Trick Worm Posted October 11, 2008 Posted October 11, 2008 For largemouth and spotted bass Im thinkin a weightless trick worm, frog, swim jig, and T-rig. If we get breaks in the cover maybe a buzzbait, rat-l-trap, or minus 1 Quote
Super User Sam Posted October 11, 2008 Super User Posted October 11, 2008 What about a swimming Senko? Horny Frogs? Otherwise, you have seemend to have most of the batis covered in your post. Don't forget to fish the edges of the grass and slop, too. Quote
Super User Catt Posted October 11, 2008 Super User Posted October 11, 2008 You will find the majority of bass located in grass will be on the bottom therefore a Jig-N-Craw or pegged Texas Rig would be better suited for this situation. Quote
BirdNestBen Posted October 11, 2008 Posted October 11, 2008 weightless fluke....... or Rattling Rapala where the cover breaks...... Quote
Super User Sam Posted October 11, 2008 Super User Posted October 11, 2008 Hey Trick, It is now 7:30 so I am awake and can answer you better. Don't forget the Rage Tail products on top. Great baits. What Catt said is true, if you can punch through the grass. I would not throw any Rat-L-Trps as their treble hooks will get caught in the grass. A Horny Toad may work as would any topwater frog. So go out and have fun and let us know what worked. Quote
memo43 Posted October 11, 2008 Posted October 11, 2008 I fish a creek with heavy grass all around the edges I have had some pretty good luck with jigs, an anacodas T-riged. pretty much anything that I can bounce/ drag on the bottom. Senkos have always been pretty good to me as well memo Quote
CJ Posted October 11, 2008 Posted October 11, 2008 Nice replies. I got to add a spinnerbait. There are always going to be situations that will dictate what works best for that given day. Topwaters are great on cloudy days but on my home lake, this time of year, the big girls like to belly down on the bottom on cloudy days for some reason. I like to slow roll a spinnerbait on the edges, rippin' it through what it hits. Quote
CookieMonst3r Posted October 11, 2008 Posted October 11, 2008 Strike King Pure Poison Swim Jig, or Pure Poison Swimbait (It's a Saltwater bait), Chatterbaits will also work. A horny toad is also a great choice. Quote
Joel W Posted October 13, 2008 Posted October 13, 2008 I fish weedy waters 95% of the time. With a cloud cover I target the outside edges. In the morning I'll work a Cranbait bouncing it along the bottom, far enough from the weeds not to get snagged constantly, but I get snagged enough so I know I'm still close enough to entice some LMs. From there I go to a 1/2 oz jig and a wt'd creature bait with a 1/2 oz bullet wt unpegged. I look for nice size weed holes and pitch a jig in there as well. Also the waters I fish have a lot of stone walls that run through the weeds, and I target them as well. Usually the weeds don't cover the walls, so there easy to see. I work a spinnerbait over them and along them. Then pitch a jig around them as well. And yes, I do loose a lot of jigs, but I do catch my fair share of Bass as well. Quote
Super User Paul Roberts Posted October 13, 2008 Super User Posted October 13, 2008 Vegies and clouds?? Awesome! I start high, a buzzbait or bulged spinnerbait, swim-jig, super-shallow crank, or walking bait. If they aren't there I ply the edges with shallow/med cranks, jigs, jig-worms. If no go I pound the bottom of the cover edges and pockets with a 1/4 to 1/2oz jig or creature. If no go, I go to a 1/2 to 3/4oz jig or creature and probe the interior of the vegetation. With good cloud cover a lot of bass may be up high, above the weeds. One way I check for this is to throw a swimming jig high up over a weedy flat, and watch for wakes of bass chasing the airborne lure to intercept -be ready for strikes right at splashdown. This is most apt to happen on warm days with heavy cloud cover (a summer thing mostly). On bright sunny days (in summer) this same tactic might also produce wakes, but in the opposite direction -away from the lure as those spooked bass bolt! In fall, with sun angle low enough, shallow bass may not spook at an airborne lure as easily. Buzzbaits and sunny days can go together in fall, but I still like a little ripple or chop to the water. Quote
Trick Worm Posted October 13, 2008 Author Posted October 13, 2008 well this is how the day went. Got one on a red eye shad. My partner was flipping/pitching the front of the boat and caught about 15 while I doing the same thing with same lure behind him got maybe 2 bites and didnt catch anything. He finished in second with a limit at 12 something pounds. We were fishing in very very heavy grass only 2-3 from the side of the boat. My partner was extremely proficient at this and I learned a lot from him. And I got to fish on a brand new Legend boat for a day!!! Quote
Super User Catt Posted October 13, 2008 Super User Posted October 13, 2008 The fish were where; top, mid-depth or bottom? Quote
Super User .dsaavedra. Posted October 13, 2008 Super User Posted October 13, 2008 if the grass is about a foot or a little less below the water surface, i'd tie on a bandit footloose and just burn it over the grass as fast as i can. i had some pretty good luck doing this. bass would just come out of nowhere and smash it. i even saw one big wake coming to my bait 20 feet from the left, but it never hit my bait. Quote
Trick Worm Posted October 13, 2008 Author Posted October 13, 2008 The fish were in about 3 feet of water and seemed to be hanging in the very front portions of the grass. The grass goes all the way to the top of the water so everything has to be weedless if you want to fish there. Quote
Super User Catt Posted October 14, 2008 Super User Posted October 14, 2008 So another words you would say the following was a true statement You will find the majority of bass located in grass will be on the bottom therefore a Jig-N-Craw or pegged Texas Rig would be better suited for this situation. Quote
Trick Worm Posted October 14, 2008 Author Posted October 14, 2008 So another words you would say the following was a true statement You will find the majority of bass located in grass will be on the bottom therefore a Jig-N-Craw or pegged Texas Rig would be better suited for this situation. We were using some kind of craw black/blue texas rigged with pegs 90% of the time out Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted October 14, 2008 Super User Posted October 14, 2008 I have had some success with the GYCB Swimming Senko and Kreature. http://www.bassresource.com/bass_fishing_forums/YaBB.pl?num=1180909581 8-) Quote
OK Bass Hunter Posted October 18, 2008 Posted October 18, 2008 Ragetail shad worked for me this year under those conditions. Quote
BigBubbaBassMan Posted October 18, 2008 Posted October 18, 2008 Most of the waters I fish have thick grass or no grass, but the sky is too often sunny. Try to find additional structures visible through the thick grass such as stumps, logs, brush, or humps and pitch a jig or weightless worm to these structures. This works especially well if these structures create pockets clear of the thick grass. Quote
Super User Catt Posted October 19, 2008 Super User Posted October 19, 2008 Most of the waters I fish have thick grass or no grass, but the sky is too often sunny. Try to find additional structures visible through the thick grass such as stumps, logs, brush, or humps and pitch a jig or weightless worm to these structures. This works especially well if these structures create pockets clear of the thick grass. Dude stumps, logs, brush, or humps are cover not structure; structure is the shape of the bottom of the lake. Quote
Super User .dsaavedra. Posted October 19, 2008 Super User Posted October 19, 2008 humps are structure :-X Quote
baitcaster1010 Posted October 20, 2008 Posted October 20, 2008 3/8 bullet weight baby brush hog june bug color Quote
bassinri Posted October 20, 2008 Posted October 20, 2008 -Terminator Spinner Bait, White -Spro Frog -Bass Magic Swim bait Those are my choices. They have all worked for me in the past. Quote
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