
“Top Ten Fall
Fishing Tips” for Lake Guntersville
![]()
Fishing on Lake Guntersville in the fall can be one of the most rewarding times of the year. The baitfish have spawned out and there will be pockets and schools of thousands of bait fish, swimming in the back coves and backs of the creeks. As I have indicated before if there are baitfish then there are bass feeding. You will have your pick of dying grassy areas to choose from, the bass will school up, they will feed before the cold of the winter sets in and the feeding frenzy of bass fishing should be excellent. An old saying on the lake in the fall is “the nastier the dying grass looks, the better the fishing.” So be alert to find the scummy, nasty, dying grass and you will find the fish. So lets begin the top ten tips: 1. Yes! Let’s look for the scummy, nasty dying grass and
start working a soft plastic on the edges, in the holes and
around the areas where the grass has died back. This time of
year because there are so many baitfish, I believe that you need
to work the worm with a light 1/8 oz. Weight so you can swim it
and give the worm a slow drop to the bottom. Sometimes when
using a worm in this manner you should try to change sizes and
styles of the soft plastic your using, as the bass seem to like
many different types of soft plastic baits in the fall,
sometimes a flutter like on a lizard is better, others the big
tale on a 10 in. monster worm attracts the bite, while at times
the dead drop of a finesse worm attracts the bite. Be creative
with your soft plastic fishing, there is a worm bite out there
that will put fish in the boat and when you find it, you’ll be
loading the boat. 2. Let’s not forget in the fall to target the schools of
bait-fish; I have seen times on the water over the years that
all you needed to do was look for bait fish schools, take
out any lure in your tackle box and throw it into the middle of
the bait. The bass are generally feeding and or following the
baitfish and if you present a lure into the school of baitfish
and make it look vulnerable you will catch fish. My favorite
lure in this pattern is to use a spinner-bait, throw it beyond
the mass of baitfish and stop it and drop it as your lure moves
into the school of baitfish. My preference here is still
Punisher Lures “Flame Spinner Bait” I like the
red in the bait as it presents a wounded look to the bass. It is
also weighted so well that the erratic dropping and changing of
speeds crumbles up in a look that resembles a wounded bait the
best I have ever seen. The lure then recovers so quickly when
you retrieve it again, that you are just amazed with its
movement, and the fact that it doesn’t role over. Its just
unbelievable how this spinner bait will create a bite. This is
where I like a ½ oz. Down to 3/8 oz. Spinner bait, as you are
generally fishing shallow, there is grass underneath and you
want to keep the lure above the grass and in the strike zone. 3. No fall fishing pattern on Lake Guntersville would be
complete without “rat” fishing, it’s an exciting pattern with
plenty of blow-ups and action. The icky grass is just the ticket
to having a great time pulling that rat over the grass beds. The
baitfish have started to move to the shallows and the conditions
are just perfect for this pattern to produce with great success
this fall. As I have stated in my previous article, set up
correctly with a heavy rod and reel with braided line and get
ready to have a blast. The rat bite this year should be as good
as its been in a long time. The grass is thick and dying on top,
it’s turning brown and the baitfishes have started to move to
the shallows. This will be an amazing pattern this fall, stick
with it don’t give up easy on the bite and you will eventually
have success fishing a rat. 4. Fall fishing on Lake Guntersville can be great, but
in order for you to have a great fall you must fish hard, the
bass won’t be everywhere. In order to turn a tough time of year
into a successful one, you must be willing to spend some time on
the water and figure out what the bass are hitting and where
they appear to be active. This will not come with an hour trip
to the lake, you see this time of year the bass seem to school
more, follow the bait and feed some but not often each day. So
your activity will come in short periods, small areas and only
for a few hours a day. The biggest and best tip I can give you
is get on the river for long periods and often, the patterns
will then develop if you try different lures, presentations and
areas. So once you find them and start repeating that pattern
the fall will be a great time to be on Lake Guntersville. 5. Believe it or not the wind is very important to finding
the fish in the fall of the year. Guntersville generally has a
wind once fall sets in, and because of this you must be savvy to
the fact that the wind will dictate the location of the bass.
With so many baitfish this time of year if its windy you need to
be aware of the direction of the wind, for example if the wind
is blowing out of the North then the South banks or the South
end of a grass clump will hold the baitfish. The wind will
dictate where the baitfish stages themselves, and hence the bass
will always be close. This doesn’t mean that you have to quit
fishing your favorite spot if its on a North bank, this means
that be aware that the bait will clump on the south side of the
humps, or grass edges, or points and your best opportunity to
find them will be on these south edges of your favorite spots.
The wind could very well be your best friend while you are fall
fishing, so let it work for you and be aware of where it’s
pushing the bait. It doesn’t take much wind to move the bait
around, so position yourself to let the wind give you an
advantage. 6. As the fall is a transition time of year there will be
bass feeding at different depths, not every bass in the lake
will move shallow at the same time. In fact if the weather turns
off cold quickly the run to the shallows will be met with the
fishes instinct to go deep when it turns cold, so the movement
to the shallows may very well be daily. Cold nights, warming sun
equals movement daily to the deeper water and back to the
shallow to feed. What this tells you; is that some days the best
feeding time will be in the middle of the day as the sun warms
the shallow water. So you may very well have to fish a little
deeper early in the day especially if we have had a cold night
and move shallow with the warming of the day. Don’t fear because
the baitfish will follow the same transition lines on a daily
bases and move in and out as the bass do. So early in the day
you may need to be backed off the grass lines or humps or points
fishing 8 to 12 feet of water and moving to the 3 foot depths as
the day moves on. When this occurs look for the break lines to
be productive, the bass will stage where that hump or edge
changes from one depth quickly to another, these break lines can
be very productive after a cold night. 7. A pattern that I have found productive over the fall of
the year has to do with obscure break lines in the grass. I have
found that the wind and sometimes heavy rains from hurricanes as
they work from south to north leave some very distinct break
lines in and around the broken up grass. When you see an obscure
break in the grass, work those areas carefully, the crawfish
become more recognizable this time of year to the bass and a
bait swimming in and around these break lines is a good producer
of big fish. Besides that the obscure breaks in the grass hold
the baitfish as they can hide them from the winds and as usual
the bass will follow the baitfish. As in the information above
the wind will again position the crawfish and baitfish by
pushing it to the grass edge as described above, so boat
position will again be important. One thing you need to be aware
of here is that sometimes the grass has broken away from the
edges and floats and moves as the wind blows, these floating
mats of grass are not obscure grass lines and in most case do
not hold the fish. If the grass does not hold itself to the
bottom it generally will not hold the fish. Bass relate to
bottom structure and floating grass mats do not have a bottom
structure tied to it. That mat of floating grass will look very
tempting but in most cases you are wasting your time fishing
around them. One of the most difficult things to do in the fall
of the year is to work any of your cranking type baits; the
floating grass is always in your way and it is very aggravating
to constantly be cleaning off your lure. However, these crank
baits produce fish in the fall especially as the later part of
the fall starts to set in. There has been no lure more
productive for me in late fall than a jerk bait or shad-rap. It
is however very aggravating when you are constantly getting
caught up in floating grass. My suggestion is for you to just
calm down and put up with it as a jerk bait or shallow running
shad-rap worked strategically around the grass can be very
productive. Find ways to make this bait work with you, in most
cases you are moving this bait very slowly anyways so position
your cast so you can work around the edges and pieces of
floating grass and let the wind help your position. Make sure
these crank baits are the suspending type; this will allow you
to leave it in position while your working it through and around
the floating debris. A key to fishing suspending baits is
patience, don’t be in a hurry to pull this bait back to the
boat, twitch it some, let it sit and rock in place and you will
be assured of a bite. Another key to successful cranking like
this is to try and match the size and color of the actual bait,
you want this lure to look real yet produce a bite, if you over
size or undersize your bait you risk it looking unrealistic in
the water. The bass have had so many lures thrown at them by
this time of the year that they are very weary of being caught.
You will find times in the late fall when a bite will come from
a reaction of your bait, so be creative with these crank baits
try to determine if the bite is a reaction bite or not. When you
can tell the difference you will be better at getting the next
bite on these crank baits. The next two tips are suggestions from this year’s 2006 B.A.S.S.
Co-Angler Champion on Lake Guntersville Hadley Coan. Hadley is one of
Lake Guntersville premier tournament fishermen; he is probably the
biggest name on the tournament trail on Lake Guntersville producing week
after week wins on Lake Guntersville over the past several years. As a
Triton boat sponsored fisherman, Hadley rivals all comers with wins,
maybe more wins in the past five years than anyone. His suggestions and
tips deserve your attention. 8. Hadley’s first suggestion starts with the use of a spinner
bait. He states; “ find the obscure small patches of grass on
the lake, not the big large mated areas and work a shad colored
spinner bait around the obscure patches of grass. Use a ¼ oz. To
3/8 oz. Spinner bait and work these grass patches thoroughly.”
He believes that the spinner bait bite might be the best fall
bite, and by being selective to the correct type of grassy areas
that you can have a real productive day on the lake. You see the
small patches of grass tend to hold more fish in a small area,
so if you stay away from the long mated flats and find these 10
to 30 foot sections of grass the bass will stack up or bunch up
around them and when you catch one the area will produce many
bites. These smaller patches of grass also have a tendency to be
broken up, leaving areas inside the grass that you can work that
spinner bait and catch your limit. Hadley also suggests,
“because the water is generally clear around these areas that
you need to use single willow leaf blades on your spinner bait,
and colors that compliment the water.” Big bright baits just do
not produce bites in clear water.” 9. Hadley’s second suggestion is to “get out your buzz baits and lay in the boat a rod rigged with a senko where you can get to it quickly, take that shad colored buzz bait and find those same holes in the small patchy grass you were working with your spinner bait and buzz that over these areas.” Not only will the buzz bait produce bites and bass but if you find the bass are hitting a little short, as they sometimes do this time of year, “you should take that “senko” and throw it into those areas that you just missed the buzz bait bite and catch fish on the senko.” Hadley believes that working the senko immediately into the buzz bait miss is an extremely effective way to put good quality bass in the boat in the fall.” A pattern that has won several tournaments for Hadley over the past years in the fall time of year. 10. The fall time of year on Guntersville is generally very
dry, many days in a row of high-pressure and just beautiful. So
one thing you can do to have a productive day is to try to get
on the water when we do have a low-pressure day set in. The rain
will turn the fish on this time of year and if you can get
yourself on the water during some of these few low-pressure days
you will benefit by catching fish. If your looking for the
perfect 65-degree sunny late fall day, it will be pretty but the
bite will be tough. Unfortunately that bad weather where you’re
a little uncomfortable on the water will be your best day to
catch fish. I’ve seen days over the years where I fished hard
for 4, 5 maybe 6 days in row, the days were just beautiful fall
days but man I could not find a bite. I mean I spent hours on
the water, then found myself on the water in the middle of a
cold very rare fall rain and just loaded the boat in just a few
hours. You see as the grass rots away, the water becomes clearer
and clearer, there are fewer places for the bass to hide from
the sun and even though the temperature of the water and the
conditions seem just perfect it really isn’t. So be tough, get
out on the water during these low-pressure days and take
advantage of the bad weather to catch fish. Well I hope you will try some of these tips, they are proven methods of catching bass in the fall on Lake Guntersville. I’d like to take a moment to thank Hadley Coan for his input, there are very few of the tournament fisherman willing to make suggestions for these types of articles. He is a true sportsman; one I respect immensely, and probably the best local tournament fisherman in North Alabama. I look forward to fishing with you this fall.
|
|