How Long Should It Take You To Learn Big/new Water.
#1
Posted April 07 2012 - 09:10 PM
I'll give you an idea of what today looked like. Fished some pockets, and chunk rock bank without bites. Pulled into a marina and caught a slot fish of a ladder. I thought to myself, good- I'm starting to develop a pattern. Continued to flip the heck out of the docks with no more bites. After this the wind really picked up so I just tried to find wind protected pockets. I fished cranks, jigs, shakyheads, scroungers but once again with no bites. After fishing the wind protected areas, I stumbled across a strip of rip rap jutting out into the main lake. It was there to protect another marina from wind. Tried some cranks with no bites, but got my second fish on a jig. Once again I think- good, I've stumbled across another pattern. I did get a couple more bites on the jig, but swung and missed. I did make an observation in this area. I was reeling my jig back in to make my next cast and I got a bite I wasn't expecting. That made me think I could maybe refine my pattern to a faster bait. So, I fished a wart that was craw colored and didn't have any bites.
I probably fished 10-15 different spots and only had results at two, and couldn't really come up with a definite pattern. Both fish came on a jig- that's the only piece of the puzzle I had figured out.
So I suppose my question is, how long should it take one to figure out a lake? Perhaps I'm just in the thick of the learning curve right now. I understand that transitioning to bigger bodies of water that are heavily pressured in a boat is an entirely different ball game. I'm just having trouble figuring it all out.
Any words of advice for this newbie?
Trying to wash the skunk off.
#2
Posted April 07 2012 - 09:19 PM
#3
Posted April 07 2012 - 09:27 PM
But you asked a bigger question than just about jigs. When you start a new lake, first thing to do is get a good contour map and look at it while you are looking at the same place using the internet (satellite images). Work it over and pick out no more than 4 or 5 spots not too far from one another. Look in areas with appropriate water depth for the time of year. Next time you go out, run over those spots using a good fish-finder to get a good look at the bottom and any underwater structure. Go over the spots slowly, with the outboard off. If you see something that looks good, mark it on the map or gps. Then fish it for a while, then move on to the next spot. When you are out there, keep in mind the rest of the year, and if you see something that might produce at another time, mark it and make a note. Many cell phones have a voice record function that is great for that. I'm still doing this with a lake I have been fishing of and on for 30 years. Out of 5 spots I pick, one is usually a winner, and two of the others wind up being decent.
#4
Posted April 07 2012 - 11:16 PM
Gosh... so much to learn.
Trying to wash the skunk off.
#5
Posted April 08 2012 - 07:09 AM
#6
Posted April 08 2012 - 08:07 AM
CEO, VP, SECRETARY AND CHARTER MEMBER OF THE "SCROUNGA" CLUB
#7
Posted April 08 2012 - 08:46 AM
1. Get as many different maps of the lake as possible.
2. Study the maps for drop offs, humps, coves, main lake and secondary points and anything else you see.
3. Take time one day and troll slowly down the shoreline to mark all structure you see on your map.
4. Speak with locals about the lake to find out as much as you can.
5. Hire a guide for a day and see where he goes and pick his brain.
6. Google the lake and look for blogs and posts on the lake to find out information as posted above.
7. FISH THE LAKE! The more you are on the lake the better you will know it. Make the lake a project and your obsession.
8. KEEP A LOG. Everytime you go out write down the weather conditions, water temperature, time of day, wind, barometric pressure, lures and techniques used and where. The more notes yoy have in your three-ring binder will help you out as the years go by.
9. Go to Google Earth and view the lake from space. You may or may not find anything but this is a great way to locate hidden docks, piers, points and whatever you can see.
Good luck and have fun.
#8
Posted April 08 2012 - 12:43 PM
Next think about seasonal periods; where bass tend to locate during each period.
Now Perry is more than likley in pre-spawn transitioning to spawn. Pick 1 of the creek arms and focus there until you know that creek arm. The second choice would be the upper 1/3 and spend you time there.
Tom
#9
Posted April 08 2012 - 07:41 PM
#10
Posted April 08 2012 - 07:53 PM
Trying to wash the skunk off.
#11
Posted April 09 2012 - 09:55 PM
Thanks for the pointers. I have a topo map but it's not a very good one. I'm looking to buy a navionics chip soon so that should help me a bit in that department. Looks like it's time to visit a new lake then too. I guess I need to hit la cygne before it's boiling.
Gosh... so much to learn.
You'll frustrate yourself even more trying to learn La Cygne. I've fished that lake dozens of times in the last several years and really don't know that much more about what the fish in it do on a day to day basis that I did when I started fishing it. The power plant has so much of an effect on them and they are so tempermental and selective about what they eat, it's insane really. Plus they get so much fishing pressure on them all year long. I've had times I killed them one day and went down the next with no weather or pressure changes and done the exact same things and struggled to get a bite.
I have a navionics chip in on of my depthfinders and it has improved my fishing a lot now that I have a topo map of the lake on the boat with me that I can scroll around and help me find likely fish holding areas.
#12
Posted April 09 2012 - 09:57 PM
Perry lake looks like a deep structure lake with threadfin shad population and a good crawdad population, those 2 prey sources are the key to catching deep structure reservoir bass. Determine the depth those prey sources are during each seasonal period and learn small sections of the lake well.
Tom
PS; if you are interested in learning bass behavior try Bill Murphy's book In Pursuit of Giant bass, a good book on deep structured lakes and bass behavior.
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