Bass Fishing Aug - Sept 2018 | Page 92

CROSS LAKE CONDITIONS Cross Lake is an 8,600-acre suburban water supply lake located on the outskirts of Shreveport, La. Despite its small size as a tour- nament lake, Cross cranks out some big bass thanks to an abun- dance of shallow cover, which includes backwaters and bayous filled with cypress trees and plenty of docks along the main lake. The All-American visited Cross in the May-to-June transition, making it a hot-weather event. As projected, water temperatures had already passed the 90-degree threshold, and Cross Lake bass were in full summer mode, lurking in the cooler shade of cypress trees and docks while wolfing down bream that were trying to bed around the same shallow cover. Water levels were about 2 feet low, rendering many of the lake’s extreme backwaters too shallow for bass to hide. As a result, a lot of bass were forced to slide out to more predictable cover along transition areas in and out of the forests, including points within the trees, deeper or isolated trees, and duck blinds on the main lake. Also, the low water made Cross Lake’s numerous docks more accessible with lures. With extra inches to work with under the fixed platforms, dock anglers were able to get lures into places where bass don’t normally see them. The low water conditions combined with the diminished fishing pressure of just 49 boats and a single practice day led to an impressive display of big limits on the first day of the event. Along with LeBrun’s whopping 26-9 limit, there were seven other limits of more than 20 pounds weighed in. Weights fell off the second day as fishing pressure began to take its toll. But it’s a Cross Lake condition LeBrun had anticipated. “This lake is notorious for producing big bags one day and nothing the next, so I knew the second day would be the hardest day of the event,” LeBrun says. “I spent time in pre-practice looking for alternatives – off-the-wall places where I could catch a fish or two if I got in trouble. Looking back, that really bailed me out. The crankbait made the big catches, but catching a few fish on a pop- ping frog on the second day really saved me.” WHAT ELSE WORKED Nick LeBrun won the 2018 BFL All-American by attacking cypress tree bases with a 6th Sense Movement 80X crankbait to provoke reaction bites. While Cross Lake’s ubiquitous cypress trees were a staple in many of the top patterns, finalists also fished docks and duck blinds. Nick LeBrun 90 Jigs and straight-tail worms rigged on shaky heads were fish producers for local runner-up Randy Deaver of Blanchard, La., and third-place finisher Adam Wagner of Cookeville, Tenn. Deaver favored a compact jig with the skirt trimmed down for fishing cypress trees in the morning. He switched to skip- ping a shaky head under docks in the afternoon. Randy Deaver Adam Wagner flWfIshIng.com I august-september 2018