Bass Fishing
March Can be the Best Top Water Fishing

Believe or not there are many years in the past where the top water bite is better in March than in the late summer. I can go back to my 18 years of keeping up with my fishing and can show you where I have caught more big bass on buzz-baits than any time of SWL buzz-baits do it well! the year. The even better news is that the buzz-baits have improved to the point that they’re more lethal than ever. The onset of new ideas on buzz-baits by Secret Weapon Lures has in my mind taken buzz-baits to the next level. They have designed a buzzbait that has a willow leaf trailer blade in the back that displaces more water and makes just enough of a different sound that the fish love it.
March has just been unreal with this SWL buzzbait, when the fish have moved up into the shallow water getting ready for the spawn; it’s on! SWL has not only designed great baits, but for Guntersville they have added a red skirt with gold blades and it has proving to be just deadly. This color combination for muddy water like we have this time of year along with the noisy sound has put some big lunkers in my boat in March for the past few years. I believe this SWL buzz-bait just aggravates these big lunkers in this late pre-spawn pattern to explode and just eat these buzz-baits.
The March time frame is a special time of year for big bass, they move and feed and get ready for the spawn. The thing is that big fish in this period strike sound and can be aggravated to hit top water, and these SWL buzz-baits do it well! If you want to have some early season fun, stop by Waterfront Tackle and grab a few of these buzz-baits or go on line and go to www.secretweaponlures.com and by the way if you buy on-line I can save you 30% off there listed price by using my promo discount code FLGGS9.
If you want to try it together call me I have openings in March and will put you on this buzzbait bite.

Fish Lake Guntersville Guide Service
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
www.fishlakeguntersvilleguideservice.com
Call: 256 759 2270
Captain Mike Gerry

 
Fishing High Flooding Water on Guntersville

If all the rain we’ve had in the past year or more keep are any indication of the coming year, we are in for more high water or flooding. I thought I’d talk to you about several ways that these conditions can work to your advantage.

The old saying that bass move shallow in high water is very true. The first thing I try to do when going after these high-water bass is look for mudlines. Mudlines generally produce ambush spots for Fishing High Flooding Water on Guntersville actively-feeding bass.

Guntersville, like many impoundments, usually muddies up very quickly during heavy rains, but not all areas are as muddy as others. When heading out to fish on a high water day, do some up-front research to get to the best areas. Head to the banks and bushes and wood structure, looking for breaks in the mudlines along the edges of the structure. Not all the creeks have good high water structure, but the ones that do will produce big time!

A lot of times the mudlines are just out from the shore or break around a bush or stump, and you can bet that a bass is sitting on the clearer edge waiting to feed. Look for noticeable points or indentations in mudlines around or next to visible cover. That subtle break generally occurs because of two reasons; there is a small drop around the edge of or in-between the cover, or the cover itself is breaking the water flow. Whichever of these occur, you need to fish it because the small drops or current break is generally just below or next to the mudline and holding a big bass.

This is perfect setting to flip a Tightline Jig and wiggle it over the clearer edge or stroke it off a treetop along a clear point. I prefer Tightline’s Wood Thumper and Grass Flipping Jigs. Both come with rattles that help bass zero in on them in limited visibility conditions.

Another effective high-water mudline tactic is to clip a single, big Colorado blade onto a 9/16-ounce Secret Weapon Quickstrike or Sidearm spinnerbait, flip it back past the flooded tree line, and slow-roll it back out. Fish are alerted by the approaching lure’s throbbing blade. Kill the retrieve beside every break in the mudline, stump, lay-down, or bush you pass and let that short-arm spinnerbait flutter down to the bottom. Then lift it with your rod tip and swim the lure slowly to the next target. In muddy water, bass hold tight to those ambush points, and the flashing, noisy in-line blade draws strikes.

If you’ve not experienced the difference in-line blades can make on a spinnerbait, give one a try and you’ll see what I’m talking about. To get you started, I've arranged for Secret Weapon to give my readers a one-time 30% discount when you use this code on checkout from their online store: FLGGS9.

If your local tackle shops don’t stock, Tightline Jigs and Secret Weapons, they should! They’re also available on the Internet at www.tightlinejigs.com and www.secretweaponlures.com.

Fish Lake Guntersville Guide Service
www.fishlakeguntersvilleguideservice
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Phone: 256 759 2270
Captain Mike Gerry

 
The Bigger Fish do Everything First

I’m sure you have all heard this before, but for Lake Guntersville and me it’s more than just a saying it’s a true belief and my records prove it. My past 18 years of history prove solidly that the bigger bass lead the way to the spawn, to the ditches to the creeks and humps and out deep in the heat.
They will spawn in 50 to 55 degree water and this time of year when common sense tells you to fish slow and deep, I’m here to tell you than you will catch fish deeper, but if you want the bigger ones move shallow. Fish the 4 to 7 foot water, on sunny warm days, use fast moving baits and hang on.  The bigger bass are already moving up in this 45-degree water, we just need a little warmth at 10 to 20 foot depths and when it occurs the bigger fish will be feeding on top of the shallow flats and you will benefit from it!
Don’t be afraid on a warm day to get down rite shallow, I mean 6 inches of water because the bigger fish will even make that move if we get enough sun over this next few weeks or days. Kick up mud on your trolling motor, when you do your probably getting to the real big bass areas.
When most anglers feel the spawn is on in that 63-degree water, it is, for the smaller fish but the bigger fish have already laid out and are moving to a post spawn pattern.  Now is time to head to the ridges and creeks because the bigger bass are not on the bed their coming off and their hungry and anxious to find a good meal. While many are fishing the 3-pound females on the bed I head to the ledges for the bigger fish.
Old but true the bigger bass do everything first so when you need a tournament bite think ahead of the pattern and you will be successful!

Fish Lake Guntersville Guide Service
www.fishlakeguntersvilleguideservice.com
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
256 759 2270
Captain Mike Gerry

 
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