Bass Fishing Dec 2019 - Jan 2020 | Page 74

BaCk ON TRaCk Michigan as a group. Bolstered by the successes we found there, we gave ourselves three days to find consistent bass on Lake Superior. By the time we arrived back home in mid-June, our entire perspective on bass fishing had changed. We no longer wondered if we could find fish on a new lake. We knew exactly what it took to eliminate unproductive water in a matter of hours. We knew how to do it with a swimbait, and we knew how to do it with a Ned rig. Most of all, we learned that bass fish- ing in this entire country is incredible. In fact, some of the overlooked cen- tral states proved to be our favorites. Sure, you might not catch a 10- pounder on your first stop in Indiana, but that doesn’t mean you can’t have an amazing time catching quality fish. And that’s what we accomplished: a better understanding of what it takes to be a consistently successful bass angler anywhere in the country. WHaT WE LEaRNED Though it’d take a book to docu- ment all of our experiences on the road last season, there were certain lessons that stood out from the trip that we’ve dubbed the six keys to catching bass from coast to coast. 1. Spend time researching the fishery. A few well-spent minutes before you reach the lake can change the course of your day. Quickly catching bass on a lake is much easier with basic information. Try to answer these questions: • Which species of bass live there? • What are their predators? • What baitfish are in the lake? • How large is the lake? • Is the water rising or falling? • What is the typical water color? 72 April 2019 came quickly, and before we knew it, CC and I were traveling east, her navigating beside me, with our 2-year-old daughter, Sierra, riding along in the backseat for the adventure of a lifetime. We traveled across the deserts of the Southwest with a truck, cab-over camper and 21-foot bass boat. The schedule was tight. We only allowed half-days on most lakes. The plan was to drive all morning, fish a half-day, then drive again. Only the largest bodies of water were afforded extra days for exploring. To further complicate matters, we were filming every stop for TacticalBassin.com – the website CC and I run with Tim and Tonya Little – so anglers every- where could learn from our experi- ences in near real time. As we worked our way east, it became apparent that weather would dictate our trip. Thunderstorms, tornadoes and repeated deluges added to the chal- lenge. We routed and rerouted in an attempt to dodge severe weather. We ate donuts in Roswell after finding amazing fishing on Elephant Butte. We hid from a tornado in Missouri before catching grand slams of quali- ty bass on Table Rock. We ran from floodwaters in Arkansas, and wished we’d quit just a few minutes earlier at Guntersville where we learned how hard rain could fall. Accepting the inevitable complica- tions that living on the road brings, we pushed on. Each new lake brought surprises. We fished rising water on Tenkiller, navigated churn- ing water below Wilson Dam on Pickwick, tested our offshore skills on Chickamauga and explored flooded Timber on Indiana’s Patoka Lake. At every stop we strived to avoid local knowledge. We weren’t just trying to catch fish. We were there to test our skills and our theories, something that could only be done by truly exploring the fisheries unaided. The results were amazing. By the time we turned north in mid-May, our confidence in breaking down water and finding fish was at an all-time high. To cap it off, Tim and Tonya, as well as a few other friends, flew in and met with us in Green Bay, and we explored Lake Early research will narrow your learning curve on many fronts. The presence of large open-water preda- tors such as striped bass might push bass tighter to cover, while shallow- cover predators such as pike can push bass to deeper offshore hard structure. Knowing “average” water color is critical because a bass that lives in muddy water will aggressively hunt in it, while a bass that is suddenly thrust into muddy water overnight will pull to cover and is far less reactive to moving presentations. Rising water will tend to push fish to the shoreline, and falling water will tend to pull them out into the open. DO NOT fall into the temptation of studying local anglers’ habits. Following “local knowledge” on spots or lures is the fastest way to have an average day on the water. Your goal should never be to mimic local anglers because what they do can rarely be duplicated with satisfactory results. Instead, apply your own style to a new fishery. Show the fish something dif- ferent, and you might unlock a lake in ways no one ever dreamed possible. 2. Focus on building patterns. This is true on your home lake and on the other side of the country. The worst mistake an angler can make is falling into the trap of slow fishing too soon. There are times when a slow-moving offering is all a bass will eat, but these times are rare. You are better off moving quick- ly, covering water in search of active fish. If you have no history on a fish- ery, fish even faster. Your entire goal should be finding that first sign of life. When the first bite occurs, you have something to build from. Take the second bite as FLWFISHING.COM I WINTER 2020