
CREATURES OF THE NIGHT
By Darl Black
If anglers limit their summertime
bass fishing to daylight hours on deep clear-water reservoirs,
it is unlikely they will enjoy a true smallmouth experience.
That’s the opinion of Jerry Brumbaugh, a professional angler
from Pennsylvania whose specialty is brown bass.
Jim Duckworth,
one of Tennessee’s most recognized fishing guides, puts it in
even simpler terms: “Smallmouth turn on when the sun goes
down.”
These experts
know that during the summer from New England to Arkansas,
smallmouth become creatures of the night on many lakes.
Turn to the
Dark Side
For years
Duckworth has been doing what ever it takes to insure his
clients meet with success. To that end, his bass fishing takes
a decided turn to the “dark side” come summer.
“Smallmouth are
a pretty smart fish, or perhaps it’s better to describe them as
having very good survival instinct,” explains the 25-year
veteran of Middle Tennessee reservoirs. “Mature smallmouth are
extremely wary – even more so than largemouth. Telemetry
studies show that on lakes with a lot of summer boat traffic,
smallmouth shift their primary feeding to the cover of
darkness.”
“Water clarity
also plays a part,” continues Duckworth. “On super clear
smallmouth lakes, such as renowned Dale Hollow, the locals never
bother fishing in the daylight through the summer. I will not
take guide trips during the day on Dale Hollow because it’s a
waste of time. But at night it’s a different story – I can
count on a smallie over five pounds for a client every couple
trips.”
North of the
Mason-Dixon Line, Brumbaugh stakes out a similar position. “On
my home water of Raystown Lake in south-central Pennsylvania, I
can catch largemouth during daylight hours with regularity
through the summer. But if smallmouth bass are my focus, then I
must fish after dark.”
Brumbaugh backs
up his opinion by referencing the results from local tournament
weigh-ins. While Raystown’s bass population is roughly 50%
largemouth and 50% smallmouth as evident during spring and fall
fishing, weigh-ins for daytime tournaments during the summer
clearly largemouth catches outdistance smallmouth by a hefty
margin.
“I’m not a
biologist so I can’t put a scientific spin on the reason,”
continues Brumbaugh. “I don’t know if smallmouth are turned off
by boating activity, or if it’s simply that preferred prey is
more available after dark.
“I do know that
when the lake stops churning from all the daytime boat activity,
baitfish schools that have been suspended over deep water will
move to the surface to feed. Plus crayfish come out of crevices
after dark as well. So with their favorite prey available, it
only makes sense that smallmouth become more active.”
Based on 15
years of fishing experience, Brumbaugh relies on a specific
temperature guideline to launch his night-fishing mode. “Once
water temperature climbs past 80 degrees on inland lakes,
smallmouth suspend off structure during the day and switch a
significant part of their feeding activity to after sundown.”
However, both
anglers point to factors that may offset a strong night feeding
response. Dark, overcast skies during the day sometimes trigger
smallmouth to move shallower to feed. Also, current can impact
feeding times. River smallmouth are far more active during the
daylight than reservoir smallies in the same water
temperatures. And in power-generating reservoirs, pulling water
will result in bronzebacks putting on the feedbag.
Brumbaugh also
spends considerable time fishing Lake Erie. He acknowledges
that Great Lakes' smallies feed during daylight hours right
through the summer. “The water temperature on these big lakes
rarely reaches 80 degrees; therefore it supports my theory that
temperature turn smallmouth into nocturnal feeders.”
Night Location:
Habitat or Prey Driven?
The structural
characteristics that typically describe a classic smallmouth
lake are the very ones that make for a good night-fishing lake
according to Duckworth. "First, I want a lake that has a lot of
points dropping into deep water. Daytime visibility into the
water must be over four feet – in other words pretty clear
water. And I want a good flow so the water is being exchanged
fairly quickly. Those green bass might like stagnant water, but
not brown bass.
“At night I
concentrate on main lake points as well as some of the major
points in creek arms,” continues Duckworth. “I like a shale
bank with an area of red clay nearby. Crawfish love red clay
and smallies love points. So when you put the two together –
Shazam!”
Yet Duckworth
says the best lakes for catching big smallmouth bass at
night are ones with threadfin shad. “Threadfin are basically a
shallow-water baitfish, which means smallmouth will be shallow
to feed. In lakes where alewives have been introduced, the
summer smallmouth fishing has been crippled substantially
because the bass will be more than 40 feet deep with the
alewives. They won’t even come shallower under the cover of
darkness because there is so much food down deep.”
Brumbaugh
believes one way around the alewife problem is to focus on lakes
with balanced habitat and a variety of prey species. According
to Brumbaugh, Raystown is a good example of a balanced lake with
flats and bluff banks plus an eclectic mix of prey. Brumbaugh
likes the availability of different main lake cover, including
deadfalls and rock on the steep banks and stumps, rock piles and
weedbeds on the flats. He also embraces the combination of
gizzard shad, emerald shiners and crayfish in addition to the
alewives.
“I feel the
more variety in food and cover, the more options the angler has
to find active fish at night,” explains Brumbaugh. “If the lake
as good populations of different bait, the puzzle may be a bit
more complicated to figure out but at least there is a good
chance for a solution. Just don’t make the mistake of staying
in one spot too long simply because you think bass should be
there. Keep moving until you make contact."
Tuned-In
Techniques
Although over
600 miles separate the home lakes of these two anglers,
Brumbaugh and Duckworth have independently settled on similar
presentations to catch smallmouth.
Brumbaugh
starts off each night by fishing main lake flats with a
spinnerbait. He makes his own ½-ounce tandem spinnerbaits with
copper Colorado blades and a dark skirt.
“I focus on the
weedbeds that grow around or immediately adjacent to stumps and
small rock piles,” explains Brumbaugh. “The ideal situation is
a weed patch that extends to a depth of about 12 or 15 feet,
with a rock pile, row of stumps or old gravel roadbed on the
outside edge.
“I position the
boat a short distance beyond the deep weed edge and cast
shallower,” continues Brumbaugh. “In most instances there will
be a two to three foot space between the tops of the weeds and
the surface of the water. I retrieve the spinnerbait just fast
enough so it does not sink into the vegetation. You’ve got to
develop a sense of feel to keep the spinnerbait barely ticking
the top weed strands.”
When he reaches
what he judges to be the weed edge, he slows the spinnerbait so
it flutters downward. He continues slow-rolling the bait a few
more feet before reeling in quickly for another cast.
If unable to
make connections with smallmouth after fishing several flats,
Brumbaugh will move to a bluff area. Here he positions the boat
much closer to the bank because these shorelines fall quickly
into deep water. Using the same tandem spinnerbait, he will
slow roll it off the ledges, working the lure down to a depth of
about 15 feet.
Brumbaugh’s
back-up bait for the steep shorelines is a dark-colored ½-ounce
jig with a rattle. He chooses either a Strike King Rattling
Pro-Model Jig or a Stanley Rattlin’ Flat Eye Jig. To this he
adds a four-inch Zoom Super Chunk, choosing this model because
of vibrant-action legs compared to standard chunks.
Another
favorite night bait is a six to seven-inch ribbon tail worm on a
3/0 hook with a 1/4 or 3/8-ounce weight. Brumbaugh is partial
to the Berkley Power Worm, but has success with other worms,
too, as long as the bait has a swimming ribbon-like tail.
“Since smallies
may be very shallow on the walls at night, I cast the jig or
worm right to the water’s edge,” explains Brumbaugh. “Let the
bait fall straight down on a slack line. Once it touches
bottom, take up slack line and pull the bait by lifting the rod
tip a couple inches. Then hold the tip high until the jig or
worm swims back to the bottom. I’ll continue edging the bait
down the to about the 15-foot depth. That’s the maximum depth I
believe is necessary to fish after dark.”
Practice
Stealth & Finesse
“If smallmouth
react negatively to boat traffic during the day, just imagine
how they react to unnatural sounds at night when the lake is so
quiet,” says Duckworth. To minimize making sounds in the boat,
he recommends having extra rods rigged ahead of time and
everything in place. He also enforces a strict ‘no flashlight’
rule, using only a small pen light for changing lures or landing
fish.
Again based on
information provided through telemetry studies, Duckworth has
become a firm believer that depthfinders spook smallmouth. “No
doubt about it. Sound emitted by depthfinders cause fish to
move away. Therefore, I keep my depthfinders turned off at
night. Study the area with the depthfinder before the sun goes
down is my advice. Stealth is the key after dark.”
Duckworth’s top
two lures are a Texas rigged Berkley Power Craw on a 1/0 XPoint
wide gap hook with 1/8-ounce sliding worm weight and a ¼-ounce
Punisher Hair Jig. “This soft plastic crayfish rig works great
for clients because it is very snag-resistant plus smallmouth
will hold onto the Power Craw long enough for an inexperienced
angler to detect the pick-up and to set the hook. I always go
with a black or black & blue Power Craw.”
However,
Duckworth points out that the traditional bait for nighttime
smallmouth in Central Tennessee is a hair jig. His pick, the
Punisher Jig, is tied with a special craft hair that has more
undulating action than similar products. Duckworth fishes the
jig without a trailer. While recommending basic black to
anglers, he admits the jig color on the end of his rod will
likely be olive green with a touch of orange.
“I’ll start
with perpendicular casts very tight to the bank, fishing the jig
or craw very slowly with three to six inch movements. Work the
bait to a depth of about 20 feet. Within an hour or so, I would
hope to key in on the exact depth that smallmouth are feeding.
As soon as that depth is established, I will position the boat
so we can cast to that particular depth and fish parallel to the
bank.”
When fishing
with experienced anglers, Duckworth works grass beds with a
spinnerbait, in much the same way that Brumbaugh does by just
ticking the tops of submerged vegetation. “Maintaining the
right retrieve speed – not too fast and not too slow – can be
tricky for novices.” He uses a ¾-ounce Terminator bait with
Colorado blades and a black or blue skirt.
“On heavily
fished clear-water lakes, smallmouth are line shy even in the
dark,” says Duckworth. “I use only 6-pound-test Trilene XL on a
spinning rod for hair jigs and craws. Because spinnerbaits will
break off easily on 6-pound line, I’m forced to move up to
10-pound Berkley Sensation on a casting outfit – but absolutely
nothing heavier. You can get away with a little heavier line on
a spinnerbait because the lure is moving steadily.”
However, on
lightly fished northern clear-water lakes, Brumbaugh does not
find it necessary to go to extremely light line. He uses 12 or
14-pound Original Stren Clear/Blue for both jigs and
spinnerbaits. “I’m really concentrating on bumping individual
stumps, climbing through branches of deadfalls and dragging over
chunk rock. The lake bottom would eat up my lures if I went
much lighter,” notes Brumbaugh.
The need for a
black light is a point of agreement for both anglers. Without
one, many pick-ups would go unnoticed at night. Regardless of
pound-test, Brumbaugh and Duckworth use fluorescent line that
will show up under the black light.
(Note: Jim
Duckworth recently produced a bass night fishing video that will
be available on his website at
www.jimduckworth.com as of May 2003.)
Past
Articles
EAST MEETS
WEST ON LAKE ERIE
TACKLING
RIVER SMALLMOUTH IN THE FALL
INDIGENOUS
BAIT
SUPER SHALLOW
SUMMER
CREATURES OF THE NIGHT
CRANKY SMALLMOUTH
TINY TORPEDO
LAKE ERIE “BEST” FOR
SMALLMOUTH BASS
HOW TO CATCH THE BIGGEST SMALLMOUTH
OF YOUR LIFE
IN QUEST OF CENTER HILL SMALLMOUTH
LOVE
THOSE HELLGRAMMITES!
|