GlenInBossTown Posted March 16, 2017 Posted March 16, 2017 Hi All- I'm a bit of a noob here. I've been living right on a small lake in Massachusetts for a few years now and have had a bit of success, routinely catching 2-6# largemouth bass an occasional pickerel and various panfish each year. But when it comes to the bass, I've only caught them on soft, Texas-rigged plastics. No luck with frogs, spin or buzz baits, etc. The lake is 585 acres and is very shallow, with an average depth of 9' and a max depth of 13'. We get a LOT of algae do to runoff from the local cranberry bogs. In fact, the first year I was there, the lake was closed to swimming for a month because the algae grew to toxic levels. The town has been doing some things with the dam and water treatment and it should be better this year. I literally walk off my back porch to the private beach, so for all of its flaws, it's a pretty sweet spot. I've got a 12' boat with a small outboard. In any event, I can't wait for the weather to warm and get out on the lake. If anyone has any suggestions for how I can expand my tools and techniques, especially as the water comes up from near-freezing in the next few weeks. I generally stay away from live bait. I watch a lot of YouTube videos, but they are mostly from other parts of the country and in different types of water. What's a good way to start to broaden my skills? Thanks, Glen Quote
Super User NHBull Posted March 16, 2017 Super User Posted March 16, 2017 Given your access, I would spend a few days exclusively with cranks and really learn them....it will pay off in the long run 1 Quote
Smokinal Posted March 16, 2017 Posted March 16, 2017 A hard jerkbait will be my main bait from ice-out up to around 50-52 degree water. I'd also play with a red craw lipless bait. And the jerkbait will not be worked like you see in most of the vids and on TV where the water is warmer. It will involve long pauses with a few twitches in between. Very little movement to it. Quote
MikeOGNR Posted March 19, 2017 Posted March 19, 2017 I would use a jig and pig. Cast it out and drag it back painfully slow. It'll get you on fish. This year I purchased a huddelston setup for throwing big swimbaits that's also and option cast unmm far and deep and slowly reel umm in 1 Quote
Super User MassYak85 Posted March 19, 2017 Super User Posted March 19, 2017 3 hours ago, MikeOGNR said: I would use a jig and pig. Cast it out and drag it back painfully slow. It'll get you on fish. This year I purchased a huddelston setup for throwing big swimbaits that's also and option cast unmm far and deep and slowly reel umm in This is what I've been doing so far, football jig and a hudd 68. Only been out twice from shore so far since ice out for like 1-2 hours. I got skunked both times though. Quote
kroberts9 Posted March 19, 2017 Posted March 19, 2017 On 3/16/2017 at 5:14 PM, NHBull said: Given your access, I would spend a few days exclusively with cranks and really learn them....it will pay off in the long run i take this approach when learning all new techniques. Bring one set up used strictly for your technique of desire and throw it all day or until your confident. it may take weeks and months but it's the best way to become proficient. I love flipping I'm good in light cover and structure but I'm not there in the thicker stuff. that's my goal this year sensing bites through the gnarliest of cover Quote
Phil_NH Posted March 19, 2017 Posted March 19, 2017 I will echo what others have said, go out with one set up- start with a jerkbait because the waters still cold, and work it till you get it down. The youtube videos might help with how to get started using a specific bait, but hands on time with it on the water is how your going to learn the different lure techniques. This time of year is can be so frustrating watching those videos of these guys fishing Texas, Florida, California and we still got 30 degrees going on. 2 Quote
Super User Darren. Posted March 19, 2017 Super User Posted March 19, 2017 I'll just wish you a warm welcome to the forums, Glen! Quote
Super User Angry John Posted March 19, 2017 Super User Posted March 19, 2017 Try a blade bait as they are cheap and work. The red rattle trap and a deep jerkbait like a stayee 90 or a kvd deep. Pull don't jerkbaits in 30-40 degree water. Pick up two one in a solid color and one clear like ghost minnow. If you have to have a third get a reflective one with silver or gold. Later they will move up but start deep on the primary points and main lake structure 1 Quote
MikeOGNR Posted March 20, 2017 Posted March 20, 2017 17 hours ago, MassYak85 said: This is what I've been doing so far, football jig and a hudd 68. Only been out twice from shore so far since ice out for like 1-2 hours. I got skunked both times though. Yea this will be my first year with hudds. Pretty siked to see them in action though. Gonna exclusively throw them all year to get on a pig I may go fish less, but when I do link up with a bite I know it'll be a giant. Quote
MaineBassMan Posted March 21, 2017 Posted March 21, 2017 I'm an ice out fisherman, My favorite time to go is within a week or two of ice out. Most of my big bass come this time of year, I've actually been on lakes when half of the lake is still iced over. My favorite spring lures are jigs, square bill cranks, 8-9ft cranks, chatter baits and suspending jerk baits. I find that the most important thing to do is idle around the lake and look for the warmest water temp on the lake. I also like locating pools in streams or rivers where the water goes from a shallow part and drops into 8ft to 12ft hole. I find bass stacked in these locations and I mean stacked!! My favorite spring lake will produce bass on just about every cast, no joke and I've had days where the average will run from upper 2lb to 4lb with the occasional hog. Always watch your lures on the retrieve, you will see chasers and sometime whole schools of smallmouth will follow, I call them "WOLF PACKS" lol hold your boat position and get ready for a feeding frenzy!! Quote
bassguytom Posted March 21, 2017 Posted March 21, 2017 I would start with a jerkbait. Remember to pause longer when the water is colder. Also I think you have a polar bear swimming up to you house from the lake in that first picture. Quote
Mr. Aquarium Posted March 29, 2017 Posted March 29, 2017 i know that lake!! jigs jerkbaits and plastics, go slow! Quote
Mr. Aquarium Posted April 1, 2017 Posted April 1, 2017 i had luck at a new pond yesterday, been dying here, found a school of perch and bass along a sunny shoreline in shallow water, they were hitting jigs and lipless baits. i was standing on a log kept missin fish cuz my drag was slippin. kept moving along shore. got to a cove on the south end. they were hittin jigs good here to, nothing big but felt good gettin on some decent action. the northern sides of the ponds will be ther warmest Quote
Ayrnay22 Posted April 4, 2017 Posted April 4, 2017 Sounds like west monponsett pond if so the eastern pond is better. Quote
JAB50 Posted April 4, 2017 Posted April 4, 2017 I agree with what everyone is telling you. Jerkbaits,jigs,lipless crankbait and slow rolling a spinnerbait. Double Colorado in a perch color. Same for the jerkbaits color along with blk/gold and blue back with either bone or silver sides. You want to have a few different colors for all types of setups. I have an idea of where you are located. Swamp Hog could give you a lot of good info and techniques to use. He fishes in that general area from the posts of his that I have read. So the techniques will be almost identical. These techniques are also the same techniques you would use in early to mid fall there. After first frost. I live in Maryland now but have been fishing down cape cod for over 35 yrs. Also, don't be afraid to throw a spider grub on a ball head or football head. 1/4-3/8oz weight and green pumpkin is a great color to use. Fish it slow or you can swim it slow depending on the water temp. Find some drop offs that go from 8 to 15 ft deep. Work those drop offs/breaks. The fish will start staging around those depths looking for bait. Quote
"hamma" Posted April 5, 2017 Posted April 5, 2017 perch patterned rapala x-rap, black/blue jig and pig, white spinnerbait for the wind, and a silver/black spotted torpedo. These are alternatives to soft plastics that will expand your "plastic techniques", and all excel in waters I've fished in Halifax, then yet,.. I haven't fished them all. Quote
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