Earning a good reputation sometimes has its
drawbacks.
Soft plastic jerkbaits serve as a prime example. The effectiveness
of soft jerkbaits in the spring leads some anglers to save these
lures for one season and ignore them the rest of the year.
So this lure’s reputation for catching bass during the spring
actually deters its usage in other seasons in which it would excel.
However a tournament competitor from Lake of the Ozarks believes
a lure that works so well in the spring should also produce in the
fall. Finicky bass can be tricked by the subtle action and slow
fall of a soft jerkbait throughout the spawning cycle, but this
finesse lure also produces at Lake of the Ozarks during the bass
feeding sprees of fall.
A Zoom Fluke free-falling through schools of shad catches bass
during those frustrating times when the fish seem to ignore everything
in your tacklebox. “Those bass come busting up through the
schools of shad and a lot of times they don’t eat one but
just injure it. Then whenever it’s settling to the bottom
they nail it,” says Bruce Gier, Eldon, MO. “The Fluke
is the closest thing to (an injured shad) imitation that I can get.”
The tournament competitor relies on a pearl or glitter-color Fluke
anytime he finds bass chasing shad and the fish continue to ignore
his other presentations. The technique usually excels when shad
are in the backs of coves and the sunshine causes the baitfish to
rise to the surface.
Casting to busting bass triggers some strikes, however tossing
the lure into the middle of the forage also catches fish. “There's
a bass underneath those shad. That’s just a given,”
says Gier. “If you throw it right on that school of shad and
let it deadfall, bass will bust it.” Gier just lets the lure
fall to the bottom without imparting any action, then reels in again
to cast to a busting fish or back into the shad balls.
Letting the lure fall on a tight line causes the jerkbait to stay
on top too long, so Gier accelerates its rate of descent by keeping
slack in his line. The bowed line makes it difficult to detect strikes
on the fall, but Gier knows an immediate hookset is unnecessary.
“Once they hit it they won't spit it out,” he claims.
The local angler rigs his Flukes on a 5/0 hook and leaves the
point exposed since he’s fishing mostly in open water. Gier
never adds weight to the lure, so he opts for a 6 1/2-foot medium-action
spinning rod with a light tip that allows him to throw the light
bait a long distance. He favors 8-pound test line and a spinning
reel with a large spool capacity.
While he catches plenty of keeper-size bass on this trick, Gier
has also taken quality fish with a soft jerkbait in the fall. “I
don’t know how many times I’ve seen a 5-pounder come
blowing completely out of the water in a big school of shad and
I’ll throw everything I’ve got at it and not get a bite,”
he says. “But this will work.”
Gier recommends trying this technique whenever shad activity is
present in the backs of coves. The pattern ends in late fall when
the water turns cold and the baitfish leave the coves. Gier employs
this deadfall method from September to November on the upper Osage
arm.
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.
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