bma3 Posted January 31, 2017 Posted January 31, 2017 What's up guys, just wanted to see what everyone's favorite bait for fishing in clear water is. Quote
Super User scaleface Posted January 31, 2017 Super User Posted January 31, 2017 I havent done a lot of clear water fishing . when I did almost all my fish have came off bottom bouncers like plastic worms , jigs , tubes and jigging spoons or top waters like buzzbaits , spooks and chuggers . 1 Quote
Super User burrows Posted January 31, 2017 Super User Posted January 31, 2017 poppers spinnerbaits ball head jigs with a grub, even natural color squarebills can work, brown,green,black, blue,soft plastics. Quote
Super User Scott F Posted January 31, 2017 Super User Posted January 31, 2017 I fish mostly clear water for smallies. Senko type stick baits work well in clear water. So do suspending jerkbaits. Actually, any lure will work in clear water. Clear water extends the strike zone so fish can see the lure from farther away. Clear water makes a stealthy presentation more important. Staying farther away from the fish, and making longer casts is important. 7 Quote
Super User burrows Posted January 31, 2017 Super User Posted January 31, 2017 @Scott F I'm just curious when you mention jerk baits they work well even in hotter temperatures in clear water ? I ask because I fish some clear water in California from time to time and I have thought about it but I've never thrown it in the summer. Quote
Super User Bankbeater Posted January 31, 2017 Super User Posted January 31, 2017 Most of the water I fish locally is clear with a lot of vegetation in it. I like to use jigs, t-rigs, traps, shallow running crankbaits, and bladed jigs. 1 Quote
Super User Scott F Posted January 31, 2017 Super User Posted January 31, 2017 17 minutes ago, Pilot. said: @Scott F I'm just curious when you mention jerk baits they work well even in hotter temperatures in clear water ? I ask because I fish some clear water in California from time to time and I have thought about it but I've never thrown it in the summer. I never fish in hot water so I don't know if they'll work. In the summer, I fish rivers that never get as warm as the lakes do, and they work for me in the summer, but not as well as they do in the spring. 1 Quote
HookRz Posted February 1, 2017 Posted February 1, 2017 Clear or shiny top water, variations of watermelon finesse worms,& tubes, BIG straight tail shakys for big fish. And as a surprise spinnerbaits; bulged just below the surface. Silver double willow with a clear firecracker skirt shallow, same only chartreuse, chartreuse, chartreuse, over deeper water. The latter can be a SMB killer. Gotta burn'em. Throw in a white buzzbait. Always throw in a white buzzbait. Lol. 1 Quote
Super User Angry John Posted February 1, 2017 Super User Posted February 1, 2017 those above are great i use them but i also use a baby brush hawg a lot. It caught me more bass in Washington state than all others combined. The only other bait was a 4" dean Rojas cane thumper worm in watermelon red flake. Clear water was tough to learn but i found distance was my friend. The longer casts always worked better. Quote
Super User RoLo Posted February 1, 2017 Super User Posted February 1, 2017 Stickworms - jerkbaits ~ Roger Quote
Super User everythingthatswims Posted February 1, 2017 Super User Posted February 1, 2017 I catch tons of fish in warm or hot water on jerkbaits. As long as the water is clear they are an excellent bait. My favorite clear water baits would be a drop shot, wacky senko, shakey head, spook, jerkbait, and small swimbait. Light line is key! 2 Quote
bma3 Posted February 1, 2017 Author Posted February 1, 2017 4 minutes ago, everythingthatswims said: I catch tons of fish in warm or hot water on jerkbaits. As long as the water is clear they are an excellent bait. My favorite clear water baits would be a drop shot, wacky senko, shakey head, spook, jerkbait, and small swimbait. Light line is key! Do you think straight braid would work or will the fish be able to see it? Quote
Super User everythingthatswims Posted February 1, 2017 Super User Posted February 1, 2017 1 minute ago, bma3 said: Do you think straight braid would work or will the fish be able to see it? People on here will tell you that bass do not care if braid is directly attached to the bait even in clear water. I would love to take them on some of the bodies of water that I fish so they can show me that. 5 Quote
FishingTheNorth Posted February 1, 2017 Posted February 1, 2017 For Smallmouth, i find mustard or puke colour tubes work best. However, i would throw the zoom ultra vibe craw on a shaky head or Texas rig for largemouth. 1 Quote
RyneB Posted February 1, 2017 Posted February 1, 2017 finesse jig and swimbaits are my go to clear water baits. a 4 inch finesse worm in green pumpkin is also tough to beat. 1 Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted February 1, 2017 Global Moderator Posted February 1, 2017 Depends on what we're calling clear. In the lakes near me, 3-4 feet of visibility is clear. Or are we talking Bull Shoals or Beaver Lake where you can read the label on a can in 30' of water where 3-4 of visibility is muddy? I prefer small, natural looking baits for the most part in clear water, although sometimes gaudy colored baits that look ridiculous in the water pique the fish's interest. I was beat badly fishing a very clear small lake while I was wacky rigging a watermelon stick worm, by my brother in law fishing a bright chartreuse spinnerbait. We could watch them coming from 20' down to eat his bait, and they were not shy about it. A wacky rig, Ned rig, and shakyhead are some of my favorites in clear water. I also like to fish jerkbaits, walking topwaters, and big swimbaits when conditions are right. If it's an option, I'll usually avoid clear water and head for stained or muddy water instead. 4 Quote
parkerg31 Posted February 1, 2017 Posted February 1, 2017 @Scott F @Pilot. I tried jerk baits for the first time in the summer last year on Lake Martin, in Alabama. To my surprise i got bit on it more than any other search bait I tried. You just have to have short pauses, almost like a fluke. I went night fishing on the same trip and used it around dock lights and it also caught more fish than any other lure we tried. 1 Quote
Super User scaleface Posted February 1, 2017 Super User Posted February 1, 2017 13 hours ago, HookRz said: And as a surprise spinnerbaits; bulged just below the surface. Not a spinnerbait but I got on a bite at Table rock retrieving a chugger slow and steady . It pushed a big wake and gently sashayed . Now there are wake baits intended for that . Quote
MDBowHunter Posted February 1, 2017 Posted February 1, 2017 15 hours ago, Pilot. said: @Scott F I'm just curious when you mention jerk baits they work well even in hotter temperatures in clear water ? I ask because I fish some clear water in California from time to time and I have thought about it but I've never thrown it in the summer. I fish almost entirely in clear reservoirs and I have a jerkbait tied on every time I'm out. The only thing I change is that in early and late season when the water is cold I'll use a suspending bait as where I find that a bait that slowly rises will get more strikes when the water is warm and fish are active. I also fish a deeper diving bait when the water is warm because the fish go deep where I fish at. Quote
Scarborough817 Posted February 1, 2017 Posted February 1, 2017 for me it has mainly been swim jigs and swimbaits 1 Quote
Super User ww2farmer Posted February 1, 2017 Super User Posted February 1, 2017 I usually have clear (up to 15 feet) water here from a few weeks after ice out to mid-summer when the algae blooms stain the water green, and then again in the late fall when the algae blooms go away for good. Sometimes in the summer we get a little windows of clear water that last for a couple days, up to a week or so between the blooms. In cold clear water in the spring and late fall, the best producers for me are suspending jerkbaits, natural colored lipless cranks fished faster than you would think in cold water, finesse jigs with small subtle action trailers, drop shot rigs with 3"-4" nose hooked baits, shaky heads with straight tail worms, biffle heads with 3" craws and creature baits, and 4" worms or yum dingers on a wacky jig. Once the water warms up a little and those fish start heading to the bank, burning 1.5 size squarebills or a swimjig is my go to reaction bite presentation. I also start leaning on frogs a lot ....against conventional wisdom, I find a white belly frog outfishes a natural colored one by a wide margin. Soft jerkbaits get the call when they just slap at the frog, or won't chase the swim jig or squarebill. Docks are staring to get put in all over the lake round about this time, and 4"-5" yum dingers skipped under them are always a good bet... Usually the fish are spawning in clear water.....if I am fishing beds, it's usually for smallmouth, and it's usually with a 3"-4" bait on a drop shot. Once they are done spawning, I either fish super shallow around bluegill beds, or deep outside the bass spawning area. If shallow, it's with a frog, swim jig, or 5" yum dinger. if deep it with a drop shot with a bunch of different stuff, or a heavy weighted wacky jig with a trick worm or 5" yum dinger. Just before the water turns green in the summer, we are usually a week or so past the post spawn period and the weeds are at their thickest they will be all year. Speed kills in this situation. I flip/pitch a lot this time of year with a chigger craw or pit boss with a 1oz. sinker....sometimes because the cover dictates it, but often to get a fast fall and a reaction bite in the clear water. If they shy away from a craw/creature bait, I replace it with a 4"-5" yum dinger....yeah it looks ridiculous with a 1oz weight pegged to it, but it flat out works. 1 Quote
WI_Angler1989 Posted February 1, 2017 Posted February 1, 2017 In clear water (90% of the time here) my choices depend on the clouds as well. If it's a little overcast, it's easier to get away with something more gaudy like a jerkbait or small spinner. If it's sunny and clear a bottom contact lure work best. Something like a tube, craw or finesse jig. Grubs swam along the bottom work awesome anytime for me though! In overcast, wind, rain, sun, dead calm... any of it. Quote
Super User WRB Posted February 1, 2017 Super User Posted February 1, 2017 Everything I use works in the deep clear water reservoirs where I fish. I see you are from northern California and from your prior posts fishing a rainbow trout stocked lake with Florida strain LMB, very challenging. It's Feburary today and that means pre spawn where you live, the spawn is about 2 months away. The bass should deep in about 25'-35' depth zone and moving up. The lures I use during this time period are 9" hand poured soft plastic worms from Uptons Customs in black grape/blue neon, Aaron's tragic, 6" oxblood red flake and MMIII, Purple/brown jigs and trout swimbaits. My advice is to focus your efforts around major main lake points, then secondary staging points and finally spawning coves when the bass move in. Wood is rare in these lakes and bass will locate around it, big boulders and red clay transition areas near rocks. Tom PS, get a copy of In Pursuit of Giant Bass by Bill Murphy and study bass behavior and location. 1 Quote
Super User Gundog Posted February 1, 2017 Super User Posted February 1, 2017 The lake I fish the most has an average visibility of about 8 feet. The water is gin clear even after rain storms. The only time I've ever seen it muddy was after the 2011 flood. Spinner baits are the best bait to throw (IMO) when you have clear water. Use a willow leaf blade and you can see that blade flash from a good distance away. BTW the thing I love most about fishing clear water is when you get to see the bass hit your lure. Quote
bma3 Posted February 1, 2017 Author Posted February 1, 2017 2 hours ago, WRB said: Everything I use works in the deep clear water reservoirs where I fish. I see you are from northern California and from your prior posts fishing a rainbow trout stocked lake with Florida strain LMB, very challenging. It's Feburary today and that means pre spawn where you live, the spawn is about 2 months away. The bass should deep in about 25'-35' depth zone and moving up. The lures I use during this time period are 9" hand poured soft plastic worms from Uptons Customs in black grape/blue neon, Aaron's tragic, 6" oxblood red flake and MMIII, Purple/brown jigs and trout swimbaits. My advice is to focus your efforts around major main lake points, then secondary staging points and finally spawning coves when the bass move in. Wood is rare in these lakes and bass will locate around it, big boulders and red clay transition areas near rocks. Tom PS, get a copy of In Pursuit of Giant Bass by Bill Murphy and study bass behavior and location. There are usually trout fisherman on many of the points in the lake, will the bass still be there? The pic in my other thread is one of the points that is super popular when it comes to trout fishing. Quote
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