Thread: Suspended Fish
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Old January 19th, 2011, 04:18 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.bass
Bob La Londe[_4_]
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Default Suspended Fish

"Bob La Londe" wrote in message
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"John B" wrote in message
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Suspended Fish

Certain lake I fish always has bass suspended 25 ft. down in 40 ft. of
water. Problem is they will not bite.
Any presentation that works for these fish. They are rather big fish
too.
thanks,
Patrick013

=======

I'm not an expert, and you will probably get some better advice, but a
simple approach.....down size your tackle and bait, and "slow" down you
presentations!

Small jigs, and finesse worms worked slow. Suspended bass usually won't
waste a lot of energy chasing fast moving lures! Also the strikes will
probably be suttle, so lighter line, and watching your line action is
the key to hook ups.

If that doesn't work, do what I do, go find a point or channel that's
about the same depth as the suspended fish were at, and drop shot
some....no luck there, head for the marina and have a cold beer!
Don't get too frustrated, suspended bass are tough....just ask the pros.

John B



I don't usually get into that situation around here where 10' is
considered deep water and the few holes that hit 20 are the dark abyss,
but I did use to fish the western basin a bit on Lake Erie. One of the
first things we were always curious about when we graphed suspended fish
was what species are they. We didn't have underwater cameras back then
(1980s) but often we would decide arbitrarily that they must not be what
we were fishing for when we couldn't get them to bite. LOL.

Often a slow falling tiny swim bait did work regardless of species though.
A sassy shad on a 1/4 ball jig counted down to depth and then very slowly
worked across the strata where the fish were holding. Another thing we
found. If the fish were holding at or close to the thermal inversion
layer they would often bite more aggressively than if they were holding in
a temperature constant section of the water column. We had paper graphs,
but if you cranked up the gain the thermal inversion layer would often
show up as a layer of clutter on the graph early in the day. Later in the
day it was harder to spot, but you could find it was pretty constant over
most of the lake throughout the day by dropping a thermometer over board
on a marked line and checking various depths.



Another thing that seemed to help was to find places where the depth at
which fish were suspended intersected structure like a hump (reef) or
island.


Bob La Londe

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