Super User iceintheveins Posted April 17, 2009 Super User Posted April 17, 2009 What are your most productive lures in 55 - 60 degree water? Here are mine: 1. Senko 2. Suspending Jerkbait 3. Jig And Pig 4. Tube 5. Shallow Running Crank Quote
Super User Crestliner2008 Posted April 17, 2009 Super User Posted April 17, 2009 Hard jerkbaits, jigs, Senkos. Toward the upper range is when I'll start to drop shot. Quote
Blue Streak Posted April 17, 2009 Posted April 17, 2009 Jerkbaits, Pointers and Husky Jerks. As the water warms I will start to use T rigged and shaky head soft plastics. Quote
bassin is addicting Posted April 17, 2009 Posted April 17, 2009 chrome/blue trap senko, i like mine wacky white spinner white chatter and i always seem to throw a double tail hula grub at some point... 8-) Quote
Super User iceintheveins Posted April 17, 2009 Author Super User Posted April 17, 2009 Do you guys burn the lipless crank or use a stop and go, yo yo type retrieve this time of year? Quote
mlpauley Posted April 18, 2009 Posted April 18, 2009 Do you guys burn the lipless crank or use a stop and go, yo yo type retrieve this time of year? I would like to know this as well Quote
Tyde one Posted April 18, 2009 Posted April 18, 2009 Im fishing a pearl white super fluke right now with a 4 hook. Weightless and killin em. Been having 60 degree water now. They arent on the bank yet though. Best fish caught in 20-30 feet of water. You catch em chasing minnows and throw it in there. Tears em up. Quote
Super User Hammer 4 Posted April 18, 2009 Super User Posted April 18, 2009 So far, drop shoting a Senco has been my goto bait for those temps. However, I bought some Zoom flukes, for weightless jerk baits, I'll see how those work. Quote
lure junkie Posted April 18, 2009 Posted April 18, 2009 as far as retrieves go in water temps similar to yours, a steady slow to medium retrieve with an occasional brief stoppage,followed by a quick twitch to get it trackin' again works good for me as far as triggering strikes go. you get a different flash on the flutter and a sound change on the the twitch breaking up the monotony of a vanilla retrieve. Quote
JShrock07 Posted April 18, 2009 Posted April 18, 2009 Do you guys burn the lipless crank or use a stop and go, yo yo type retrieve this time of year? I would like to know this as well I like to yo-yo them, just as I begin my retrieve i will use a steady retrieve until I hit grass. Once I hit the grass I start to yo-yo. I will pull it up just enough to rip it out of the grass. This will really help the bass react to it. Quote
Super User iceintheveins Posted April 18, 2009 Author Super User Posted April 18, 2009 Do you guys burn the lipless crank or use a stop and go, yo yo type retrieve this time of year? I would like to know this as well I like to yo-yo them, just as I begin my retrieve i will use a steady retrieve until I hit grass. Once I hit the grass I start to yo-yo. I will pull it up just enough to rip it out of the grass. This will really help the bass react to it. Something about lipless cranks over emerging grass seems to just nail bass. Quote
Super User Paul Roberts Posted April 18, 2009 Super User Posted April 18, 2009 ice, The way I look at it, it's "how much speed are they willing to chase?" Speeds good for covering water, but it's also important to what the fish perceive as catchable for their given state of activity. You have to play around to discern that. But, there seems to be, as water warms, a certain speed requirement to attract/trigger strikes. While bass can chase in cold water to some degree (if motivated by easy prey) when water warms they seem to NEED speed more often than not. Above 55 is where I start to really see it. I often speed test small bass (easy to find bc there are lots of 'em) to see if they need speed. Too often I'll be fishing "my own way" and find I'm impaling small bass when I reel up to cast again. This is a BIG CLUE , and, although I my continue my way for a time (to be sure), increasing speed turns out to be the ticket. As to lures, I have my favorites but all the above are fine. But I think speed and the willingness of bass to make a capture (your pauses and accelerations) is what's important. Disclaimer: These comments are the thoughts and ideas of one Paul Roberts and may have no connection with reality outside of Paul Roberts limited intellectual capacity and time spent on Earth. ;D Quote
Super User Catt Posted April 18, 2009 Super User Posted April 18, 2009 Instead of looking at just the water temperature I would want to know what the weather pattern was 3 days prior. If it has been stable then I would bust out the Rat-L-Traps. I would rip em through grass, bounce em of wood, & kneel-n-reel em. Oh yea I'd do the same thing with a spinner bait! I would throw Texas rigged plastic in, around & through any available cover followed by a Jig-N-Craw; soft plastic swim baits would also be in the picture. Target areas would be main lake points, secondary points, spawning flats & starting at the second break line off the bank. If the weather pattern 3 days prior was cold fronts then I would slow down presentations Quote
Super User Paul Roberts Posted April 19, 2009 Super User Posted April 19, 2009 Yeah, agree with Catt that weather trends are a clue to activity. I was thinking spring and rising temps (reaching 55-60) -there does seem to be a progression with general temp (the number) as spring progresses. I assumed this is what ice was talking about. Early season like this I expect aggressive fish when the water's warming and have to slow down when it's cooling (cold front). Summer's different though. Dark skies are a blessing then. Quote
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