guys who do this for a living and adapt it to your waters. Most things will work everywhere, although there may be a few regional techniques that might not translate exactly... but can be used with slight variations.
Example: The splitshot rig was developed in California by professional anglers fishing deep, rocky, gin-clear waters that receive tremendous amounts of fishing pressure - some lakes out there only allow fishing every other day, it's
that crowded!
I was fishing at Lake Konowa in Oklahoma - an electrical powerplant lake that has a warm-water discharge 12 months out of the year. The discharge canal receives HUGE amounts of fishing pressure, especially in the winter. Now, this is the South(sorta) - big spinnerbaits and 10-inch plastic worms are the 'bread-n-butter' baits - but using the info I learned, I tied on a split-shot rig on 8-pound test spinning gear, with a 4-inch pumpkinseed finesse worm.
I caught a double-limit of bass(12 fish) in about 3 hours - in January!
Improvise - Adapt - Overcome
Last edited by tony93 on Sat May 01, 2010 6:38 am; edited 1 time in total