Rafael Rosen Posted June 19, 2019 Posted June 19, 2019 I'm a rookie freshwater angler looking for advice. I've gotten reasonably successful at finding fish and I'm looking for ideas that can help me get more bites. Yesterday evening I took my canoe out to the meadows around sunset. Noticed some fish jumping in a calm shallow area next to the sandbar. Water was about a foot deep and packed with vegetation (maybe watermilfoil?). I tried casting a hula popper past the jumps and retrieving it back through. No nibbles though. Anything else I could try in that situation? 1 Quote
Super User Choporoz Posted June 19, 2019 Super User Posted June 19, 2019 Best advice I ever got was to read BassResource. Maybe one out of every hundred fish I see jump, I can confidently identify it as a bass. 90+ I can identify as non-bass. Of the non-bass, there are times when it is small fish fleeing from hungry bass. So, my point is...that chasing jumping fish gets to be a fool's errand most of the time. It will suck your time on the water until you can confidently identify what's jumping and why. 1 Quote
Hower08 Posted June 19, 2019 Posted June 19, 2019 As a beginner here is my recommendation. Take it for what it's worth though. Pick two or three things and learn the ins and out of them till you have 100 percent confidence in each technique. Pick a top water a crankbait or spinner bait and a soft plastic. I would pick a zoom trick worm In black/red combo. a black buzzbait and a strike king 1.5 in shad or chartreuse with black back. Those 3 baits together should be able to put you a very good amount of bass in the boat Quote
Super User Koz Posted June 19, 2019 Super User Posted June 19, 2019 Quote Noticed some fish jumping in a calm shallow area next to the sandbar. This is where knowing your lake and what species are in the water are a big help. For example, I'm confident in that where I fish that most of the time I can discern between a bass, catfish, shad, bluegill, and grass carp surfacing. It's probably easier for me, though since we don't have pickerel, perch, musky, walleye, or pike in the lagoons I fish. That being said, when I determine it's a shad or bass surfacing I toss a buzzbait in that area and if I'm correct on the type of fish I thought I saw I usually get a strike from a bass. My suggestion is to start of with a Senko or trick warm, spinnerbait, and a top water like a buzzbait. You could go with a frog, but you waon't hook up as frequently as the buzzbait. With the Senko I'd make sure to fish it wacky rigged, weightless Texas rig, and weighted Texas rig. Personally, I'm not a fan of crankbaits, but that's because I fish from the bank. It's a different game with crankbaits fished from a watercraft. Quote
Super User Mobasser Posted June 19, 2019 Super User Posted June 19, 2019 Learn how to fish, and get good with a plastic worm. Quote
BassinCNY Posted June 19, 2019 Posted June 19, 2019 I think the next thing I would try is a weightless texas rigged senko. Quote
BadBassWV Posted June 20, 2019 Posted June 20, 2019 Best Advise. If your married, Find a way to get home when UPS drops off all the Lures, Rods, Reels, Pliers, Hooks and any other gear you will be purchasing so the Wife doesn't find out how much your spending per month on gear. Every time the wife sees UPS, I get the same thing. What did you order Now??? LOL It's an addiction, Got to have new Lures even if you never use them. 1 Quote
Super User Ratherbfishing Posted June 21, 2019 Super User Posted June 21, 2019 Were these fish breaching the water or just busting the surface? Bass seldom do the former and if it's this, likely as not you were casting to carp. Topwaters are fun but for my money, soft plastics (especially worms) cast to where the splash was will produce more fish. Quote
r3825 Posted June 21, 2019 Posted June 21, 2019 Probably carp that you were seeing, keep at it, you'll get it. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.