Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Greetings Bass Fishing Community,

 

I live in Loxahatchee, FL and work in Deerfield Beach.  Everyday during my lunch hour I bank fish for large mouth bass near my office.  My go to setup is a Texas-rigged 4" Senko with a 3/16 oz bullet weight on 15 lb mono line.  During the first quarter of 2017 I landed 110 bass with 15 (13.6%) being over 1 pound.  The largest was 7-4.  So far in the second quarter of this year I have landed 78 bass, but only 5 (6.4%) have been over a pound.  The largest was just under 3 pounds.  The last 41 fish I have caught have ALL been under one pound.

 

This is the first year I have maintained a fishing log and paid attention to the number and size of fish I am catching, so my question to all of the south Floridians is what is going on?  Is this a normal pattern or do I need to adjust my techniques to catch large bass now that its getting hot here?  My catch rate has stayed consistent at slightly better than 2 fish / hour but the fish quality has plummeted.

 

Advise and insight is greatly appreciated.

Posted

I would say 1st quarter was spawn & bedding and second post spawn moving into summer pattern.

  • Like 2
Posted

Caught two more little guys today.  I am in a competition with one of my colleagues so I need to keep the numbers up.  We count total fish not weight.  Last year I beat him by one fish, right now I am down 6 fish.  I will play around with some different lures and presentations.  Are the big girls still in shallows this time of year or have they gone deep?  

Posted

Use a larger senko. Will still catch the dinks but the odds of a larger fish go up dramatically. Have caught 1 lb bass on 9 inch senkos. Usually use the 5 + inch model. Also, shed the slip sinker. Don't need it and it kills the action.

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

People love to blame it on that 4" senko.  The truth is if you put that 4" in front of a big bass she will hit it with a vengeance.  You need to change up where you are fishing, some places don;t have a large number of bigger bass.  Small bass don't often hang with big bass, they are in danger of becoming a meal.  Don't blame it on the bait, that is an easy cop out.  You have obviously lost confience and that is not a good thing with any bait.   Change location, and change technique.  I caught two 20 inch bass last night with a 4 inch stick-o, and loads more on other trips.  Its either location, or technique!  Remember a senko does not provide action by itself, you provide the action with your rod tip.  If one technique doesn't work, change up.  It will drag, hop up off the bottom and fall back, walk along the bottom with a jerk and slack, and dead stick.  They don't always want it the same, and work the whole water column by changing weights or just slowing down.  Good luck, its not the bait.

  • Like 5
Posted

We have about 6 different locations that we rotate through so I am fishing the same water now that I was earlier this year with the same tackle and techniques.  I have found that as the temperature rises the bass seem to want a faster retrieve.  I will remove the slip weight and see what happens.

 

My personal best at 7-4 was caught on a 4" Senko.

Posted

With the weight removed throw it in a swimming pool or clear water. It gyrates unbelievably. Most of my strikes with senkos come on the fall, at least 85 %. No strike, move it a few feet then let it fall again. I know some guys have brand preferences and I have tried many, but unless the fish are especially aggressive a senko works best for me, and I hate that as they seem to be the most expensive on the market. Not professing to be an expert, just personal experiences I'm relating.

  • Super User
Posted
47 minutes ago, davecon said:

With the weight removed throw it in a swimming pool or clear water. It gyrates unbelievably. Most of my strikes with senkos come on the fall, at least 85 %. No strike, move it a few feet then let it fall again. I know some guys have brand preferences and I have tried many, but unless the fish are especially aggressive a senko works best for me, and I hate that as they seem to be the most expensive on the market. Not professing to be an expert, just personal experiences I'm relating.

 

 

Most of my bites come on the initial fall, or the slow walk along the bottom and the length of pause in between the jerks.  Its a strong jerk and immediate slack in the line.  How long you wait in between jerks makes a big difference.  It will walk just like a zara spook, but along the bottom.  Use as little weight as necessary, with wind being the main factor.  The less weight the better the walk.  Technique is everything.  Great to practice in a swimming pool.  Watch Major League Fishing, most of the pros are thrilled to just be catching bass of any size.  The only thing worse then not catching big bass, is not catching any bass!

  • Like 1
Posted

I have been buying "Senko" type seconds from Bridgemaster on FL-60 in Lake Wales for $5/pound.  They seem to work no differently than the name brand lures.  I do like the added casting distance a bullet weight gives me, but will try weightless or maybe a 1/16 oz for a while and see how it works.  Are you still Texas rigged if you remove the slip weight?  I have seen the term "Weightless Texas-Rigged" but isn't that just a hook and a lure?  Am I missing something?

  • Super User
Posted
45 minutes ago, BCline said:

I have been buying "Senko" type seconds from Bridgemaster on FL-60 in Lake Wales for $5/pound.  They seem to work no differently than the name brand lures.  I do like the added casting distance a bullet weight gives me, but will try weightless or maybe a 1/16 oz for a while and see how it works.  Are you still Texas rigged if you remove the slip weight?  I have seen the term "Weightless Texas-Rigged" but isn't that just a hook and a lure?  Am I missing something?

  

 

Texas rigged weightless works great on the shallow, weedy,  Loxahatchee flats.  The bait will slowly flutter down and then come right over the thick weed beds.  Pause in the holes in the vegetation, and let it slowly fall in the hole.

  • Like 1
Posted

I lived and fished in South Florida for 40 years before moving to Central Florida.  South Florida has big fish, but the canals are full of small bass.  These small bass will jump on anything they can get into their mouths.  If you want to catch 100 of them in a day, throw out a 4" Rapala and see what happens.  The biggest canal fish I ever caught was 8 pounds but most were 12 inches.  The good news is the number of fish in these canals is much greater than in a natural lake.  If you want to target only bigger fish you should do a number of things differently.  First is fish where they are and second use bigger bait.  When I lived in South Florida I never caught a bass over 6 1/2 pounds until I started fishing with big plastic worms.  Try a Zoom mag II or Ol'Moster worm with a small weight and fish it dead on the bottom.  Slow down and fish quality not quantity.  Larger top water lures also attract big fish, but you have to stick with it  My favorite is a Devil's Horse in chrome with a black back and an orange belly.  I had a good friend who made over $100,000 a year fishing tournaments with that lure alone.   Many times I went to the scales only to see him standing there with two 8 pounders, one in each hand.

  • Like 6
Posted

Well I broke my little fish streak today by landing a 2 1/2 and a 3 1/2 pound snakehead.  Not exactly what I wanted but it was nice to have something pull drag again.  Both on a 4" Senko.

IMAG1814.jpg

Posted

Yikes!  I didn't know they had snakeheads in South Florida.  This doesn't surprise me a bit.   Keep them down there....

Posted

Throw frogs or spooks (I prefer frogs) take nothing but frogs and throw them in cover and in open water in any canal in so. Fl. - stay with it you will be rewarded I promise you.

Posted

Targeting big fish takes a big commitment alot of patience and you must be able to handle not getting alot of strikes and alot of fish.I have fished with alot of guys and if they weren't getting a bite or a fish every few minutes they would get aggreviated and not enjoying themselves.But the reward of catching big fish compared to small fish is no comparsion. 

Posted
Quote

But the reward of catching big fish compared to small fish is no comparsion. 

I'm with you.  I would rather fish three days without a bite for a chance at one fish over 8 pounds.  I used to fish with a guy who would cast out a big worm, let it sink to the bottom and smoke a whole cigarette before moving his bait.  He caught a bunch of fish over 10 pounds.  Most anglers fish too fast for big bass.

  • Like 3
Posted

for me, slowing down and using bigger worms are the keys to catching bigger fish. when it starts getting hot early morning spooks or devils horse followed by big worms.

Posted

IMG_20170528_102607.thumb.jpg.9dad2c7665be650948f633171d81b2c0.jpg

IMG_20170528_102654.jpg

Got her this morning at lox? not alot of bites but I slowed my fishing down and went to a big jerkbait on Wednesday I caught like 50 fish but they were dinks just shows if you change your approach and go with bigger baits and slowwwww your fishing g down you will be rewarded.

  • Like 1
Posted

It is harder to catch big fish in the summer in Florida, especially in shallow water areas.

Posted
2 hours ago, hawgenvy said:

It is harder to catch big fish in the summer in Florida, especially in shallow water areas.

 

That's why God invented snook ! They don't mind the heat.

Posted

 

I think what messes with our heads here in Florida is during spring time we are catching fish just about every cast and big fish than summer comes and it slowwwwwsssss  down lol 

Posted

If you want to catch big Florida bass in summer you should try fishing at night.  I fished the Everglades and Okeechobee at night and caught many big summer time bass.  My favorite bait was a 1/2 oz. spinnerbait.   Bugs are a problem, but it's worth the effort.  The best time is usually from 12:00 AM until dawn. 

  • Super User
Posted

 

I wouldn't devote too much thought to lure type and no thought to lure color.

Begin by creating waypoints on your contour chart that pinpoint the most appropriate seasonal habitats.

At each trial site, drill-down to find the most fruitful 'fish depth' and the most fruitful 'lure delivery'

(that is time well spent).

 

Roger

  • Like 1
Posted

Thanks to everyone for the comments.  Saturday evening I finally broke my little bass streak and landed a nice 3 pounder.  I restrung my favorite reel with 17 lb mono and rigged it weightless.  I am going to throw nothing but big Senkos this week and see what happens.

IMAG1821.jpg

  • Like 1

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


  • Outboard Engine

    fishing forum

    fishing tackle

    fishing

    fishing

    fishing

    bass fish

    fish for bass



×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.