Bass Fishing Feb - Mar 2020 | Page 58

SOUTHERN-FRIED BEDDING BRONZE Once he catches a spawning smallie, Ott DeFoe swaps to finesse gear to milk more fish from the area. THE FISHERIES MILK THE SPOT Once you get a bite, whether or not you hook up, it’s time for phase two: mop-up time. “Once I get a bite, I immediately pick up a drop-shot or a Ned rig and fire right back to where I had the bite,” says DeFoe. “Smallmouth are so aggressive when they get on beds that fish will come back and eat that small offering almost every time.” Here’s where many anglers make another crucial mistake. After catch- ing that fish, they’ll get back on the trolling motor and continue working down the bank. Don’t do that. “If there’s one smallmouth on a bed, there’s probably more there,” says Snavely. “So once I catch one, I’ll sit in the same spot and cast around. Often, I’ll catch three, four or five more fish without moving the boat. Sometimes you can catch as many as 15 without moving the boat very far.” And even once you think you’ve fished out a spot, you might not have. Be patient. “I can’t tell you how many times I was burned by this when I first really started targeting them,” says Snavely. “I’d catch a few and then the bite would go dead. So I’d leave, only for some guy to come in a little while 56 later and tear them up in the same exact spot. “Smallmouth move up so quickly that many times the same spot will replenish, and quickly.” That’s why DeFoe will often fish his way into a pocket, and if he locates an area with spawning small- mouths, he’ll turn the boat around and fish his way out, making sure to go down the same stretch. The tactic not only allows the spot to potentially replenish, but it also presents his lures at different angles, allowing him to hit spots he might have missed on the first pass. From there, it’s rinse and repeat. Maybe the smallmouths in a given lake will be on those gravel flats, or perhaps on 45-degree chunk rock banks. Regardless, once you have an idea of what they’re on, you should be able to replicate it throughout the lake when you find the right ingredients. “Smallmouth are so aggressive when they get on beds and can be so predictable when you know what to look for; it’s just a fun way to fish for them,” says DeFoe. “The only prob- lem is it’s usually only a two-week window.” But, as the 2019 Cherokee event showed, inside those two weeks, the bronze fishing can rival that of any- thing up north. Before searching for bedding small- mouths on a Southern lake, it’s best to pick the right lake. After all, while many Southern reservoirs have smallmouths in them, some are much more prolific smallmouth fisheries. So, real quick, here are some of the better Southern smallmouth fisheries. • Dale Hollow (Ky. and Tenn.) • Cherokee Lake (Tenn.) • Fort Loudoun-Tellico (Tenn.) • Watts Barr (Tenn.) • Wilson Lake (Ala.) • Beaver Lake (Ark.) • Table Rock (Mo.) We’d be remiss to not mention Pickwick Lake, too, as it’s notorious for having some truly giant smallmouths in it. In fact, you might not have realized that four of the five largest state-record smallmouths have come from Southern fisheries. Here are the top five: 1. Kentucky/Tennessee – 11-15 (Dale Hollow) 2. Alabama – 10-8 (Wheeler Dam tailwater) 3. North Carolina – 10-0 (Hiwassee Reservoir) 4. Ohio – 9-8 (Lake Erie) 5. South Carolina – 9-7 (Lake Jocassee) FLWFISHING.COM | MAJORLEAGUEFISHING.COM | FEBRUARY-MARCH 2020