Cool Tips for Cold
Weather
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By Billy “Hawkeye” Decoteau
Surrounded by brilliant hues of
gold’s-yellows-bronze, highlighted
with scattered touches of matted
white birch trees, northern pine
trees frame New England landscapes,
signaling the end of yet another
bass’n season. While savvy northern
bass anglers, prep their bass boats
for cold weather conditions and an
occasional trip to the lake for
vertical jigging with spoons and
blade baits, southern anglers such
as Leesburg, Georgia’s Jason Smith
can be found towing his bass boat to
his favorite bass haunt for some
fast crankbait action!
“Bright sunny days this time of year
make for excellent crankbait
patterns in timber,” says Smith.
Elaborating on the movement of
forage, Smith has found southern
shad have the tendency to suspend in
trees along deep river channels or
creek beds adjacent to flats. “Find
the standing timber and you just
might fill your livewells with a
limit of ‘Hogs’!”
Smith concentrates exclusively on
deep creek ledges ranging in depths
from 12-15 feet with standing
timber. “With the primary bass
forage shad, coupled with the need
to reach deeper depths, as well as
running my crankbait through timber,
the only bait I rely on for this
technique, is Gambler’s Deep Custom
Crankbaits!” (www.Gambler-Lures.com)
Jason Smith’s arsenal consists of
rigging a Big Bear Pro model 7’
medium fast action-cranking rod,
paired with Quantum’s 6.2:1 Accurist
baitcaster reel. The key secret to
this technique, according to Smith
is making multiple casts from
multiple angles to locate the area
and depth the bass are staging in
the timber. As for colors, this
southern angler answers,” Either
Gamblers ‘Not so Sexy Shad’ or their
‘Gambler Shad’ colors are my go to
baits.” (www.BigBearFishingRods.com)
While Jason Smith is running up
creeks in the south, Norton,
Massachusetts’s Team Skeeter member
Mark Burgess is scanning deep-water
glacier lakes in New England. (www.MarkBurgessFishing.com)
This Humminbird electronic expert
was sure to enlighten me to some
cold-water sonar techniques. “New
England lakes for the most part are
crystal clear, take Lake
Winnipesaukee for example, it is not
uncommon for bass, especially
smallmouth bass to be located in
depths ranging from 25-35 feet or
even deeper at times,” claims
Burgess. Cracking a bass-eating grin
Burgess smiled, “I’m not so sure I
should be telling you this?” Burgess
added, “Locating the bass is another
thing………..Baitfish is the secret!”
Venturing out onto the water with
Burgess, he shifted his Yamaha V-Max
HPDI Series-2 250 HP Outboard into
neutral, opened a lake map and began
to educate me on locating deepwater
bass following schools of baitfish.
(www.Yamaha-motor.com) “My
Humminbird 997color Side Imaging
Combo, paired with a Navionics chip
takes this paper map to a completely
new dimension. You are about to
witness the most amazing incredible
view of this lake’s bottom, while
scanning not only under the boat,
but also to the sides!”
Honing in on Burgess’s Humminbird's
8” wide diagonal color screen, the
Bassmaster Southern and Central
Trail competitor zoomed in on a
contour line that dropped suddenly
and leveled out. “It’s imperative
that anglers spend more time viewing
their electronics, than randomly
casting. Cold-water bass will
congregate around isolated pieces of
cover, especially if there are
baitfish. Locating these
‘Spot-on-the-Spot’ bass magnets
takes time and patience,” says
Burgess. Adding, with a shivering
chuckle, “During this cold weather
period patience is a precious
commodity anglers need to acquire if
they want to be productive”
Typing away on his Humminbird sonar,
Burgess’s screen divided in half as
his Side Imaging Sonar revealed the
lakes bottom in a totally different
dimension. “Without Side Imaging, it
would take us hours to scan this
structure break for isolated cover
and pods of baitfish.” Explaining
each distinct display on the screen,
Burgess idled along at 3-5 mph as
his Side Imaging Sonar projected 75
feet to each side for maximum
clarity, while it also displayed
actuate distance measurements on the
screen.
As the Humminbird 997 CSI Sonar
displayed the flat and raising
terrain, bottom profiles, water
column, descending terrain, and boat
position I felt as though I was
actually underwater scuba diving.
“Now this is what we’re looking for,
isolated rock piles, surrounded with
baitfish.” With that Mark Burgess
shut-off his outboard, stood up,
walked to the bow and lowered his
Minn Kota 101 US-2 Fortrex Trolling
Motor into the water.
“Take a look at my bow unit and tell
me what you see,” echoed Burgess. It
was amazing Burgess’s bow unit
displayed the exact same waypoint.
We then maneuvered accurately to the
rock pile surrounded with schools of
baitfish. “This is where many
anglers go wrong or get lost, thanks
to my Humminbird Side Imaging Sonar,
I have logged in the same exact
waypoint on both units, savings time
and acquiring a more actuate
waypoint.”
Burgess continued my on the water
class covering electronics
explaining that his Humminbird
sonar’s equipped with Side Imaging,
is connected by a unique unit called
“InterLink”. “InterLink goes between
your bow sonar and console sonar
allowing you to receive actuate
identical reading, and when you do
decide to log in a waypoint it is
stored on both units at the same
time,” says Burgess.
Mark Burgess went on to explain this
information can also be downloaded
unto a personal computer allowing an
angler to store this information off
the water while assembling a game
plan for future trips to the same
body of water. “InterLink Network
Connection is by far the simplest
and easiest addition any serious
tournament angler can add to their
Humminbird sonar’s, placing critical
information at your finger tips
anywhere within the boat.” According
to Burgess the InterLink Network
Connection does not require
additional expensive built-in wiring
or any complicated connections. (www.Humminbird.com)
Once the Skeeter/Yamaha Pro circled
around the area with his Minn Kota
trolling motor, dropping his buoy
markers in precise locations, he
proceeded to pull several Shimano
rod/reel combinations from his rod
locker. “Our presentations are going
to completely vertical, and in fact
we will actually watch our baits as
they fall onto our targets and the
bass eat them!”
Rigging a Perch color Heddon Sonar (www.LureNet.com)
blade bait to one of his Shimano
spinning outfits, Burgess allowed
his bait to fall vertically below
the trolling motor. Instructing me
to watch the Humminbird sonar screen
as his bait fell I was amazed when
he pointed out his baits entrance
unto the screen. “Most of the
baitfish on Lake Winnie are perch,
and that is one reason the perch
color Heddon Sonar works so well.”
Burgess concentrates on two basic
colors for his Heddon blade baits,
Perch, and Gold.
Under the tutelage of Professional
Bass Angler Mark Burgess, we
utilized two vertical presentations.
My most productive combination
proved to be the Heddon Sonar blade
baits in the perch color, attached
with an Excalibur ‘Hold-Tite Snap’,
tied to 8 lb Silver Thread
Fluorocarbon line. While Burgess
seemed to constantly entice the
smallmouth bass with his Shimano
7’2” Custom Drop-Shot Rod, saddled
with a Shimano Stradic spinning
reel, spooled with 8lb Silver Thread
Fluorocarbon line (www.SilverThread.com).
Utilizing 18” between his 3/8 oz
Excalibur Tungsten drop-shot weight
and a light-wire 1/0 Excalibur
needlepoint hook; Burgess impaled a
YUM Houdini watermelon/gold fleck
worm. (www.YUMBaits.com)
As Burgess loaded his rod, by
turning his reel handle, once again
he echoed, “Fish-On”. “It’s
imperative to have extremely sharp
hooks for positive hook-ups,
especially on these smallmouth's,”
smiled Burgess as he once again
politely requested I to get the net!
God Bless and Best Bass’n.
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