snowplow Posted November 13, 2023 Posted November 13, 2023 Hey guys, I'm fishing later into the year then I ever have for bass. I'm trying to catch bass every month out of the year this year. I caught my November bass so far on a spinnerbait on a windy day with low visibility but I was just curious. Where are you guys finding the bass this time of year around here? Quote
pdxfisher Posted November 13, 2023 Posted November 13, 2023 I have not fished for bass in a three weeks but my last trip I was catching bass in the Columbia in 15-30' of water on a drop shot. Fish were coming off humps and points. There did not seem to be a preference for upstream vs downstream side. Quote
Super User islandbass Posted November 14, 2023 Super User Posted November 14, 2023 I mostly stop fishing but not completely for bass usually by December because I am a shorebound angler for whom bank fishing for bass just isn’t productive and many lakes nearby are closed by the end of October (Western Washington, King County). I can’t speak for eastern WA. Usually when I do, as @pdxfisher mentioned, drop shot is pretty much my go to. @snowplow: Are you in western WA? The chum salmon should running soon if they aren’t already. Imagine a smallie on steroids and that is a chum. Quote
snowplow Posted November 14, 2023 Author Posted November 14, 2023 Yep I'm in King Co too. I've never fished for Chum. I'll have to try it. I was thinking more about this and you know listening to YouTube videos and trying to figure it all out. I keep hearing that in November the bass are active but nowhere I fished am I seeing active fish. Are you guys seeing active fish right now? I also keep hearing their chasing bait fish but I haven't really seen that myself. Maybe I missed it. How big are the bait fish right now? I have so many questions lol. Quote
pdxfisher Posted November 14, 2023 Posted November 14, 2023 The bass I was catching on my last trip were puking up shad fry and perch. What I think happens in the Columbia is that the bass sit in deeper water and when schools of shad fry go by (usually about 10' deep) they come up and eat a few. I usually don't see them chasing bait this time of year. I see them chasing bait all summer but I see fewer fish pinning bait against the surface once fall hits and the shad fry are migrating. That is my guess/observation for the Columbia. You have a lot of lakes up your way to fish. I have never been on any of them so I can't comment on what to expect there. Quote
snowplow Posted November 14, 2023 Author Posted November 14, 2023 I saw bass pinning fry to the surface in October but not since then and even then just once or twice. Quote
Caliyak Posted November 14, 2023 Posted November 14, 2023 I grew up in Central Washington and fished Potholes and surrounding lakes. You can fish all year in central Wa. It's a trip but there are places to fish all over the basin. If you see the candy cane water tank, you're in the right spot. LOL Quote
Super User islandbass Posted November 17, 2023 Super User Posted November 17, 2023 @snowplow: Then you’ve observed what I observed but of course I am a bank angler. A boat even here would definitely increase the odds. The latest I ever caught a bass from the shore was November. If you’re interested in targeting chum, it should be a good time now. Start your research with the green river, from the mouth to Auburn. And check the regs - sometimes certain sections of the river might be closed. One of the things I despise is how conculuted and at times confusing the regs are. I have a lot of things I’m juggling right now so fishing is way in the back burner 😭 and I just can’t get around to it. maybe we can connect sometime in the near future. I am not an expert by any means, just a guy you loves to fish. Quote
snowplow Posted December 10, 2023 Author Posted December 10, 2023 For you western WA guys out there, just curious how large are the baitfish right now in Dec? Bluegill/pumpkinseed/crappie, perch, and trout? Quote
Pat Brown Posted December 10, 2023 Posted December 10, 2023 Probably a lot of different sizes but the bass seem to key in on smaller ones here. A lot of this years sunfish fry that hatched over the summer are now 2-3 inches long and swimming around in schools as the surface water hits it's winter lows in the 40s. I assume it's similar with regard to the size the bass prefer but hard to say what size the forage is on your body of water without netting or catching a few on rod and reel. 1 Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 11, 2023 Super User Posted December 11, 2023 The LMB in the State of Washington are Northern strain that tend to avoid baitfish over 5” long. The vast majority of young of the year baitfish are under 5” long, Sunfish family and crappie around 3”. Bass eat a wide variety of prey including young of the year catfish, carp, suckers and adult size fresh water Sculpin and crawdads. Keep in mind fish including bass can not judge the size of themselves or the prey the see and often make mistakes trying to swallow prey too wide. Tom Quote
snowplow Posted December 12, 2023 Author Posted December 12, 2023 Wow that's an epic piece of information. Thank you! Quote
snowplow Posted January 5, 2024 Author Posted January 5, 2024 I got two questions for you guys, 1. When I'm listening to YouTube and learning new things I hear a lot of people talk about techniques for down south, the west, and the north. Just curious as a Washington guy would I be aligning with the West or the north or both or what? 1. In Washington here. I know we have sculpins. I always knew them as bullheads growing up. I only saw them in rivers. Is that a good thing to imitate here in Washington? Are they common in the lakes and ponds? Are sculpins and gobies essentially the same thing for my purposes? Quote
Super User WRB Posted January 7, 2024 Super User Posted January 7, 2024 Fresh water sculpins are common in west coast rivers and lakes. Roboworm makes a 4” sculpin in Oxblood w/light red flake, perfect on a split or slip shoot rig. Tom Quote
snowplow Posted January 7, 2024 Author Posted January 7, 2024 Cool thanks. I wasn't sure if they were in the lakes and ponds. Quote
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