Toddyc20 Posted October 4, 2010 Report Posted October 4, 2010 Hey all. I'm going to be heading out for a few bass fishing excursions in the next couple of weeks and I was wondering if anyone could provide some tips. I've never fished for bass this late in the year. How deep are they this time of year? Is a fast (spinnerbait/crankbait) or slow (plastics/jigs) they better way to go. I'm not looking for numbers at all i'm just looking for that one big fish. Thanks for the anticipated help.
uglyfish Posted October 4, 2010 Report Posted October 4, 2010 Where are u going and are u targeting largies or smallies?
Guest swiss Posted October 4, 2010 Report Posted October 4, 2010 That's a really complicated question since it depends on what body of water you're fishing and the weather conditions. There is no single solution, but I would imagine that they'll get shallower at this time of the year.
Toddyc20 Posted October 4, 2010 Author Report Posted October 4, 2010 Where are u going and are u targeting largies or smallies? I'm heading to Eugenia this coming weekend so lets start with there. My target will be largemouth but would not turn my nose up to some smallies either. Most of my luck in the past on Eugenia has been in 8-12 feet of water, drifting through the weed beds. I would imagine finding green weeds at this time of year would be very difficult. Is 8-12 feet a good starting point or should I look shallower/deeper?
spinnerbaitking Posted October 4, 2010 Report Posted October 4, 2010 Tubes, Flip'n Jigs & Senkos would be a great start for Lmbass or Smallies, last week we were getting them on a local lake in 6" to 2' of water late in the evening on Spinnerbaits & Buzzbaits, on Quinte at the CBAF Fed Cup last weekend Smallies on a Tube Jig & Drop shot worked great & Texas Rigged Tube, Senko, Flip'n Jig & Spinnerbaits worked, I'm an hour away from Eugenia but haven't been there in a while hopefully get there soon Best of luck to ya Richard let us know how you make out
bdox Posted October 4, 2010 Report Posted October 4, 2010 I'd be looking for bait. Bait will be relating to cover, underwater points, and any remaining GREEN weeds/pads. Reaction baits like cranks and jerkbaits will be key if you find schooling bass chasing bait. Cold water will mean slowing down your presentation, especially with the jerkbait. Long pauses! If you find weeds, throw down a jig and let it sit (easier said than done for most).
Garry2Rs Posted October 4, 2010 Report Posted October 4, 2010 Around here the water is about 58*. Shallow weeds are dying, or dead. Find the deeper green weeds and fish divers like Wally-Diver's or Tail-Dancer's. Plastics are not. Garry2R's
splashhopper Posted October 4, 2010 Report Posted October 4, 2010 got a few 2-3 lbers on the weekend with a real sloooooooowww retrieve on crankbaits in 3-5 ft of water. Also got 2 on senko's in 8-10 ft of water near submerged trees slow slow slow slow slow slow slow snooooze snooose snoooze snoooze HIT!
ld17 Posted October 5, 2010 Report Posted October 5, 2010 I was fishing a river system last Sunday and I caught largemouth on the outside weed edge in 7-9 fow on senkos. The water temp. was 63 deg. calm wind. Then last Thrusday I was on Erie and I caught some smallmouth on a crankbait in 10-12 fow. Again the temp. was 64.3 deg. and the wind was calm. I think if the temp of the water is in the high 50's to low 60's you can still get some fish shallow. Let us know how you make out.
Toddyc20 Posted October 5, 2010 Author Report Posted October 5, 2010 Thanks for the tips and advice. I can't wait to try out a few things and hopefully i'll come back on here saturday evening with a pic or two of some nice bass.
Guest Johnny Bass Posted October 5, 2010 Report Posted October 5, 2010 I'm heading to Eugenia this coming weekend so lets start with there. My target will be largemouth but would not turn my nose up to some smallies either. Most of my luck in the past on Eugenia has been in 8-12 feet of water, drifting through the weed beds. I would imagine finding green weeds at this time of year would be very difficult. Is 8-12 feet a good starting point or should I look shallower/deeper? Like was said. Depends on the water.Largies will be in around 8-12FOW I find 10 being the magic number. Smallies will be much deeper,unless you work river mouths/bays(spring patterns).
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