boostr Posted December 23, 2014 Posted December 23, 2014 We still have soft water here in Northern Jersey, and I was thinking about trying my hand at Bronze Back fishing in one of our river systems. 1. Where do they usually hang when the water temps drop? 2. What type of lures to use in the cold temps? Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted December 23, 2014 Global Moderator Posted December 23, 2014 Deep water in an area where they can move vertically quickly ( steep shorelines, bluffs, fast dropping points). Shakyhead with a finesse worm, jigging spoon, or a jerkbait would be what I'd be tossing at them. 2 Quote
boostr Posted December 23, 2014 Author Posted December 23, 2014 Another thing, are smallies more aggressive then Lmb when the water is cold. Like 35* cold. Quote
5fishlimit Posted December 23, 2014 Posted December 23, 2014 Hair jigs work really well as do smaller jerkbaits. 1 Quote
boostr Posted December 23, 2014 Author Posted December 23, 2014 How would you fish the hair jigs, like a regular jig? Quote
cyclops2 Posted December 24, 2014 Posted December 24, 2014 Smallies are aggressive when asleep. Compared to a wide awake largemouths on 5 hour energy drinks. 1 Quote
Super User Scott F Posted December 24, 2014 Super User Posted December 24, 2014 Do a google search on the float-n-fly. Quote
Turtle135 Posted December 24, 2014 Posted December 24, 2014 Smallmouth will be looking to get out of the current when the water temperature drops down below 40 degrees. They will gang up in "winter holes". Look for current protected areas with greater depth than the surrounding river. Dead drift a suspending jerkbait through those areas. Dead stick hair jigs, tubes, small paddle tail worms, etc. in those spots. The reason fisherman turn to hair jigs in the coldest water is that even when you have them motionless on the bottom there will be a tiny amount of movement in the hair from the current which the smallmouth can detect and that is enough to trigger a take. 1 Quote
wnybassman Posted December 24, 2014 Posted December 24, 2014 I'd be dragging a tube. Bring lots. Quote
boostr Posted December 24, 2014 Author Posted December 24, 2014 Thanks for the input, I'm really getting the itch. Gonna have to take my spinning gear out of winter hibernation. Quote
fish365 Posted December 24, 2014 Posted December 24, 2014 Heavy metal is hard to beat on deep main lake points. Silver buddy, Damiki Vault and others will get a lot of smallmouth now. Like to throw on braid/floro leader spinning set up. Hang on when you feel a bite, not unusal to pick up other species like a big cat or drum also. Quote
bassguytom Posted December 24, 2014 Posted December 24, 2014 Smallmouth will be looking to get out of the current when the water temperature drops down below 40 degrees. They will gang up in "winter holes". Look for current protected areas with greater depth than the surrounding river. Dead drift a suspending jerkbait through those areas. Dead stick hair jigs, tubes, small paddle tail worms, etc. in those spots. The reason fisherman turn to hair jigs in the coldest water is that even when you have them motionless on the bottom there will be a tiny amount of movement in the hair from the current which the smallmouth can detect and that is enough to trigger a take. This is spot on here. We are catching smallmouth in the Delaware river fishing small hair and plastic jigs very slowly. In most cases the bite will feel like you picked up a leaf or some grass, set the hook. Wintering holes are only a couple of feet somtimes also. Winter fishing in a river is tough but can also be very rewarding. Nothing on jerkbaits last 3 trips. Good luck. 2 Quote
Super User Scott F Posted December 24, 2014 Super User Posted December 24, 2014 Heavy metal is hard to beat on deep main lake points. Silver buddy, Damiki Vault and others will get a lot of smallmouth now. Like to throw on braid/floro leader spinning set up. Hang on when you feel a bite, not unusal to pick up other species like a big cat or drum also. The original poster was talking about fishing rivers. Quote
fish365 Posted December 24, 2014 Posted December 24, 2014 The original poster was talking about fishing rivers. Works in rivers also just like a hair jig. Find an eddy. Quote
5fishlimit Posted December 24, 2014 Posted December 24, 2014 How would you fish the hair jigs, like a regular jig? I throw them on outside edges of a deep pool on a river feeding into Lake Erie. I let it soak for some time, and small hop to another rest. Any feel of a thump and I swing for the fences. Sometimes it's a catfish or a sheephead. Other times you get a certain shake, and you know an angry bronzeback took your hook. 1 Quote
boostr Posted December 24, 2014 Author Posted December 24, 2014 Great info. The river I'm gonna be trying is not that huge I can pretty much cast across it in some areas, but there are smallies there. I figured where the river widens out would by a good area to try, and would that also be where it would pool. How about hitting the areas where it flows into the lake, and the are where it turns into a river again. Quote
FunkJishing Posted December 26, 2014 Posted December 26, 2014 steep drop offs preferibly with rock/gravel is where they'll hang in cold water, often hugging underwater cover. these baits will get you bit. TUBES HAIR JIGS (Black/White) TIGHT WIGGLING CRANKBAITS (Slow Rolled) RAT 'L' TRAPS Quote
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