Trees hanging over a shoreline with steeply dropping depths are ideal for shadowline fishing.
Shadowline
Bass
By Bruce
Litton
Breaking the rules feels good when
results justify. Here in the Northeast, by sometime in June most of us who
catch largemouths start talking about early and late, but this isn’t the only
time of day to fish after the post-spawn period we’re in the midst of now. Sunrise
and sunset only marks the time when we may think we need to be on the water to
catch bass once weather really heats up, but May is the month to begin tweaking
tactics, anticipating when bass slow in summer. They don’t stop eating.
Like a lot of things, it’s a half-truth
that summer bass can’t be caught during the day. Once the May and early June
post-spawn adjustment period starts settling into the first summer dog days,
bass slow their pace, but their metabolic processes race. The higher the water
temperature, the more calories burned, so it may seem odd they don’t swim about
at top speed, and yet their sensory alertness is on the increase now, which
doesn’t necessarily mean bass get motivated to lunge and strike a plug or
spinnerbait, but does mean they eat a lot. What they eat should concern us.
Rather than burn more calories by going
on the chase after fish forage, once water temperatures move beyond the high
end of optimal—somewhere in the 70’s—bass begin to take whatever easy meal
drops their way. Maybe a tadpole, a grasshopper or leech. Bass even feed on
nematodes and subaquatic insect larva. Why not easily flex those vacuum jaws? Alert
to the copious critters in warm water, contrary to popular wisdom, bass feed
all day during summer, and I’ve caught plenty at high noon with temperatures in
the middle 90’s by fishing the edge between shadow and sunlight.
For years I’ve begun my approach to
summer the first week in May, pitchin’ and castin’ weightless plastic worms. I
look for sticks, brush, timber in the water often where branches surround me,
too. On the banks of ponds and small lakes from 12 to 40 acres. Bank fishing
lets me take stealthy approaches to bass lairs, although I’ve enjoyed plenty of
success at the shadowline in lakes as large as 2685 acres from a boat. Since
May means bass guard beds, I try to ignore the bucks I notice, and look for
deeper water. I like a sunny afternoon best because it creates that edge I mentioned.
Inches beyond the line between sunlit
water and shade, this target zone I call the shadowline is more important than
sticks—not all lakes and ponds feature wood in the water—but if shaded brush
combines with emerging weeds, all the better. Depth may be three to 12 feet.
Females—the bigger bass—spawn quickly and let the bucks—worthy of being left
alone—guard the newly arrived bass in shallows. Females hang further out, as if
they can’t quite forget their young. From now on through July, you’ll find
plenty in these semi-shallows, and even though August can get especially tough in the middle of the day, many afternoon
catches happen in these spots.
I suggest forgetting the use of Senkos
for the shadowline method. They sink twice as fast as slim traditional-type worms.
If you target cover, use a 2/0 worm hook and bury the point in a seven to
eight-inch worm. Rig an 18-inch, 15-pound test monofilament leader and tie it
to 15-pound test quality braid by a uni-to-uni splice. Otherwise, scale down to
a size 2 plain shank if you fish spots without cover. Even a micro swivel is
too much weight, and fluorocarbon sinks while mono doesn’t. Twister-tail worms
I find too “noisy.” Bass may respond best to a quiet, slow approach.
Pitch or cast that worm to the sunlit
side of the shadowline; a bass in the shade sees in high definition a tantalizingly
slow-sinking treat accessible by an easy swim. You can catch plenty if you
don’t care to fish before breakfast or after dinner.
http://littonsfishinglines.blogspot.com/2012/05/mounthope-pond-offers-chance-at-lunker.html
http://littonsfishinglines.blogspot.com/2012/05/mounthope-pond-offers-chance-at-lunker.html
As a beginner fisherman, this is all jargon to me:
ReplyDelete"If you target cover, use a 2/0 worm hook and bury the point in a seven to eight-inch worm. Rig an 18-inch, 15-pound test monofilament leader and tie it to 15-pound test quality braid by a uni-to-uni splice. Otherwise, scale down to a size 2 plain shank if you fish spots without cover. Even a micro swivel is too much weight, and fluorocarbon sinks while mono doesn’t. Twister-tail worms I find too “noisy.”
What does that mean if you were to explain to a five year old?
I would point out a 2/0 worm hook, firstly. Best advice I can give is go to a tackle shop where the proprietor will spend time with you. Everything here is spelled out. The proprietor will know what momofilament is and a good brand of quality braid line is Power Pro. He can point to that. The uni-to-uni splice you need to look up online. Lots of U-Tube tutorials will show you how to tie that, I suppose. If not, directions are inside the Power Pro package. A size 2 plain shank hook--the proprietor can point to where they are on the shelf. Don't worry about microswivels. You're tying a splice.
DeleteMy son caught loads of bass this way with size 2 plain shank hooks at age 4. He mastered the method at age 5. One thing I failed to point out is that if you're fishing where there's not a lot of cover--which is where Matt got good at this--you don't need the Power Pro and the splicing. Just six-pound test line (monofilament it is called).
So you just tie the hook with the plastic worm on it to the line and there you go. Use no sinker. This should simplify. And believe me, a five-year-old can get really good at catching bass this way, so long as a pond is available to him with bass in it. My son had me drive him to Sunrise Lake (three acres) near Mendham, NJ, two, three times a week.
Hey Bruce, wish I would've read this before going out Ramapo yday. Came away with Bluegill and crappie...that's it. The hike was nice though. JH
ReplyDeleteJorge, links won't work inside comments, but for your interest, back in 2014, I posted twice on Ramapo. If you want, you can try Googling Ramapo State Forest Hike and Bass at Ramapo Lake, and also Ramapo Lake Bass, Pickerel, Crappies...Northern Pike? Good to hear you caught crappie especially, but bluegills are really pretty fish.
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