Crutch Posted May 10, 2015 Posted May 10, 2015 On 5/10/2015 at 2:47 PM, hatrix said: There are places that use to be good but are basically fished out now from live bait. Some places have been hurt badly by the Amish fishing 20 people deep and keeping anything they catch. It doesn't take long to destroy a place like that. I can attest to this, living in Northwest Indiana. Though, on the other hand, you have to consider that most fishermen, Amish included, aren't good fishermen. A lot of people go out with live bait and when they don't catch anything they say "Oh well, the fish just aren't biting!". It took me a while to change from that attitude to an attitude of "Well, they aren't biting on this presentation.. But they will on something else.." Quote
Super User WRB Posted May 10, 2015 Super User Posted May 10, 2015 Reading through this thread briefly I see a lot of assumptions being made. The bluegill are spawning, the bass haven't...the bass have spawned! High fishing pressure from bucket anglers isn't high fishing pressure from skilled bass anglers. Limited presention techniques with poor results doesn't equate to high pressured bass. I am not a tournament bass angler anymore, however tournament fishing will teach you a lot about bass fishing. Every tournament will have several groups of anglers; winners with limits of bass and losers with few or no bass caught on the same lake at the same time. Every tournament angler finds himself in both groups. Know one catches bass every event who relies on a few presention techniques or locations. When the fishing gets tough you must make a change and adapt to the current conditions. The bass, according to the OP's observations, were targeting bedding bluegill and didn't use any presentations for that situation. Tom Quote
Josh Smith Posted May 10, 2015 Author Posted May 10, 2015 On 5/10/2015 at 8:11 AM, gobig said: Those definitely look like bluegill beds which means the bass are pretty much done. You might find a few on beds but they are done for the most part. On 5/10/2015 at 3:37 PM, WRB said: The bluegill are spawning, the bass haven't...the bass have spawned! I promise, the bass have not spawned. I go to this lake almost daily. Ice-out wasn't too long ago. And that's the messed up thing. Something has changed in this lake big time. Josh Quote
Super User WRB Posted May 10, 2015 Super User Posted May 10, 2015 If you see bluegill beds the majority bass have already spawned. the water clarity may have prevented you seeing bass beds or the bass spawned deeper than normal for that lake. Check your water temps with a swimming pool thermometer, at 2'-3' depth it should be over 67 degrees for bluegill, 70-75 is their prime spawn water temps so the eggs hatch quickly.. Bluegill spawn over a longer time period than bass, up to 3 months, one the reason they are so prolific. It should be a good time for Senko's and split shot reapers. Tom Quote
MassBass Posted May 10, 2015 Posted May 10, 2015 Fish still gotta eat. Triggering a reaction strike may be your best bet. Quote
SouthernBassin Posted May 11, 2015 Posted May 11, 2015 I'm assuming that with extreme fishing pressure bass will still eat but only at certain times of the day Quote
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