MarcusTheFisherman Posted March 29, 2007 Posted March 29, 2007 Hey my name is marcus and i am having trouble catching fish on new lakes in georgia. I was wondering if there is a way to figure out what color or worm or baits to use based on the conditions of the lake such as water color and lake layout. Quote
Super User KU_Bassmaster. Posted March 29, 2007 Super User Posted March 29, 2007 Simplify your choices. Color is not as important as action. I have limited myself to basically two colors for plastics for the past couple years on an experiment. Green (dark) and Black. The muddier the water the more I lean towards black. The clearer the water the more I lean towards green. The experiment has been a success and all I carry now are basically those two colors with a few other seasonal colors thrown in the mix. Quote
Super User T-rig Posted March 29, 2007 Super User Posted March 29, 2007 I almost only use dark colors. Green, black, brown and these colors seem to work everywhere. There are times that i use some other colors like, baby bass or white usually when fish are more agressive. Quote
Shakes Posted March 29, 2007 Posted March 29, 2007 Always, always, always, always start with a spinnerbait. Based on water clarity, here are the best options: Clear Water - White or Translucent Skirt, Double Willow blades in silver Lightly Stained - White or White/Chartruese Skirt, Tandem Willow, silver colorado, gold willow Heavily Stained - Chartruese Skirt, #3 colorado, #6 indiana, both gold Dirty - Firetiger Skirt, double gold colorados, or colorado/indiana combination. Silver puts off a much more natural flash then gold blades, which makes it best for clear water. The clearer the water, the faster you reel the bait. Gold blades put off a much more intense flash, and are best for stained to dirty water. Good luck buddy. Happy fishing. - Aaron Quote
MarcusTheFisherman Posted March 29, 2007 Author Posted March 29, 2007 Hey thanks alot guys. That was some helpful information . Quote
bassboy1 Posted March 30, 2007 Posted March 30, 2007 What part of GA ya from? Up here at Allatoona, I hear they are busting different pearl shades of senkos. Quote
MarcusTheFisherman Posted March 30, 2007 Author Posted March 30, 2007 i live in loganville but i've fished there before. I am fishing at oconee and jackson most of the time but the fish in the small ponds and lakes around my house seem harder to catch so thats why i was wondering. Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted March 30, 2007 Super User Posted March 30, 2007 Simplify your choices. Color is not as important as action.I have limited myself to basically two colors for plastics for the past couple years on an experiment. Green (dark) and Black. The muddier the water the more I lean towards black. The clearer the water the more I lean towards green. The experiment has been a success and all I carry now are basically those two colors with a few other seasonal colors thrown in the mix. I actually fish a few other colors, but watermelon with black flakes could probably cover it all. Black with red flakes is color specific on a couple of lakes and some variation of white seems special sometimes. That said, color is WAY overrated. Quote
Brad_Coovert Posted March 31, 2007 Posted March 31, 2007 You can live with three colors for most plastics - watermelon (clear water), green pumpkin (stained) and black (dirty or night). For baits like soft jerkbaits, Senkos or other baits that you may fish in the upper water column, a baitfish color such as white pearl will do the job in most waters. For a changeup, carry a bottle of chartreuse dye to dip tails in to give the fish a different look now and then. For spinnerbaits, you could easily get away with white in double willow in clearer water, white/chartreuse willow/colorado in stained water and chartreuse colorado in muddy water. Crankbaits - shad, chrome, chartreuse and crawdad patterns will do it. Topwaters - baitfish colors. Buzzbaits - Black and white. These are basic colors that will work under most any condition. It takes discipline to do live with a handful of colors, which I do not have :-[. Plus the bait monkey is a color nut as well. Still, color is not the first factor. Depth, speed, action and size are more important. Good luck! Brad Quote
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