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Anglers have a chance to fish plenty of clear or off-colored
water and shallow- or deep-water structure in the middle section
of the Osage arm of the Lake of the Ozarks throughout the year.
The lower section around Tan-Tar-A and the confluence of the Niangua
arm and Linn Creek features fairly clear water most of the year
and has plenty of bluffs and other steep banks that are ideal for
deep-water patterns. However the section above the Hurricane Deck
Bridge usually contains more stained to murky water and has more
gradually sloping banks on both the main lake and in the various
creeks that are ideal for catching fish shallow throughout most
of the year.
Three-time BASS Federation Divisional qualifier Brian Maloney stays
close to the Tan-Tar-A area during the winter to fish the clearer
and deeper water. He looks for big chunk rock and black slab rocks
on the main lake or goes halfway back in the coves and targets secondary
points. “On that end there are deeper v-shaped coves and once
the lake drops into its winter pool in mid-January to mid-February,
the fish are sucked out of the coves and stack up on those types
of rocks,” he advises.
One of his favorite winter lures is a small (3/16 or 1/ 4 ounce)
brown or dark green jig that he mixes with a brown or green plastic
tube or craw trailer. He works the lure with 10- to 12-pound fluorocarbon
line.
Suspending stick baits is his other choice for wintertime bass
in this area. The Osage Beach, MO, angler prefers a green-and-white
or purple-and-chartreuse model for cloudy days but opts for shad
patterns (blue-and-chrome or black-and-chrome) or the clown color
for sunny skies.
“If there is some ripple on the water with the wind blowing
into a secondary point I will fish the jerkbait from the bank out
to 20 feet deep,” says Maloney. “The fish seem to suspend
in the 5- to 10-foot range. If I’m looking on my graph and
don’t’ see any suspended fish then I go to the jig and
drag it out to 20 feet.” He retrieves the jerkbait on 8-pound
line with a series of jerks and pauses, sometimes letting it sit
for as long as 30 seconds.
In early or mid-March, bass move into the prespawn stage when the
water temperature climbs to around 45 degrees. Then Maloney concentrates
on the flatter banks in the bigger creeks and hollows above the
Hurricane Deck Bridge where he throws a medium-diving crawfish-color
crankbait on 8- or 10-pound line. He moves halfway back in the coves
and runs his crankbait 3 to 12 feet deep in areas where the 45-degree
chunk rock banks change to pea gravel.
Some sight fishing can be done in the cleaner water around Tan-Tar-A
during the spawn. Whether he’s fishing the clear or dirty
water, Maloney looks for concrete pillars of dock walkways and sea
wall abutments where bass usually build nests. The fish will spawn
as shallow as 2 feet in the dirty water and as deep as 6 feet in
the clear water.
Maloney relies on the small jig and tube trailer or a bright-colored
Chompers Twin Tail grub with a 1/ 4-ounce standup jighead to catch
fish on the nest. “Sight fishing makes it easy,” says
Maloney. “Just cast beyond the fish’s nose and you will
find somewhere in that bed where the fish will spin around and nose
down on your bait.” He makes multiple pitches on 12-pound
fluorocarbon line behind the docks to coax spawning fish into biting.
His favorite docks during the spawn are usually located in a small
nook about halfway to three-quarters back in a cove. The spawn in
this area usually begins when the water temperature climbs above
65 degrees and runs from mid-May to June.
Bass start leaving the nest in late May or early June. Maloney
coaxes these sluggish postspawn fish into hitting a Carolina-rigged
6-inch plastic lizard. His rig consists of a main line of 17-pound
test, a 1/ 2- or 3/ 4-ounce egg-shaped sinker, swivel, bead and
18-inch to 2-foot leader of 10- to 12-pound line and a 1/0- or 2/0
worm hook. He favors lizards in green pumpkin or dark melon that
he dips the tail with chartreuse or purple dye. If AmerenUE is running
water, Maloney slowly drags his rig across main or round secondary
points about 20 to 25 feet deep. He keeps the lure moving along
on the bottom until it hits any piece of cover and then he lets
it sit for a couple of second before resuming his retrieve.
Topwater lures are also effective during the post-spawn. Maloney
likes to work Zara Spooks (green-and-clear or chartreuse-and-clear)
parallel to the bank along a point or any depth change near the
spawning areas. On cloudy or windy days, he also catches some post-spawn
bass on black ½-ounce buzz baits.
In the early summer, Maloney catches bass on Carolina-rigged lizards
along the channel ledges or on deep-diving crankbaits (blue-and-chartreuse
or shad-pattern hues) that he cranks into brush piles 12 feet or
deeper.
Night fishing turns on as the summer gets hotter, so Maloney relies
on a 10-inch Berkley Power Worm (June bug, black-and-blue or red
shad) that he Texas-rigs with a ¼- to 1/ 2-ounce bullet sinker.
He works the worm through brush piles 15 to 30 feet deep on main
and secondary points or main lake cuts with 45-degree banks.
During the heat of summer, Maloney can also catch bass from isolated
docks in the back of coves above the Hurricane Deck Bridge. He flips
his 10-inch plastic worms on 17-pound line to shady areas of the
shallow docks.
Fall is “fun fishing time” for Maloney. He looks for
shad activity in the flats of the coves and flips his small jig
to shallow docks and brush piles. When bass start suspending on
the corners of the docks in about mid-September, Maloney works Zara
Spooks, buzz baits and crankbaits along the sides of the boat houses.
He also likes to swim a white 1/ 4-ounce jig and white plastic tube,
craw or grub down the sides of the docks to catch fish suspended
under the dock foam. Old docks in the backs of coves are best for
the swimming jig tactic. As the water gets colder in autumn, Maloney
keeps moving down lake. He fishes above Hurricane Deck Bridge until
the first part of October and then tries his fall patterns in the
Tan-Tar-A area until about early December.
For information on lodging and other facilities at
the Lake of the Ozarks or to receive a free 152-page vacation guide,
call the Lake of the Ozarks Convention & Visitors Bureau at
1-800-FUN-LAKE or visit the Lake of the Ozarks Convention and Visitors
Bureau web site at funlake.com
Copies of John Neporadny's book "THE Lake of
the Ozarks Fishing Guide" are available on this web site. Click
here to order your copy today. |