![]() |
|
Today's weather --What would you do?
I am itching to go fishing. The forecast for today is cloudy with a high of
48. Chance of rain tonight or early Monday morning. The water temp will be 45-50 degrees. I have never had much luck bass fishing in the winter, but I am determine to try. Can anyone share what fishing patterns you would use on a day as described above? Thanks Phil |
Phil wrote:
I am itching to go fishing. The forecast for today is cloudy with a high of 48. Chance of rain tonight or early Monday morning. The water temp will be 45-50 degrees. Winter??? That sounds like mid-spring to me! I'd probably start with a hard jerkbait, but would have a jig & grub handy. |
Hi Phil - I've spent alot of days on the water like you described with only
limited success. Now, add sunshine into that mix & things turn right around. With than rainy forcast there generally comes overcast skies & a slow bite in the winter. I only fish in those conditions if I have to (tournaments). Warren "Phil" wrote in message ... I am itching to go fishing. The forecast for today is cloudy with a high of 48. Chance of rain tonight or early Monday morning. The water temp will be 45-50 degrees. I have never had much luck bass fishing in the winter, but I am determine to try. Can anyone share what fishing patterns you would use on a day as described above? Thanks Phil |
"go-bassn" wrote in message ... Hi Phil - I've spent alot of days on the water like you described with only limited success. Now, add sunshine into that mix & things turn right around. With than rainy forcast there generally comes overcast skies & a slow bite in the winter. I only fish in those conditions if I have to (tournaments). See, now that's where you might be making a mistake. You should periodically fish under crap conditions so that when crunch time (tournament) comes, you have an information base to fall back on. Quite often, I fish in less than ideal conditions because I never know for certian what weather I'm going to have for a guide job. I need to know how to produce fish under any weather condition. Janet thinks I'm nuts to go out by myself when the weather's cold, miserable and nasty, but the clients appreciate it when we're putting fish in the boat and others aren't. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
They must be banging down your doors to go fishing in Wisconsin in winter,
eh Steve! JK- I've actually spent hundreds (ok, maybe dozens) of days like that on the water, that's where I drew my conclusions from... Warren "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in message ... "go-bassn" wrote in message ... Hi Phil - I've spent alot of days on the water like you described with only limited success. Now, add sunshine into that mix & things turn right around. With than rainy forcast there generally comes overcast skies & a slow bite in the winter. I only fish in those conditions if I have to (tournaments). See, now that's where you might be making a mistake. You should periodically fish under crap conditions so that when crunch time (tournament) comes, you have an information base to fall back on. Quite often, I fish in less than ideal conditions because I never know for certian what weather I'm going to have for a guide job. I need to know how to produce fish under any weather condition. Janet thinks I'm nuts to go out by myself when the weather's cold, miserable and nasty, but the clients appreciate it when we're putting fish in the boat and others aren't. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
That's my usual tact these days, too... the older I get, the more I enjoy
being able to feel the reel in my hands as I fish, so I look for warmer days and sheltered banks. But tomorrow I'm heading to Tims Ford for some shallow-water smallmouth action. Temp should get up to the mid-40's, NE wind about 10 mph, and we'll be in it most of the day, looking for the banks and points that get the most pounding from wind-swept waves. I expect to crank quite a bit, or throw small hair jigs on 6-pound test Suffix line. My spinnerbaits usually get a rest when the water temps drops below 45 degrees, but I might break out one and jig it down a rocky bank a few times. For an idea of what I can expect, go to http://tennesseebassguides.com and read the latest two trip reports... 1/29 and 1/27. Joe -- Free background to help banish winter blahs at www.secretweaponlures.com/scrsvr.com _______________________ "John Kerr" wrote in message ... Phil, I am now a fair weather fisherman, but in my younger days, I went fishing in some pretty miserable weather...quite often I might add :). I found that I did pretty good in conditions like you expect, by just fishing a bit deeper cover, a bit slower than usual. I try and think like what the bass may be thinking.....If it's cold out, I'm gonna hunker down, and let the prey come to me grin. JK |
I've been comparing wintertime spinnerbait fishing tactics with a couple of
folks here at ROFB, and Jack Dalzell reminded me of something.... I've always relied on a short-arm spinnerbait with a single CO blade for cold water, but I should be open to other ideas. I mentioned my usual setup to Jack, and here was his reply: "My experiences with very cold water (35-45 degrees) is, I use a 3/4oz shad/shiner color (white or white/chartreuse if the water is stained, chartreuse/blue for mud) with a small Colorado blade in front of the largest Indiana blade I have (not sure of sizes, but I sure am fond of Indiana blades, especially during cold water) with a #11 Uncle Josh pork in either white or chartreuse. I slow roll this bait on any rip rap that I can find, throwing the bait very shallow and retrieving it out to about 10-15 ft of water. Most strikes are very subtle, feeling like a leaf on the bait, or the blades quit turning. One other tip that I have is... I wrap the hook shank with electrical soldier. The SW baits really are equipped for this because of the keeper barb which prevents the soldier from moving, and I have created many a 1-oz. SW using this technique." Thanks, Jack.... good suggestion. I'm looking at one hanging on the microphone stuck to my monitor right now.... better toss it on the top of my sack so I can try it out tomorrow. Joe -- Banish winter blahs with a fishing background at http://secretweaponlures.com/scrsvr.htm (Got the URL right this time) |
Today's weather --What would you do? Joe, I use to live in Estell Springs...a block from Tims Ford. I went fishing almost every day :). A lot of good water there, but I did most of my fishing at the upper end from the bridge in Estell to the river inlet. Caught some nice bass around the old brick factory site. Have a geat day on the water! JK Group: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: Mon, Jan 31, 2005, 10:25pm From: rofbmail secretweaponlures com (Joe=A0Haubenreich) That's my usual tact these days, too... the older I get, the more I enjoy being able to feel the reel in my hands as I fish, so I look for warmer days and sheltered banks. But tomorrow I'm heading to Tims Ford for some shallow-water smallmouth action. Temp should get up to the mid-40's, NE wind about 10 mph, and we'll be in it most of the day, looking for the banks and points that get the most pounding from wind-swept waves. I expect to crank quite a bit, or throw small hair jigs on 6-pound test Suffix line. My spinnerbaits usually get a rest when the water temps drops below 45 degrees, but I might break out one and jig it down a rocky bank a few times. For an idea of what I can expect, go to http://tennesseebassguides.com and read the latest two trip reports... 1/29 and 1/27. Joe -- Free background to help banish winter blahs at www.secretweaponlures.com/scrsvr.com _______________________ "John Kerr" wrote in message ... Phil, I am now a fair weather fisherman, but in my younger days, I went fishing in some pretty miserable weather...quite often I might add :). I found that I did pretty good in conditions like you expect, by just fishing a bit deeper cover, a bit slower than usual. I try and think like what the bass may be thinking.....If it's cold out, I'm gonna hunker down, and let the prey come to me grin. JK |
Yep, I know the old brick factory pretty well. A very nice stretch of river
through there. My dad is from Decherd, and I enjoy getting back down that way. He has lots of stories of fishing there in the first half of the 20th century. Today, when we visited Tim's Ford, the weather let us down.... it was mild, partly sunny, in the lower 50's, and mostly calm. Not at all what we wanted -- strong winds. We caught fish early (smallmouth mostly, but also spots and largemouth), with the largest of the day over 3 pounds. Most were caught on crankbaits (red Bombers for me) or Gene Larew Long John Minnows on 3/16 ounce jig heads. The bite dropped off about noon, and we ended up with ten for the day. Joe ___________________ "John Kerr" wrote in message ... Today's weather --What would you do? Joe, I use to live in Estell Springs...a block from Tims Ford. I went fishing almost every day :). A lot of good water there, but I did most of my fishing at the upper end from the bridge in Estell to the river inlet. Caught some nice bass around the old brick factory site. Have a geat day on the water! JK Group: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: Mon, Jan 31, 2005, 10:25pm From: rofbmail secretweaponlures com (Joe Haubenreich) That's my usual tact these days, too... the older I get, the more I enjoy being able to feel the reel in my hands as I fish, so I look for warmer days and sheltered banks. But tomorrow I'm heading to Tims Ford for some shallow-water smallmouth action. Temp should get up to the mid-40's, NE wind about 10 mph, and we'll be in it most of the day, looking for the banks and points that get the most pounding from wind-swept waves. I expect to crank quite a bit, or throw small hair jigs on 6-pound test Suffix line. My spinnerbaits usually get a rest when the water temps drops below 45 degrees, but I might break out one and jig it down a rocky bank a few times. For an idea of what I can expect, go to http://tennesseebassguides.com and read the latest two trip reports... 1/29 and 1/27. Joe -- Free background to help banish winter blahs at www.secretweaponlures.com/scrsvr.com _______________________ "John Kerr" wrote in message ... Phil, I am now a fair weather fisherman, but in my younger days, I went fishing in some pretty miserable weather...quite often I might add :). I found that I did pretty good in conditions like you expect, by just fishing a bit deeper cover, a bit slower than usual. I try and think like what the bass may be thinking.....If it's cold out, I'm gonna hunker down, and let the prey come to me grin. JK |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:29 AM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2006 FishingBanter