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Small fish near big fish?
I was out fishing today catching 2.5 -3.5 lb bass all day long. Do
larger fish hang out in the same areas as the smaller fish? or should I be going somewhere else to fish for the big ones? |
Small fish near big fish?
"Muskoka Fisherman" wrote in message
oups.com... I was out fishing today catching 2.5 -3.5 lb bass all day long. Do larger fish hang out in the same areas as the smaller fish? or should I be going somewhere else to fish for the big ones? Its popularly believed by some that big fish tend to be solitary hunters. That is not to say there can't be two or three big fish relatively close together if there are two or three great cover/ambush spots near each other and lots of bait goes by that area. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Small fish near big fish?
On Jun 10, 10:47 pm, Muskoka Fisherman
wrote: I was out fishing today catching 2.5 -3.5 lb bass all day long. That, my friends, is what you call a drive-by gloat. 2.5 - 3.5 lb bass all day that far North is pretty darned impressive. Dick Durbin |
Small fish near big fish?
On Jun 10, 10:47 pm, Muskoka Fisherman
wrote: I was out fishing today catching 2.5 -3.5 lb bass all day long. Do larger fish hang out in the same areas as the smaller fish? or should I be going somewhere else to fish for the big ones? You probably need to go to a different lake if all you are catching is little dinks like that - the lake is probably not very good for bigger bass. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Small fish near big fish?
"Olebiker" wrote in message ps.com... On Jun 10, 10:47 pm, Muskoka Fisherman wrote: I was out fishing today catching 2.5 -3.5 lb bass all day long. That, my friends, is what you call a drive-by gloat. 2.5 - 3.5 lb bass all day that far North is pretty darned impressive. Dick Durbin Not for smallies B~ |
Small fish near big fish?
"Muskoka Fisherman" wrote in message
oups.com... I was out fishing today catching 2.5 -3.5 lb bass all day long. Do larger fish hang out in the same areas as the smaller fish? or should I be going somewhere else to fish for the big ones? One other thing... sometimes you can limit your smaller fish and keep your hook open for bigger fish by upsizing. For instance I catch tons of dinks on 4" senkos, a fair number of keepers on 5" senkos and a few larger fish to toad size, but no dinks and very few small keepers on 7" senkos A large jig and pig are also often considered a big fish bait. Big profile, big fish. I know a fellow who cranks with hand carved channel cat swim baits that run 8-14" and he catches nothing, but quality fish. He just doesn't catch that many. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Small fish near big fish?
Thanks for the advice. I'll try to up the size of my lures and maybe
try some jig and pigs tool Top water lures in weeds near drop offs have been working for me very well this year. |
Small fish near big fish?
"Muskoka Fisherman" wrote in message
oups.com... Thanks for the advice. I'll try to up the size of my lures and maybe try some jig and pigs tool Top water lures in weeds near drop offs have been working for me very well this year. If you have been using a small popper try a frog or a larger popper. Something that looks like a meal to a big bass. You might not catch as many... When I am fun fishing though there is nothing like getting into a mess of fish any size. Another thing. If you just want to have fun consider downsizing your tackle. A 13" bass on a microlite spooled with 4 or 6 pound test is a lot of fun to fight. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Small fish near big fish?
On Jun 10, 9:47 pm, Muskoka Fisherman
wrote: I was out fishing today catching 2.5 -3.5 lb bass all day long. Do larger fish hang out in the same areas as the smaller fish? or should I be going somewhere else to fish for the big ones? Bass tend to hang together according to age and stick close to where they hatched. They roam but tend to prefer their old neighborhood. The older they get the more familiar they are with surroundings, and the more they become familiar with the majority of basic bass angling and popular lures. Little bass get eaten by larger bass, hence the popularity of bass pattern lures. The age group you were into are the upper end of the group willing to chase schools of shad or other baitfish. Ads they get older they break from such spending of vital fat, beginning to conserve calories, preparing for winter more efficiently. They become more opportunistic, doing more ambushing of larger fish like bream, crappie, larger trout. When smaller bass are fairly shallow, look for the lunkers deeper. They seek more security from larger predators like us. That puts them out of sight most of the year until the spawn at a time most anglers get their one shot at them in their most vulnerable condition. In summer you will fins more quality bass in 15 foot water and deeper, but never deeper than a thermocline. Favorite places are near their winter haunts, around complicated bottom structure, deep stumps, intersections of drainages like a creek and a ditch draining a flat with steep outside slopes. Mid lake humps and ridges near deep water are good where the hump pokes above the thermocline. Relatively few anglers try those places, so the bass there are not as pressured as shallow bass 15' deep. Lots of big bass have been caught before and learn to avoid artificial lures. Make sure you fish them convincingly and slowly and try bumping every rock, stump, ditch slope, bend of a creek, brush pile, sunken boat, etc. Bottom crawling & bouncing lures are excellent choices. Big bass love finding large crayfish so imitate those. The larger jigs with fat trailers best imitate crayfish, but so do craw patterned long billed crankbaits even in shallower water than it seems proper to use them. A deep diver that can reach 20 feet works wonders in 10 feet because it digs bottom and clamors over and through rocks. Try to match the colors and largest sizes of crayfish in your fishery. It's a slow technique inching a craw bait along bottom and only occasionally leaping it up a few feet. Dragging through mud to put up a mud trail works. Spoons work well. Bass don't see many of those. Heavy 1.5 oz spinnerbaits are good fished down the center of a creek in deep water. Use one with large Colorado blade, and go with black body/skirt/ trailer/blade colors. Verify the presence of fish with sonar before investing much time over a spot. if you see a school of baitfish or panfish over structure or around cover like submerged trees there's likely bass nearby. Whatever you hear are top favorite baits are probably spooking big bass by the time you get that news. Think out of the box and choose something that will get down to large bass that hand below smaller bass, holding a depth when retrieved. You don't want a lure that comes up when retrieved until it's at the boat. Bring a spinnerbait up slowly, pausing it several times, and dangle it next to the boat before casting it. Big bass will often follow something like that and hit it at the last possible chance. Jim |
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