April Guest Column of the Month
BASSIN'
TACTICS FOR
MUDDY
WATERS
By : Jim Porter
The Spring rains had swollen the
Tennessee River
significantly and Lake Guntersville was a roiling mess of
floating
milfoil grass, bank debris and red clay. The rising
waters caused
the normal current flow of the main channel to spill over
into the
submerged back-water flats, bringing with it that muddy
condition
in which the locals said 'a possum would leave tracks'.
Against
better judgment, I had decided to try and catch a bass or
two.
But, after three fruitless hours of teaching a variety of
lures how
to swim back to my rod tip, I had about made up my feeble
mind to
call it a day and let the fish win another one.
However, on the way back to the ramp, I was blessed with
one of those rare strokes of luck reserved for those who
never seem
to have any.
The gentleman's name was Leon McDaniel and I spied him
anchored in the middle of an open flat a few hundred
yards off the
main river channel. Watching him as I motored by, the
sympathy of
a defeated comrade-in-arms prevailed. Suddenly, Leon
snapped his
rod up into a tight arc as a fish took his lure. A few
moments
later, the angler lipped a fine three pound bass. Totally
amazed,
I cut off the engine, dropped an anchor over into the
dark, clay-
stained waters and decided to play spectator for a while.
Placing
his catch in the livewell, Leon then performed some
adjustments to
his lure. Turning about in the boat, he made a long cast
out to
the side and slightly upstream into the current flow.
With a very
slow retrieve, he worked the lure along in the moving
water. In a
few short seconds, he boated another fish. And, then,
another.
And, then, another!
Realizing that I was watching, Leon McDaniel, the
gentleman
that he was, wave me over. By now, I was feeling true
pain and did
not need a second invitation. What I learned during the
next hour
was the most amazing thing I had ever seen in 20 years of
bass
angling.
Leon was fishing a jig. No, nothing special; just a half
ounce lead-head jig with a bit of lime-green hair for a
body. And,
he was fishing it in an eight MPH current and some of the
muddiest
water imaginable. Too stunned to participate, I sat and
watched
that man catch and release 42 bass.
Muddy water has long been the nemesis of bass anglers.
That it appears to make fishing difficult would be an
understatement. Many think that the best solution is to
throw in
the towel and get home in time for the second half of the
ball
game. However, there ARE productive ways to take bass
from even
the muddiest of waters. The key is that, under conditions
of
reduced visibility, the fish depend a great deal more on
sound,
rather than sight, to detect and locate their prey. They,
also,
seem to prefer specific locations for holding and
feeding.
Learning to effectively approach muddy water conditions
usually takes a good bit of trial and error, resulting in
much
waste of valuable fishing time. Your writer was no
exception to
this rule. However, we HAVE found ways which will
produce, some
exceptionally well. During discussions of the subject
with other
experienced bass anglers, we discovered even more
techniques which
are valuable. By sharing these, it is hoped that you will
be able
to add another productive dimension to your outdoor
experiences.
The story about Leon McDaniel is special in a number of
ways. First, it totally, and without question, dispelled
any
preconceived or rumored notion that bass will not feed in
muddy
water. Second, it proved that no special, complex
techniques are
required. And, third, it demonstrated, all too well, that
we
anglers often defeat ourselves because we do not, or will
not,
adjust to the conditions.
Leon had two specific locations that he fished under
high,
muddy water conditions. One was the flat we told of. It
had a
depth of approximately six feet, with the down-current
side
gradually sloping to ten. Under normal conditions, there
was
little, if any, current flow that far from the main
channel. The
key to this spot was gravel and mussel shells. The bottom
was hard
and clean and the reverse, down-current slope provided a
slight
eddy water condition near the bottom. The jig was heavy
enough to
make its way to the bottom in the current and, with a
slow, tight-
line retrieve, could be felt well enough to detect a
strike. The
real key, however, was that the lure banged across the
rough bottom
like a marble rolling down the face of a wash board.
Since
visibility was less than zero in the reddened waters, it
was
obvious to even the most casual observer that the clatter
of the
lure allowed the bass to home in on it. (It was no fluke,
as we
have now used this technique in a number of waters with
success).
His second 'honey hole' was also back off the main
channel
in a back-water flat. However, this one was slightly
different.
The depth was the same six feet, except there was a ditch
dredged
across the flat to accommodate the laying of a gas
pipeline. The
ditch was about 15 feet wide and ten feet deep. The
current flow
was exceptionally strong here and two anchors were often
required
to hold the boat in place. Leon would anchor about 30
feet above
the ditch and cast parallel to it. The lure was then
allowed to
make its way downstream to the ditch and fall off into
it. Again,
the bottom was very hard and rough, and the jig made a
good bit of
noise as it washed along with the current flow. Rarely
did the
lure make it past the lip of that ditch, as it would be
readily
inhaled just before it dropped off. While Largemouths
were the
predominate residents of this location, Crappie, White
Bass and
freshwater Drum also teemed. The fish were apparently
holding
below the lip of the ditch, where the current eddied as
it broke
across the top. Again, since visibility was nil, the
sound of the
lure against the rough, hard bottom was used to find the
lure.
Around heavy cover, such as logs and tree blow-downs, in
muddy water, bass will hold very tight against the cover
feature.
In periods of poor visibility, this undoubtedly gives
them a
reference point and a sense of security. Additionally,
they will
be shallow, possibly trying to be near to the light so
they can at
least see a bit. In this situation, a bass will not move
far to
take a lure. Consequently, we must drag it by him as
close as
possible. Coupling this with the need for the lure to
make some
constant sound for the bass to be able to locate it, we
have the
exact reason that a spinner bait is the ideal lure for
cover areas
in highly stained waters.
I vividly recall the best spinner bait 'artist' I ever
saw.
His name was James Parker and he was a two-time National
Champion
using the blade lure. Parker had two prerequisites for a
bass
fishing location: shallow brush tops and the muddiest
water
available. Personally, at the time, I would never have
fished
water that stained, but the man convinced me real quick.
His
favorite lure was a standard size one-half ounce single
spin, with
a white skirt and a number five Colorado blade.
As James explained, "Bass in shallow water are
active,
feeding bass. However, they are also easy to spook, since
they can
easily see you. Highly stained water virtually eliminates
that
and seems to give them a false sense of security. All you
have to
do is locate some cover, such as brush or logs, in
shallow water
and, if the bass are there, they are a cinch to catch.
The only
secret to it is that you must fish very slowly and cover
the area
well. The lure almost has to bump them on the nose."
When we asked Parker about the potential of other lures
in
these types of areas, he replied, "In muddy water,
we want to keep
the lure right in against the cover at all times and
shallow.
Therefore, the spinner bait has to be the only logical
choice,
since we can exercise absolute control over it. You
really can't
do that with any other lure. Also, the sound factor is
important
and that blade makes a very seductive throb. Retrieving
the
spinner bait so that it rubs along the sides of the logs
and limbs
will also help catch the attention of the fish."
Parker advises that two other locations are also
productive
when the waters are muddy. These, the reader should note,
parallel
what we learned from Leon McDaniel.
"I like to find a rough, gravel bottom, near a
drop-off and
with current flow," he went on. "A spinner bait
is still my first
choice. I fish it slowly, trying to stay in continual
contact with
the bottom, but fast enough to keep the blade turning. I
think the
bass come directly to the sound. The strikes are not
savage; in
fact, they are usually very light. Most of the time I
note that
the spinner bait simply gets a bit 'heavy', or the blade
just stops
turning. I expect the bass follows the sound to its
source and
just tries to suck the lure in when he thinks he's close
enough."
James Parker's other recommended spot is an area of rip-
rap, such as might be found along the side of an adjacent
highway
or a bridge crossing. If there is current flow effecting
the
rocks, you can be sure that the bass will be there to
feed on the
moving water. While he was still partial to the blade
bait, Parker
advised that a jig and rind combination, or a slowly
retrieved
crank plug, also works well. "The main things,"
he stated, "are to
keep whatever lure you are using in contact with the
rocks and fish
it slowly. Since the rip-rap will undoubtedly slope
downwards, you
may have to experiment a bit to determine the correct
depth.
Normally, the muddier the water, the shallower the bass
will be.
Also, concentrate near the edge of the current flow, just
inside
the eddy water line."
If the body of water has been muddied from the flow of a
main river channel or other large tributary, the mouths
of small
feeder creeks should be evaluated. Quite often, they may
still be
flowing clear. If this condition is found, look for the
mud line,
where the clear and muddy waters converge. Bass will lie
just in
the edge of the stained water, no doubt for concealment,
and feed
into the clearer areas. These are the types of places to
find the
bass breaking on the surface as they chase bait fish. If
the
feeder creek appears muddy, but has no discernible
current, venture
back into it a way. Often, the rising, muddy waters of
the main
lake will have pushed into the creek for some distance
and there
may be clearer water further back.
A similar location can often be found in the back of
large
coves. If the stained water is being forced into the cove
from the
main part of the lake or river, there is a good chance
that the
back areas of the cove may be clear, or only murky. Bass
have a
natural instinct to move shallow under rising water
conditions to
partake of the food available in these freshly flooded
areas. Look
for cover, such as brush and blow-downs, and fish them
hard. If
the water is muddy or highly stained, use Parker's
spinner bait
tactics. If there happens to be a reasonable degree of
clarity, a
plastic worm will probably be the ticket.
Another potential muddy water location brings to mind an
outstanding fishing trip on Toledo Bend Lake in East
Texas.
Hurricane-spawned rains had turn the majority of the lake
into a
virtual solid-looking mass of suspended dirt. Everything
was
muddy, even the feeder creeks. My partner, Rodney
Williams,
salvaged our day, however, when he remembered an area of
flowing
springs way in the back of a creek arm. Under normal
conditions,
the way to locate these was to slowly cruise the area and
watch the
surface temperature gauge. The water temperature of the
spring was
in the mid-50's and it would quickly fluctuate the meter
reading.
However, under the water conditions we were facing that
day, the
springs, particularly one large one, were visually
discernible.
The mixing of the clear and the turbid waters showed up
like a
lightly boiling cauldron.
Having fished these springs before (in the Winter, he
said,
when the springs were warmer than the surrounding
waters), Rodney
came up with a productive lure choice his first time out.
Taking a
silver and black Bagley crank plug, my friend cast across
the patch
of mixing water and into the far muddy area. He cranked
it down
hard with a fast retrieve and, when it entered the spring
expulsion, he stopped it cold and let it float up. Float
up it
did, but the buoyant plug didn't travel far. Suddenly, he
was on
to a nice fish. Nearly every retrieve through the roiling
water
produced a strike and, on occasions, it turned out to be
a nice
Crappie or White Bass. (This, like the experiences with
Leon
McDaniel, tend to point out that when times get tough,
the fish,
regardless of type, seem to be drawn to similar feeding
locations.)
There was a fairly large concentration of bass in this
choice area so, after catching and releasing a goodly
number, we
began to experiment with retrieves and lure types. A
vibrating
crank plug, specifically a Cordell Spot with its lead
slug rattle
chamber, worked exceptionally well. However, as many bass
took it
in the muddy water as did when it came across the clearer
area.
Likewise, a Rebel Wee R, with a noise-making rattle
chamber, took
fish from the stained areas. Silent plastic worms, and
the
'rattle-less' Bagley, only scored when they entered the
less murky
water. This reinforces the fact that the bass can, and
do, find a
lure based on the sound it makes.
An interesting sideline fact about muddy water bass is
that
they seem confused and disoriented by the lack of
visibility. This
is evidenced by three of their responses (or lack
thereof). First,
bass taken in muddy water rarely, if ever, jump. Second,
they will
make very short and powerful surges and generally run in
small
circles near the spot that they were hooked. Possibly,
this is
because they can't see well and don't really know which
way to
flee. These facts are of assistance to the angler,
especially if
he hooks a trophy. He doesn't have to apply too much
pressure,
knowing that the bass is not going to run far before he
turns, and
generally can expect that the fish is not going to jump
and throw
the lure. A third oddity is that, when released, the bass
usually
swims directly back to and under the boat. I would
surmise that he
is probably moving towards the nearest 'structure'
feature he can
see, that being the boat.
Muddy water bassin' is sort of a 'mind over mud' game for
the angler. But, once you have that first success, it
will no
longer be feared.
Check out
other articles by Jim Porter at :



|