Home       ProStaff       Products       Cart       Lake Reports       Members Area       Fishing Radio Show Online  


 

Entry Form and Rules

OMTT Results

Press Release

FREE
Newsletter

We value your privacy

Contact Us

 

 

 

 

 




 
New User?
Register Here


 
Contact Us With Questions, Comments or Suggestions

 
Tell a Friend
about this website


 

Go With The Flow For Spawning Lake of the Ozarks White Bass

By John Neporadny Jr.

Silvery masses of white bass swarmed everywhere in the gin clear waters of the creek. The stream contained so many whites that the fish darted between my legs as I waded through the riffles.

Casting into a pool full of whites, I immediately hooked a fish and as it fought, at least 10 other white bass ran with the hooked fish. Nearly every cast produced a fish as I caught of limit of hefty white bass in less than 20 minutes. I've caught spawning white bass in the dirty waters of the Mississippi River and its tributaries before, but I'll never forget my first white bass encounter in the clear waters of a Lake of the Ozarks creek.

When white bass get that spawning urge, they seek the right mixture of water flow and rocks throughout waterways in this region. Although white bass can successfully spawn on various types of bottoms, they seem to congregate more around any rocky areas, such as gravel shoals and riprap.

During a typical spring with normal rainfall, white bass run in several feeder creeks or rivers on the Lake of the Ozarks. On the northern side of the lake, the prime white bass runs occur in Cole Camp, Indian, Gravois and Little Gravois creeks.

The southern region offers some of the best spawning runs however. An annual prime spot for spawning whites is the swinging bridges area in the Lake of the Ozarks State Park on the Grand Glaize arm. Other good spawning areas are the Big and Little Niangua rivers. The area around the Highway J bridge on the Little Niangua arm can be especially good at times.

I look for white bass in the rocky pools below riffles where the
current eddies into a shallow gravel bar of a feeder creek. Since
these streams contain clear water, I use ultralight spinning tackle
with 4-pound test line. Some of the most productive lures include
small tube jigs with spinner jigheads, small floating Rapalas and
Roostertails.

My favorite way to catch white bass though is to combine a 4-inch floating Rapala with a white or pink 1/16-ounce doll fly. I tie the jig on a 1-foot leader of 4-pound test and attach it to the back hook of the Rapala. Since the combination has to be jerked hard to be most effective, I use a medium-action spinning rod and reel filled with 8- to 10-pound test line.

White bass travel up the Lake of the Ozarks tributaries from mid-April to early May. The average size of these spawning whites runs from 3/4 of a pound to 1 1/2 pounds.

Heading up one of the feeder creeks at Lake of the Ozarks region provides some of your best fishing action of the spring if you can find the annual white bass spawning sites.

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.

 
Charles With Remax Logo
 

Become a Sponsor
requires power point or Download Power Point Viewer

New Internet Explorer only option >>>>

 

K.A.S.T. " Kids Are Special Too" Introduces kids to the outdoors as an alternative to drugs. Click to learn more
 
Home Products View Cart Checkout Search Empty Cart
 
Bull Shoals MO |  Lake Of The Ozarks |  Pomme De Terre |  Stockton |  Table Rock |  Truman |  Tanneycomo
Beaver Lake |  Bull Shoals AR |  Greers Ferry |  Lake Ouachita |  North Fork |  Norfork |  Lake Barkley
Copyright © 2004 -2006 Don Berry Pro Fishing LLC. All rights reserved.
Design by:
Springfield Digital Web Design