Catch big smallies now – without electronics!

  • greghuff
    South Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Posts: 134
    #1429443

    Not all anglers can afford high-tech depth finders. So how do you find smallmouth bass in late summer, when they don’t spend as much time shallow? Here’s a few tips.

    An IDO forum guest asked recently for advice targeting smallmouth bass in August in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area – an area in which powered boats are not allowed. Since most anglers’ depth finders are wired into their boats, fishing in the BWCA often means fishing without electronic "underwater eyes." I posted the following tips for the BWCA, but realized that these tips could be useful also to smallmouth anglers that do not own the sophisticated depth finders needed to dial in on deep, late-summer smallmouth haunts like rock piles and reefs.

    * * *

    At this time of year, the smallmouth are likely to be shallow only in low-light periods. In the heat of the day, they will move to deep, offshore reefs and rock piles.

    If you don’t have depth finder to locate these spots, there are some patterns you can get on by just using your eyes (although these patterns usually yield onesie-twosie bites rather than a big school, like some of the deep structure can offer).

    1. Vertical bluff walls

    When more light penetrates the water, bass instinctively "know" that they are more exposed to predators, so they often like to have something solid up against one side of them. On rock piles and reefs, it’s a boulder or a ledge. But smallies do the same thing on vertical bluff walls, which generally only exist adjacent to deep water. The smallies will get right up close to the rock face and rise and drop in the water column, seeking food and the optimum temperature to be the most comfortable.

    To target these fish, position your boat right up against the bluff wall, parallel to it, on the far end of the wall.

    If it’s early morning or dusk, start with a topwater bait (Rapala Skitter Pop, XRap Prop, Storm Chug Bug, Rapala X-Rap Popper) and retrieve parallel to the bluff face, as close to the bluff as you can. Start with a rapid retrieve with fewer pauses, then slow down and increase pause time if you’re not getting bites. If that doesn’t work, switch to a spinnerbait.

    Use a big white or chartreuse spinner bait with double willow blades (Terminator T1, Terminator Super Stainless, etc) and lightly cast or pitch it up flush against the bluff wall and let it fall on a slack line (very important — keep that spinning bail open) to the bottom. The bait will helicopter down vertically, creating the illusion of a dying ciccoe/tullibee/minnow. Many bites will come on the fall, indicated more often than not by a visual jump in your line. So if your line hops or all of a sudden stops falling, you likely have a bite. If you don’t get bit on the fall, slow roll the spinnerbait a few yards then rip it up pretty violently, then let it fall again on slack line. Repeat that process back to the boat. If you don’t get bit on that, it’s time for a tube.

    A Green Pumpkin tube is probably the most versatile and effective smallmouth bait. That said, another color on any given day MIGHT be more effective, so let the fish tell you what they want. But I’d start with Green Pumpkin. Pitch the tube parallel to the bluff face, but not quite flush to it — you want to give the tube enough room to spiral as it falls (which is how it triggers bites when in the water column). Let the tube fall on slack line, just like the spinnerbait. Again here, you’re likely to see your line jump or stop before you feel the bite. If you don’t get bit on the fall, use your rod tip (not your reel) to move the tube across the bottom a few feet. Then use your rod tip to lift the tube off the bottom, then drop your rod tip quickly to let the tube fall again on slack line. Repeat this process back to the boat. If they won’t hit the tube, it’s time for a drop shot.

    I always use VMC Spin Shot hooks, because they rotate 360 degrees without twisting your line, which I believe results in a better bait presentation. I have had great luck in Voyageur’s National Park (similar water color/clarity as BWCA) with Trigger X Paddetail Worms as my drop-shot baits. I’ve fished the Goby and Watermelon Red Flake colors with great success, but a 4-inch Trigger X Swimming Grub in the Chartreuse Pepper color resulted in my personal best Up North smallmouth, a 5 lb. 14 ouncer. I caught that one drop shotting a vertical bluff wall.

    Pitch the drop shot rig up fairly flush against the rock face and let it fall on a tighter line than the other presentations. Once your sinker hits the bottom, let the bait soak there for a while, very lightly jiggling your rod tip. If it is at all windy out and there’s some good wave action, you might not even need to jiggle your rod tip, as the rise and fall of the canoe (assuming a canoe, since your’re in BWCA) will provide a lot of action to your bait. If you don’t get bit in the location of your first drop, use your rod tip (not the reel) to move your bait a few yards and repeat the process until your bait is directly under the canoe. Fish it straight down for a bit, then try again if you don’t get bit, pitching the rig to different spots along the bluff wall and/or different distances out from the bluff wall.

    If you don’t get bit on a bluff wall with one of those tactics, the smallmouth are probably not on that one, so try the next bluff wall down the lake.

    # 2. The second "Eyesight Pattern" is hazard markers.

    When see a buoy, or a jug, or whatever, tethered out in open water, that’s usually marking a rock hazard. To a smallmouth fisherman, that’s a beacon that indicates a rock pile, boulder or reef that most likely has a big smallmouth or two holding somewhere on or around it.

    Start by throwing a topwater over and around it. Then slow roll your spinnerbait over it. Then pull a lipless crankbait over it (Rattling Rap, Rippin’ Rap, Clackin’ Rap). Then try banging into it with a crank bait (Rapala Scatter Rap, a Rapala DT10, DT14, DT16, DT20, depending on depth). If those don’t work, the bass might not be active, but might be there, so try a tube or a Terminator Football head jig (use a crayfish color — look under rocks near shore before fishing to determine what color the local crawdads are).

    Tight lines!

    Greg

    artifishal
    Posts: 216
    #1430307

    Great read! I do a lot of my smallmouth fishing up in the VNP and can’t wait to give some of these techniques a try!

    greghuff
    South Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Posts: 134
    #1430308

    Where do you fish in the VNP?

    My family takes a trip every year to Crane Lake. We fish Crane, Sand Point, Mukooda and (sometimes) the Loon River.

    Bryan Myers
    Moderator
    Posts: 586
    #1430309

    Great read, and great tips! Finding crawdads to match the color brings back memories of growing up wading the shallow rivers of north east Illinois. We used to turn rocks to check on crawdad colors and also would see if there were other things like hellgrammites in the area that the smallmouth might be keying on.

    moxie
    Sioux City,IA
    Posts: 874
    #1430310

    Great read and I admire the waters with regulations of fishing without electronics.

    artifishal
    Posts: 216
    #1430311

    Greg, my family owns a travel trailer on Crane Lake at Scott’s Campground. We have been going up there for 7 or 8 years now. We fish Crane, Sand Point, and Namakan pretty heavily!

    greghuff
    South Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Posts: 134
    #1430312

    We’ll have to compare notes someday, Artifishal!

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