Bass Fishing Oct 2017 | Page 48

Commanding the Cup 46 On day one of the Cup, Atkins took command of the event with a stunning 21-pound, 5-ounce catch to grab the early lead over hometown favorite and former Cup winner Anthony Gagliardi. Atkins’ Cup tactic was fishing big, noisy pencil poppers over the top of sub- merged “cane piles.” A cane pile is a type of man-made fish habitat com- prised of bamboo stalks clumped together and cemented into a bucket, then placed upright in the lake. The idea is to get the cane piles to stand up verti- cally in the water column to simulate standing timber, giving bass an ambush point to lurk around while waiting on unsuspecting shad and blueback herring to cruise by near the surface. The cane piles are often placed in 20 to 30 feet of water throughout the main lake on the breaks of humps and points, which are known travel routes for nomadic herring. Bamboo that stands up 10 to 20 feet off the bottom and is about 5 to 10 feet shy of the surface is ideal. Dialing in on Cane Cane piles are prolific in Lake Murray. The problem, however, is that despite their numbers, cane piles are hard to find. “The cane is thin and gets water- logged, which makes it hard to detect on side-imaging sonar,” Atkins explains. “They do show up with traditional 2-D sonar, but happening across one right under the boat is like finding a needle in a haystack.” Atkins would know. He spent two and a half days of pre-practice looking for cane piles before he found the first one. “I discovered the first one with 2-D sonar and marked it,” Atkins recalls. “Then I came back to it the next day and idled back and forth by it about a dozen times while I dialed in my side- imaging until I could see it clearly.” Atkins says adjustments to sensitiv- ity, contrast and chart speed were need- ed to juice up his signal and clearly define a cane pile on side-imaging. The chart speed was particularly important. When the return scrolled by at a faster speed on the screen, it enlarged the image of the cane pile and the cane’s sonar “shadow” out to the side. “Once I got the side-imaging dialed in where I could see cane piles out both sides of my boat at 100 feet, it was on,” Atkins says. “I spent the next six days side-imagining for cane.” In all, he located nearly 80 piles, with about 25 of them winding up as key targets. “The fresher, bushier piles were better, without a doubt,” Atkins says. “I could see more fish returns around them when compared to the older, thinner ones.” FLWFISHING.COM I OCTOBER 2017