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#1
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Hey folks,
There's a lake you've all heard Randy mention called the 'Big Lake'. A nice lake with 5 seperate sections and many contour changes, stunk fields, laydowns, etc. A well rounded fishing experience. There is a cove on the lake that has always been thick with Hydrilla grass and has some submerged brush, sticks grass clumps. You get the idea. This area has always been a speedworm, horney toad area but this season, we have a whole new ballgame. It seems almost 2/3 of the lake is getting choked out by the grass (and it's spreading like wildfire). The flats, drop-offs, stump fields, along rip-rap, etc. I have even witnessed the grass in clumps in the open water deeper areas. What would be the best way to locate bass in this situation? Should I fish it as I would without grass and work the structure and depth changes accordingly, or will the grass make the bass behave differently? Dave V |
#2
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David Vito wrote:
It seems almost 2/3 of the lake is getting choked out by the grass (and it's spreading like wildfire). The flats, drop-offs, stump fields, along rip-rap, etc. I have even witnessed the grass in clumps in the open water deeper areas. What would be the best way to locate bass in this situation? Should I fish it as I would without grass and work the structure and depth changes accordingly, or will the grass make the bass behave differently? I HATE to hear the phrase choked used with regards to aquatic vegetation. Talk like that too often eventually leads to weed control efforts that NEVER help the fishing. Anyway that's why there's such a thing as a Texas rig, son. Get you a flippin' stick, some nice, thin braid or Fireline, ad bunch of pretty heavy slip sinkers and as many green pumpkin creature baits as your boat will float, and go fishin'. |
#3
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I'd recommend you peg your sinker when you Texsas rig, too. Fishing thick
vegetation was the inspiration for the Florida-style screw-on slip sinker, and keeping your weight tight up against your hook makes it easier to manage the bait as you hop, crawl, slither it back to you and on the fall. Joe ---------- "RichZ" wrote in message ... snip Anyway that's why there's such a thing as a Texas rig, son. Get you a flippin' stick, some nice, thin braid or Fireline, ad bunch of pretty heavy slip sinkers and as many green pumpkin creature baits as your boat will float, and go fishin'. |
#4
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![]() "RichZ" wrote in message ... I HATE to hear the phrase choked used with regards to aquatic vegetation. Talk like that too often eventually leads to weed control efforts that NEVER help the fishing. I didn't mean to offend you Rich. I guess my question was misunderstood. What I was asking is, will the bass react the same as far as drop offs, migration channels, spawn and post spawn staging areas, just as if the grass wasn't so thick. Or, will they use the grasslines as cover, migration and staging areas? As far as baits to use and techniques are concerned, I was going to leave that for a new thread. ![]() Dave V |
#5
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David Vito wrote:
"RichZ" wrote in message ... I HATE to hear the phrase choked used with regards to aquatic vegetation. Talk like that too often eventually leads to weed control efforts that NEVER help the fishing. I didn't mean to offend you Rich. I guess my question was misunderstood. What I was asking is, will the bass react the same as far as drop offs, migration channels, spawn and post spawn staging areas, just as if the grass wasn't so thick. Or, will they use the grasslines as cover, migration and staging areas? As far as baits to use and techniques are concerned, I was going to leave that for a new thread. ![]() Dave V In lakes blessed with lush aquatic vegetation, the inside and outside weed edges are the most important breaklines in the lake, next to the shoreline. You can't ignore the veggies. They are too important to the bass. But always keep in mind that bass a creatures of the edge. Find an edge to get an edge. |
#6
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RichZ wrote:
In lakes blessed with lush aquatic vegetation, the inside and outside weed edges are the most important breaklines in the lake, next to the shoreline. You can't ignore the veggies. They are too important to the bass. But always keep in mind that bass a creatures of the edge. Find an edge to get an edge. back to speaking about the lines for , do you put a mono leader - a vanishing line for instance - of any type on the braided or fire lines, or have you found it doesn't make that much of difference and so not worth the trouble - unless maybe the lake is crystal clear, a trait Lake Champlain for instance seldom exhibits. |
#7
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If I am using braid, I never use a leader. I wacky rig with braid and I
guess it doesn't make a diffrence. Back on topic: I fished that lake for 4 1/2 hours this morning. The lake was like glass. I fished drop shot off a point with a nice drop off with a watermelonseed 4" worm with no luck. Fished the slop in the back with snag-proof frogs, speedworms and a t-rigged watermelon wild thang. Had a couple of blow ups on the frog but no hook ups. I waited on one, nearly pulled the rod out of my hands but on the hookset, I had to duck the speeding frog. I finally took 1 on a spinnerbait just before I hit the launch in thick but submerged vegitation. There was so much more grass this time out. The canal leading to the back section of the lake was really thick, usually no grass at all in there. I worked the edges, shoreline and secondary edges with whatever I had tied on (see above), with no luck. Just one of those days? Dave V "ndy" wrote in message news:fMehg.3873$Vo4.797@trndny04... RichZ wrote: In lakes blessed with lush aquatic vegetation, the inside and outside weed edges are the most important breaklines in the lake, next to the shoreline. You can't ignore the veggies. They are too important to the bass. But always keep in mind that bass a creatures of the edge. Find an edge to get an edge. back to speaking about the lines for , do you put a mono leader - a vanishing line for instance - of any type on the braided or fire lines, or have you found it doesn't make that much of difference and so not worth the trouble - unless maybe the lake is crystal clear, a trait Lake Champlain for instance seldom exhibits. |
#8
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I always prefer to find the points where two or more edges meet. That's
where my boat will be parked! WW "RichZ" wrote in message ... David Vito wrote: "RichZ" wrote in message ... I HATE to hear the phrase choked used with regards to aquatic vegetation. Talk like that too often eventually leads to weed control efforts that NEVER help the fishing. I didn't mean to offend you Rich. I guess my question was misunderstood. What I was asking is, will the bass react the same as far as drop offs, migration channels, spawn and post spawn staging areas, just as if the grass wasn't so thick. Or, will they use the grasslines as cover, migration and staging areas? As far as baits to use and techniques are concerned, I was going to leave that for a new thread. ![]() Dave V In lakes blessed with lush aquatic vegetation, the inside and outside weed edges are the most important breaklines in the lake, next to the shoreline. You can't ignore the veggies. They are too important to the bass. But always keep in mind that bass a creatures of the edge. Find an edge to get an edge. |
#9
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![]() "RichZ" wrote in message ... David Vito wrote: "RichZ" wrote in message ... I HATE to hear the phrase choked used with regards to aquatic vegetation. Talk like that too often eventually leads to weed control efforts that NEVER help the fishing. I didn't mean to offend you Rich. I guess my question was misunderstood. What I was asking is, will the bass react the same as far as drop offs, migration channels, spawn and post spawn staging areas, just as if the grass wasn't so thick. Or, will they use the grasslines as cover, migration and staging areas? As far as baits to use and techniques are concerned, I was going to leave that for a new thread. ![]() Dave V In lakes blessed with lush aquatic vegetation, the inside and outside weed edges are the most important breaklines in the lake, next to the shoreline. You can't ignore the veggies. They are too important to the bass. But always keep in mind that bass a creatures of the edge. Find an edge to get an edge. In the Sacramento delta, we throw a Speed Trap, that just nips the top s the weeds. |
#10
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