Bass Fishing Feb - Mar 2018 | Página 69

FISHING THE PRESPAWN HIGHWAY 3 SCenaRIoS FoR LoCaTInG STaGInG BaSS on “ReST SToPS” aLonG TheIR TRanSITIon InTo SPaWnInG aReaS T By Joe Sills ILLuSTRaTIon By kevIn hanD FEBRUARY-MARCH 2018 I FLWFISHING.COM he road trip usually begins when the water tem- perature approaches the low 60s, or even soon- er in some waters. Bass, often waiting some- where in deeper wintering areas, are compelled by environmental changes to begin their transition to spawning flats. During the big migration, says FLW Tour veteran Mark Rose, they “loiter” at rest stops along their prespawn highways, waiting and foraging until the spawning flats can provide what they need for a successful spawning season. “Prespawn highways are ditches leading up to spawning flats,” Rose notes. “If I could draw a picture of one, I would draw a bay with a little channel com- ing out of it, then a drop-off with a stump or three or four on it. That channel is the highway, and before spawning, a fish is going to stage on that drop-off beside the stump.” Rose knows this scenario is accurate because he keyed on several types of prespawn highways when he claimed a 2017 FLW Tour win at Lake Guntersville in early February. Rose wasn’t the only pro to tap into the prespawn highway pattern in 2017. Birmingham pro Barry Wilson ran similar patterns at a Tour event on Lake Cumberland and a Costa FLW Series tournament on Lake Chickamauga and narrowly missed out on wins. Still, the two second-place finishes netted him close to $50,000. Rose and Wilson are experts at identifying spring travel routes and the staging stopover areas that bass use along the way. For the most part they rely on three strategies during the prespawn, and suggest that these approaches will work on any body of water to help catch big stringers. 67