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White Bass
I have made it my duty to find and catch these wonderful fish in the past year...will little luck. I have tried different approaches and am struggling to get one in the boat. I have found several schools of fish in the morning. I've tried the crankbait trolling, live shad below the boat and behind. trolled umbrella rig and short of using dynamite, I don't know what I am doing wrong. Most schools I find are a mix of whites and stripers. Not the big boys, but big enough and the depth finder is covered with the evidence. An area of about 80 yards seems to be common. As soon as I cast in one area, they start busting in another. I have tossed white jigs, red fins, 200, 300 series cranks and white plastics of all types. any suggestions would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks James |
I've found schools of them on two separate mornings busting up minnows and couldn't catch one. I was very confused. We all know how to catch them - small cranks, roostertails, small curly tail grubs, crappie magnets all work great. They're picky this summer haha.
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1. White rooster tail or similar in line spinner.
2. Gay Blade or Bass Pro Lazer Blade 3. Little George. I have found schools that would grab anything thrown at them. This is becoming more rare for some reason. IMO, most use too large a lure. The best lure will be the size of the bait fish when fishing the jumps. Usually the larger fish will not be surfacing. They wait under the schooling fish and grab bait fish that go deeper to escape the jumps. |
3/8 oz leadhead jig with a white or chartreuse curly tail grub has usually been my bait for catching them on the Tenn river here in the western part of the state. White Rooster tails seen to work better up near Pickwick tailwaters. Cast them out, let them sink fairly deep, and then a slow steady retrieve even when they are busting on top.
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I often use a 1/8 and 1/4 ounce gold Kastmaster spoon and change the hooks out with an XCalibur XT3 dressed hook and flatten the barbs. I just skip it back to me and they usually kill it in the jumps. Also use the Pop-R with the barbs flattened.
Regards |
Stripe
I like to throw a Heddon Pup-let it sit and then twitch it. It has a little hole in the nose that spits out water that they love. Also try zipping a Heddon tiny torpedo- sometimes a big turd will work. It's hard to believe that you have yet to catch one in the jumps-which leads me to believe you are in the skippy jumps, not stripe.
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Thanks for the replies, there are several methods I will try! Will keep ya posted if I get into them. One morning I would swear I kept seeing catfish rolling on the surface and even a bit of a splash at times. Most of the fish i'm spotting are around 1-4lbs, but I'm telling you there are some jumping that would eat the others! Next time I go I will get some still shots from the Humminbird.
Thanks again! James |
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Regards |
What size kastmaster do you prefer, Randy? DUH. Just re-read your post. Move along, nothing to see here.
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I usually motor within casting distance of where they are jumping and throw a 1 oz. bendable spoon. It gets down fast and I have always caught 4 or 5 fish per jump before they move somewhere else
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I do pretty much the same as some has mentioned but also have had luck throwing a hair jig under a float then popping the float back like a popping cork. They will inspect the float and the jig falls in their face.
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went Thursday morning, fish almost jumping in boat and no takers. taking paddle Friday morning to hit them on their head, will post results
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