Winter Fishing Tennessee River Impoundment:
PICKWICK LAKE
By Reed Montgomery
Reeds Guide Service (205) 787-5133
Lake Level: Down 5 feet
Water Temperature: Upper 40's
Humps, points, bluffs and Lake headwaters. These are just
a few of the types of places, an angler should target on
Pickwick Lake during late January and early February.
This is the official period of winter, on this Tennessee
River Impoundment, situated in North Alabama near the
town of Florence. Here is a run down of Pickwick Lakes
wintertime, likely locations.
HUMPS
Smallmouth bass and a surprisingly good number of
largemouth's, can both be found around Islands, submerged
humps, sand bars and ridges, located throughout the lake.
Many are now visible, some are hidden, just beneath the
surface of the water.
On Pickwick Lake there are many underwater Indian mounds,
left here during impoundment. These are actually rock
piles, that block the swift current of the Tennessee
River system.
Smallmouths relate to the edge of the swift current,
awaiting an easy meal. Largemouth's hug the bottom or
find refuge among washed in wood cover, stumps, or ledges
around these humps and islands. Utilizing a map and good
depthfinder, most anglers can find a large number of
these humps, few anglers even know about.
| Lures to entice strikes from these
smallmouths and largemouth's, can vary, according
to severe winter or slight warming trends. When
its been very cold, such as nighttime lows near
20 degrees and daytime highs not even reaching 50
degrees, things slow tremendously on these mid
lake high spots. This calls for fishing
thoroughly and very slow with each offering.
Drifting along the edge of these islands, ridges,
and submerged humps, while jigging spoons or
fishing with tailspinners, will cover lot of
water and entice fish hugging the bottom.
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Carolina rigging small, finesse lures, such as 4 inch
worms, lizards, grubs, soft jerkbaits and crayfish
imitations, will entice more strikes in very cold water
than bigger, more gaudy type lures. Finesse fishing with
light line and small lures take big bass in winter on
this lake.
POINTS
Points on this lake hold bass year round. During winter,
when the lake is low, they bunch up on points lakewide.
This can be long, main lake points, that border flats,
dropping into deep water. Or short points with deep water
along all three sides.
Or points can be found in the mouths of cuts, pockets and
creeks, where both largemouth's and smallmouths gather,
just out of the swift, main lake current, feeding on
baitfish and crayfish. Some of these points have deep
water all around, dropping abruptly into very deep water.
Points, bordering deep water can always be found along
rock bluffs in small cuts, pockets and creek mouths.
Fishing these many points on Pickwick Lake, evolves into
simply running and gunning throughout the lake during
winter.
You can move from one point to another on this lake, in a
very short amount of time. Fishing each point thoroughly
and very slowly, then slow your approach, until making
another move nearby. Not only can bass be found right up
on these points, but in the surrounding water as well.
These out-of-the current spots often contain huge schools
of bass, bunched up, usually in one very small spot. This
means either dragging bottom-bumping lures, or fan
casting, Carolina rigged lures and deep diving
crankbaits, looking for that instinct strike. Wood cover
along these spots always harbor the bigger largemouth's
in the area. Try laydowns, washed in debris, stumps and
brush piles.
BLUFFS
On Pickwick Lake, rock bluffs account for many of the
year round tournament victories and show some huge,
trophy sized smallmouths and largemouth bass during the
winter months.
When its been a severe winter, smallmouths can be found
all along these deep, rock bluffs. Enticing strikes from
these finicky bass, can mean fishing each spot slowly and
trying many lures, approaches and depths.
Lures range from small worms and crayfish imitations to
grubs, shad imitations and jig combos. In clear water
situations, natural colored worms or colors of red, blue,
and green, are always enticing for that smalmouth bite.
Crayfish inhabit these bluffs, hanging and hiding around
rocks, boulders and scattered debris along the lakes
bottom. Lures that simulate these tasty treats are
plastic crayfish, jigs adorned with pork trailers or
plastic chunks, and even deep diving crankbaits. Best
choices are, crayfish colors of brown, red, or green,
with contrasting colors on the belly, such as red or
orange.
Shad, baitfish and bream all swim these bluffs during
winter. Fishing identical looking lures, will entice
strikes from these bass using their eyesight traits in
these clear winter time waters. Soft plastic shad
imitations, grubs, crankbaits, jerkbaits and rattletraps,
are just a few of the many shad imitations that these
bass will hit. Suspending jerkbaits can be dynamite on
these bluff bass in winter
LAKE HEADWATERS
Its been said that simply fishing the lake headwaters
will eventually connect an angler with a true, trophy
sized bass in the winter. This goes for smallmouths,
largemouth's and an occasional striped bass (or drum).
Just below upriver Wilson Lake Dam, there are countless
smallmouths taken each winter. A word of caution. Between
the bridge and the dam, are hazardous waters. Especially
with the lake down 5 feet for winter.
There are hidden, underwater rockpiles, that can severely
damage a boat, motor or even worse, you. These rocks can
capsize a boat, knock a hole in the boats bottom, or tear
off your motors lower unit. Worse yet, getting thrown in
these swift, cold waters can mean hypothermia and often,
death.
Always wear a life jacket and an attached outboard motor
engine kill switch, when navigating in these lake
headwaters (or anywhere on the lake for that matter).
Life jackets are required whenever, within 800 yards of
any Alabama Lake dam. Dress very warmly and be prepared
for any emergency situation.
Spare clothes, matches or a lighter (and paper to start a
quick fire) may be needed. Keep all in a plastic bag, in
the boat, in dry storage. This could just save your life
or your fishing partners life.
As for fishing, the bass are there, getting them to bite,
is up to the angler that can stand the cold. Drifting in
the swift current, is the normal process for catching
these bass on Pickwick Lake, below the Wilson dam
tailrace waters. You can use live bait, such as small
minnows, shad, crayfish or leeches.
Or you can drift, dragging lures behind the boat, bumped
along the lakes bottom as you drift downstream. Plastic
worms, lizards, crayfish imitations, grubs, tube baits,
deer hair jigs, rubber skirted jigs, and small jigs with
spinners, all work here.
Drifting in this current can also just mean vertical
jigging lures such as spoons, tailspinners or metal blade
baits. Either on the lakes bottom, or in the mid depths,
halfway to the lakes bottom, for suspended bass. Water
generation dictates where these Pickwick Lake bass will
hold.
When the water is not running in these lake headwaters,
especially during sunny days or week long warming trends,
these bass will move shallow and hit a variety of lures.
Look for water temperatures in the low 50's, for this
type of shallow water pattern to work in these lake
headwaters.
There is a lock located at the lake headwaters. Here,
water is released, every time a boat enters or exits the
lock. Rip-rap rocks, line both sides of this long, narrow
channel, just below the lock. Smallmouths and
largemouth's, feed here along these rocks, and can be
enticed to bite with many lure choices.
Crankbaits, rattletraps, grubs, jigs, spinnerbaits and
even topwater lures will work here, when coupled with
warming water during winter. No matter where you fish on
Pickwick Lake during the winter, be prepared to connect
with a possible world record smallmouth bass. They are
here.
One smallmouth bass, weighing 8 1/2 pounds, was caught
here in 1988. Its time for another to be taken, by some
fortunate angler fishing Pickwick Lake this winter. Give
it a try or call Reeds Guide Service. "Fishing all
of Alabama and these Tennessee River Impoundment's for
over 30 years."
This report provided by:
Reed Montgomery / Reeds Guide Service
Producer / Host "Fishing Alabama" With Reed
Montgomery
Sunday Mornings 9-10 A.M.Central Time
Radio Station WJOX 690 AM Birmingham, Alabama
Reeds Guide Service (205) 787-5133
"Over 30 Years Fishing Alabama for Bass and
Stripers"
E-mail: ALABASSGYD@aol.com
Website: www.FISHINGALABAMA.com
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