Bass Fishing Dec 2019 - Jan 2020 | Page 41

Cold-Water Feeding in much of the scientific literature, bass and other centrarchids (bluegill, crappies, etc.) have been shown to significantly reduce feeding and movement once the water temperature dips out of the 50s into the 40s. that being said, there are places all across the country where bass anglers continue to smash them basically until ice-up, and even a few fisheries where you can catch bass routinely through the ice. so what gives? science hasn’t given us any clear answers, and there has only been limited research done on the specifics of where, why and how much bass feed in the winter. What science has found over and over is that bass (and fish in general) have to be opportunists to succeed. if the water temperature is only 42 degrees, a bass might turn down a wounded shad fluttering in its face, but it might eat the shad if it’s convenient. though the bass isn’t processing the situation this way, the expla- nation is that the metabolic cost to consuming the shad is less than the energy the shad would bring, so there’s potential for a surplus and definitely not a deficit. in addition to a deeper understanding of fish metabo- lism, the take-home here for most anglers should be sim- ple: despite all our knowledge, animals (including us) are constantly forced to search for balance between needs, wants and available resources. to the savvy angler, this means that under the right conditions, there are ample opportunities to keep catching bass even when tradition- al folklore might say it’s not possible. DAMIKI RIGGING: A HOT TACTIC FOR By Curtis Niedermier COLD-WATER SMALLIES One of the hottest finesse baits for wintertime smallies in the clear-water mountain reservoirs of the Southeast the last few years is what local anglers have dubbed the Damiki rig. It’s a 3- to 3 1/2- inch soft-plastic jerkbait or minnow bait rigged on a 3/8-ounce (give or take) jighead with a 90-degree line tie and a light-wire hook. The name comes from the Damiki Armor Shad, which was the first bait to become popular for the technique, but dozens of other baits have since been used. The bait shines when the water temperature is in the mid-40s and smallies are deeper than 30 feet. Anglers typically dead-stick the rig midway down the water column to catch suspended small- mouths that are hanging out under schools of shad and alewives. Sometimes bass will even rise off the bottom to eat the bait, and a little video gaming is necessary to get them to eat. Smallies will set up on a variety of structure, but finding bait is more important than looking for any particular structure. Find bait, and you can dangle this little morsel in front of some really big smallies. 65,530 0 surface acr es. 1,200 miles m of shor eline. H ost of f the 2019 Costa FL LW Series Se eries Championship. That’ s righ ht, w e c ould onl y be talking about one plac e: Lak e Cumb erland. H ome of the he best bass fishing in southern K entucky y and select ed the N o. 1 M os st Enchant ed Manmade W onder , our o r lak e is perf ect f or angler s — and our r c ommunity is the perf ect v acation destination. J oin us in i Somer set N o v . 5-7 f orr the 2020 FL LW L W Series Championship and let us sho w y ou the Spirit of Souther rn K entucky! seesomer set.c com WINTer 2020 I FLWFISHING.COM y set s   #seemy 39