Jump to content
bamabass

where are they??

Recommended Posts

i have a small farm pond that i know has big bass in it.ive caught 3+4 pound bass all the time but cant find the big ones.there is alot of vegetation in the summer and has cattails on thhe backside.there are bass,bluegill,catfish,and small amounts of crayfish at all time.what is your suggestion to find and ctch those lunkers??

thanks

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In my experience, which is not necessarily great (no 10 plus on my wall), I find that the big ones (7-8 lbs.) in small ponds will often haunt the same small area almost all year long. I know of a place where I can catch a very nice fish almost every trip by casting to an area the size of a kitchen table. The joker goes back every time she's released.

Keep searching, try different lures and retrieves, fish at night on a full moon, throw a frog, fish in the rain, just keep trying. If you hook a big one, try there again and again on different days.

I saw a guy hook a huge fish that everyone else threw to first. He stayed on that fish for near 20 minutes, trying every lure. It finally inhaled a crawbait. Nearly broke his rod in half, and finally the split rings gave out. He got the lure back with no hooks.

Don't know for sure, but I saw the fish with my two eyes from a VERY short distance, and saw the rod doubled back. I do not think it would be a stretch to say it was 15 lbs. That is simply huge for LM around here.

When searching for big bass, you have to accept that you will probably get skunked. But the payoff is great when you land a large fish.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not having much to go on about the farm pond as to the depth, size, geometry, and clarity of the water but I suspect the big ones would hold up in key locations.

==== Content removed via request ====

Since you said it’s your pond you should be able to catch a few during the spawn when the females go on the beds. However, like most large bass they adjust their eating habits until after dusk. Biologists are right about bass preferring optimum water temp to eat but, big fish feed more between dusk and dawn. I believe big bass are the exceptions to the rule. Big bass get big because they don’t do what the majority of the bass do the same goes for big bucks (deer) also. Maybe the larger bass are more aware of their surroundings who knows, but ask around to other fishermen who night fish and ask them if the fish are larger when caught at night. I have a chain of lakes near where I live and the fishing is brutal on the weekends, it gets better on the week days, but the night fishing is fantastic. I equate that to boat traffic and fishing pressure the big ones know the “noise means trouble”. Yes, bass can be conditioned. So, I suggest to you to go night fishing using a 5/8 oz. or large jitterbug, black spinner bait, devils horse, or a chug bug. Night fishing also improves your “feel” at the rod which improves your day fishing and it is rush when they hit top water at night. Give night fishing a chance you’ll see what I mean. That’s my two cents worth.

Edited by redg8r
Alleged copyrighted content removed via request Please ensure the content you provide on TU is permitted by it's author. Thank you.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If it's only 15 feet deep, I'd try buzzbaits at night. There are inlets and small ponds on our river that rarely exceed 10 to 12 feet deep. I haven't broken the 10 lb. barrier yet, but my best fish (8.5) and many other big ones have mainly come on black buzzbaits in pitch dark. I HATE fishing at night, but it will usually produce bigger fish.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I know someone who was stocking their own pond and also had a problem catching the big fish. Until one day a river otter was seen coming out of the pond with a nice bass in its mouth. I did a quick Google search and found out Maryland also has them. Could it be possible you have a theif stealing your fish?

www.dnr.state.md.us/wildlife/riverotter.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Try a musky jitterbug at nite. Big fish have fallen for a nice slow retreive for yrs. . The hooks are'nt much but its no problem changing them out. I have a freind that is always catching lunkers in the dark at numerous farm ponds around here. I believe the count is up to about 65 over 6 with several 8's in there. He has told of big fish that have jumped and just ripped the hooks right out.

He's either throwing that bait spray painted flat black or the largest floating jointed rapala w/ same paint worked slowly on the surface. He crushes them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hoodaddy's friend has it figured out! We do the same thing up here with great success. Do you consider yourself a jig fisherman? Otherwise, if you prefer worm fishing move up to the 9-12 inch long worms and give them a try. Either way I think the information in this post will help you.

Dynamite or draining the pond would be my last resorts.:lol:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In just about every pond that I've ever fished, bigger fish will fall for a Rattletrap in late winter. That's not to say that they will bite it every time that you fish. But fishing a pond that isn't heavily pressured, on days in Feburary when the fish are really active (on a warming trend of three days or more), the big ones will usually hit that Trap if you put it in front of them and give them multiple chances.

This involves covering every angle of the pond, and making multiple casts.

Now, if this same pond gets lots of fishing pressure, all bets are off.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...


×
×
  • Create New...
Top