You can beat the heat and summertime crowds by fishing
at night on the Lake of the Ozarks. When the moon shines and the water
calms down, the fishing action picks up for bass, crappie and catfish.
Some fish can be taken during the day, but night fishing offers
a cooler alternative and the fish seem to feed more after dark. From mid-June
to the latter part of July, nocturnal trips for bass are productive on
the Big and Little Niangua arms where the fisih hold in brush piles around
docks. In the Little Niangua, flipping behind docks in coves also takes
bass at night. Fish lights on the back of a dock are good attractants
for bass, especially if there is a brush pile within 5 feet of it because
the light brings the bugs in, which brings the baitfish and big bass in.
During the last part of July and in August, concentrate on brush piles
on the Osage arm around the Lodge of the Four Seasons.
Bass seem to prefer main lake structure later in the summer.
Points can be ideal spots to check at night because the fish move out
to deep, cooler water during the day, but after midnight when the water
starts to cool down they will come up on the shelves.
Water color has little effect on night fishing since bass can be taken
in clear or off-color conditions. The key is to find brush piles either
on the main lake or other areas that have deep water nearby. Any brush
pile sitting in 5 feet of water or deeper will hold bass at night.
The depth of the fish varies throughout the night as they come
up to feed at certain times. Start your evening fishing the brush piles
5 to 10 feet deep and when the fish stop biting in the brush, move up
shallower in search of bass roaming and feeding behind the docks. As morning
approaches, move back to the brush piles.
Picking the best time after dark to catch bass can be difficult because
the action can be non-stop some nights or there will be lulls between
bites other nights. If there's a full moon, the fish might bite all night.
Other times the fish bite during periods such as 11 p.m. to 3 a.m. or
daylight to 8 am.
Magnum-size plastic worms (10 or 11 inches) and jigs are excellent night-time
lures. Plastic worms in darker hues,
such as black, blue fleck, June bug and red shad, work well along with
a brown or black 3/8-ounce jig with a rattle and some type of pork chunk
or double-tail plastic grub trailer in a bluegill color. Retrieve the
worm and the jig in the same fashion. Let the lure fall into the brush
and crawl it through the limbs. Sometimes the fish suspend around the
brush piles, so you should lift the worm up over the brush and then let
it drop down into it, then lift it out of the brush again and let it drop
back to get the fish that are suspended around the brush.
Another technique also produces at night for bass. Try a 3/8-ounce black
spinnerbait with a silver willowleaf blade and a black twin-tail trailer,
which should be slow rolled over the chunk rocks.
Nights are also a prime time to drift for catfish. When the wind calms
in the evening, head for a the back of a cove and rig your rods with shad
and frozen shrimp. Spend the rest of the evening and into the early morning
drifting the cove for catfish.
If you don't have a boat, resort docks also provide good night action
for a variety of fish. Most of the resorts have sunken brush piles around
the docks, which become havens for bass and crappie. Bass can be taken
from the brush on plastic worms or jigs. The best crappie action occurs
in the brush piles located under lights that shine directly into the water.
The lights set off a chain reaction as microorganisms are attracted to
the lit area, followed by baitfish and then crappie. Minnows, jigs or
a jig tipped with a minnow catch crappie under the lights. Some crappie
anglers also get in on a bonus catch when a school
of white bass move under the lights to feed on shad. Tight-lining
off the docks with live bait or stink baits is an effective way to
take catfish at night.
As the temperatures rise, take the day off and try some fishing
under the stars at the beautiful Lake of the Ozarks this summer.
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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