Read Article - LIVETARGET Lures

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Read Article - LIVETARGET Lures
{
Day Lake
on
the
David
Walker
{Fall/Winter Transition}
By DON WIRTH
Senior Writer
7:20 a.m. It’s 18 degrees as
the day begins. “This morning
is going to be more about
­survival than fishing,” he says.
If you are man enough to fish in the brutal
cold, take notes out of David Walker’s playbook. Big bass are willing to take the field
8:39 a.m. Walker cranks a channel bank.
Photos: Don Wirth
B
1
9:58 a.m. Walker hangs a good fish on a crawfish
crankbait.
58 BASSMASTER
November/December 2014
Bassmaster’s “Day on the Lake” series puts Elite Series
pros on small lakes they’ve never seen before, then gives them
seven hours to crack the code and catch bass. This month,
David Walker takes the challenge. The 48-year-old Sevierville,
Tenn., angler has fished B.A.S.S. events for 15 years and has
qualified for the Classic nine times. Here’s what transpired on
Dec. 12, 2013, when we put Walker on Lake N, a small reservoir.
Here, learn how to catch bass when the calendar says late fall
yet midwinter conditions prevail.
» 6:30 a.m. It’s clear and a bone-chilling 18 degrees when I
meet Walker at his motel. A high of 40 is forecast for later in the
day. The pro is towing a Ranger 1862 center-console aluminum
boat equipped with a 90-horsepower Evinrude outboard, Minn
Kota trolling motor, Lowrance electronics and twin Power-Pole
anchors. “What’s up with this cold weather?” Walker wonders.
“Winter doesn’t officially begin for another week! It’s going to be
all about survival out there today, especially if the wind kicks
(Continued)
up.” We head out for Lake N.
Day {David Walker}
on the
Lake
» 7:14 a.m. We arrive at Lake N’s boat ramp. A group of
duck hunters has just launched their boats; water from
their trailers has already frozen on the ramp. “Man, it is
freakin’ brutal out here,” Walker says, shivering. We both
don extreme cold-weather gear and prep the Ranger for
launching.
7 HOURS LEFT
» 7:20 a.m. We launch the aluminum rig, and Walker
arranges his arsenal of G.Loomis rods equipped with
Shimano reels while his outboard warms up. What’s his
strategy for the day? “This is the first sunny day this region has had for over a week, and if the wind doesn’t
blow, that could bring the fish up shallow. Wintertime
fishing is different than other seasons; bass really like
the sun now, plus they’re often suspending, and they can
see your lure at a much greater distance when there’s
good solar penetration. I’ll probably look for vertical
structures like channel banks and rock bluffs early in
the day; bass usually want deep water close by now. It’s
so cold this morning, the upper ends of shallow tributaries and little pockets off the main lake might be iced up,
but the deeper areas of the lake should have a more
“They should get a little
more active once the
sun gets over the
treeline.”
constant temperature. Later on this morning, bass
might move into the shallower/flatter areas of the lake
to take advantage of the sunlight.” He checks his graph’s
surface-temp reading. “It says 39 degrees right now, but I
don’t think it’s quite that cold. East Tennessee smallmouth anglers fish the float-and-fly (a tiny hair jig below
a bobber) when the water temp dips below 40 degrees.
Hopefully, I won’t have to resort to that method.”
» 7:35 a.m. Walker takes off on a mercifully short run to a
steep bank, where he makes his first casts of the day with a
Koppers LiveTarget Bait Ball jerkbait in the brown shad
pattern. “These Bait Ball lures have created a sensation
since they were introduced earlier this year. They feature a
clear plastic body with multiple baitfish images inside,
sort of like the ‘ship in a bottle’ concept. They mimic a
small school of baitfish, yet in a much more compact and
easy-to-fish manner than an umbrella rig.” He checks the
water clarity. “Wow, the water looks really clear, even
though I heard they had three inches of rain here just the
other day. You definitely want clear water for jerkbaits.”
» 7:40 a.m. The temp readout on Walker’s bow graph
now shows 42 degrees as he continues fishing the jerkbait. “That’s a relief; any water temp with a ‘3’ in front of
it is bad news as far as I’m concerned!” The
front deck of his aluminum boat is slick with
ice. “I’m really having to watch my footing. I
definitely don’t want to fall in the lake today!”
» 7:45 a.m. The surface temp readout has stabilized at 43 degrees. “That’s a heat wave compared to 39! They should get a little more active once the sun gets over the treeline.”
Walker is still looking for his first strike on the
channel bank. I ask him about his jerkbait retrieve cadence. “Right now I’m fishing it with
two short jerks and a medium pause. I know
guys who pause it long enough for them to eat
a sandwich and a bag of chips, but I don’t have
that luxury since I need to cover some water.”
» 7:51 a.m. Walker pitches a homemade
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60 BASSMASTER
November/December 2014
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Each Issue
During Preceeding
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of Single Issue
Sept/Oct 14
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Circulation
black-and-blue 1/2-ounce jig with a green pumpkin
Z-Man Turbo Crawz trailer at a boat dock. No takers.
» 7:56 a.m. He tries the jig around a concrete retaining
wall. “It drops off real quick to 17 feet here. Winter bass
will suspend around these vertical walls and feed on shad.”
» 8:03 a.m. Walker backs off the wall into 22 feet of water and drops a 3/4-ounce Hopkins spoon around some
fish he’s spotted on the bottom. He hops the jigging
spoon several times, then says, “Whatever kind of fish
they are, they’re not hungry for a spoon.” A shotgun blast
sounds across the lake. “At least the
duck hunters are having some luck.”
» 8:05 a.m. Walker switches to a watermelon craw LiveTarget HFC crankbait and retrieves it parallel to the retaining wall. “HFC stands for ‘hunt for
center’; this lure has an erratic ‘hunting’ action but always swings back to
true center, so it tracks exactly where
you want it to. It’s an awesome crankbait in cold water. I fish all my crankbaits on 10-pound Sunline
fluorocarbon.”
» 8:09 a.m. He switches to the same
lure in chartreuse craw. “Because
we’ve still got shade on this bank I
need a brighter color.”
» 8:16 a.m. The water near the end of
the wall is 44 degrees. Walker reverses
directions and retraces his path while
cranking the HFC.
cranking speed down, but it’s hard to keep it consistently
slow, so I’m also using a slow-speed 5.7:1 reel. The instant
I feel the lure hit bottom or a hard object, I slow it way
down. I’ve found bass are especially oriented to rock in
cold water, but flatland lakes like this one often don’t
have a lot of rock, so wood is the next best thing.”
» 8:50 a.m. Walker idles a short distance uplake to a
mud point. He breaks out a box of LiveTarget jerkbaits
and selects one in a green shad pattern. “This color’s a
(Continued)
IMPROVED
WITH
6 HOURS LEFT
» 8:21 a.m. There’s a light breeze
blowing out of the south. Walker
cranks a couple of boat docks with the
HFC; his reel and rod guides keep icing up.
» 8:23 a.m. Walker runs the crankbait parallel to a dock and a bass
grabs it but instantly gets off. “That
felt like a good fish. The water may
have to warm up a degree or two before you can get one to really choke it.”
» 8:25 a.m. He casts the jig to the
dock. “Let’s see if I can tempt that fish
to bite again!” His line hangs in the
dock; when he retrieves the lure, he
also picks up a chartreuse spinnerbait
that was wedged between two boards.
“Aha, now we know what the locals
are using!”
» 8:30 a.m. The channel bank flattens out, causing Walker’s crankbait
to dig up a wad of slimy snot grass.
» 8:39 a.m. Walker opts to move
straight across the lake to another
steep bank; he’s sitting in 22 feet of
water and casting the chartreuse
craw HFC to the shoreline. I ask him
how he adapts his cranking style to
cold water. “I try to manually slow my
NEW
NEW
NEW
PROUDLY
www.stren.com
November/December 2014
BASSMASTER 61
Day {David Walker}
on the
Lake
little brighter than that other jerkbait I
was using. I need to wake these fish up.”
He also ties on a homemade umbrella rig.
“I hate these things! Umbrella rigs are the
angling equivalent of wearing sweat
pants — a sign that you’ve totally given
up!”
» 8:53 a.m. Walker casts the jerkbait to
the point, reels it down and hangs it in
some submerged cover. He breaks out a
plug knocker; this hangs in the cover, as
well.
» 9:04 a.m. After considerable tugging,
Walker pulls the object, an old tire, to the
surface and retrieves his lure and plug
knocker. “Look, whoever sank this tire actually cut sections out of the sidewalls to
stick brush in. Talk about somebody with
too much time on their hands!”
» 9:12 a.m. Walker runs back to the opposite shore to fish a clay point. He probes
a submerged tree at the end of the structure with the jig.
5 HOURS LEFT
» 9:20 a.m. The air temp is still frigid,
but the sun has finally melted the ice off
the decks of Walker’s boat. He’s moved
around the point to fish a series of laydowns with the jig. “I haven’t had a bite so
far on any type of cover except a boat
dock. Given the clarity of this water,
they’re probably suspending.”
» 9:25 a.m. Walker switches to a small
LiveTarget shad-imitating crankbait on a
spinning outfit. “Bass often feed on small
baitfish in cold water, and a lure this size
can usually get bites when bigger lures
can’t. It’s got a super-tight wobble. This
time of year, it can be more important to
determine what kind of lure the fish want
than to pinpoint precise locations where
they might be holding, because they’re
probably suspending and therefore not
relating tightly to specific pieces of cover
or structure.”
» 9:26 a.m. Two bald eagles are perched
in a dead tree on the bank Walker is fishing. “They’re probably waiting for those
duck hunters to leave so they can grab a
coot for lunch.”
» 9:30 a.m. Walker cranks the mini-shad
across another clay point.
» 9:31 a.m. Walker catches a nonkeeper
off the point on the mini-shad. “This fish
feels like an icicle!”
» 9:40 a.m. Walker moves uplake to
crank a retaining wall with the chartreuse craw LiveTarget HFC. “I like this
spot; it’s 7 feet deep along the wall, and
I’m feeling some rock down there.” The
water here is 43 degrees.
» 9:41 a.m. He catches a short fish on the
LiveTarget HFC.
» 9:46 a.m. Walker tries the mini-shad
crankbait on the retaining wall. “The water’s a little murkier up here, but you can
still see the lure flash.”
» 9:49 a.m. Walker proceeds farther uplake, following the retaining wall while
cranking the HFC and mini-shad. The
wall makes a sharp bend and the depth
decreases, so he backs his boat out from
shore and resumes cranking.
» 9:55 a.m. Walker ties on a chartreuse
root beer LiveTarget Tennessee Crank, a
crawfish-profile crankbait. “I’m adjusting
to a slightly lighter color pattern because
this water is a little more stained than it
is downlake, plus this lure is a dead ringer
for a live craw.”
» 9:58 a.m. Walker casts the craw imitator to the wall, winds it down, and a good
fish grabs it. He works it closer to the boat
and lands his first keeper of the day, a
3-pound, 2-ounce largemouth. “I felt the
lure tick some brush about 8 feet down,
then the fish hit it. First cast with that
crankbait, too — just shows how important it is to make even seemingly minor
adjustments in your lures this time of
year.”
» 10:03 a.m. Walker continues cranking
the retaining wall. A bass taps the
Tennessee Crank but doesn’t hook up.
» 10:08 a.m. As Walker cranks the wall,
we hear a loud cracking sound. Then, almost in slow motion, a massive tree on
the bank topples over and crashes to the
ground with a deafening thud! “Good
grief! That’s amazing! I’ve seen trees blow
over in storms, but never when it was
dead calm like it is out here now!”
» 10:10 a.m. Walker cranks a gravel boat
ramp. “Never pass up an old boat ramp!
They attract lots of minnows and craws.”
» 10:14 a.m. Walker works over a pontoon boat dock with the Tennessee Crank
and jig.
4 HOURS LEFT
» 10:21 a.m. Walker makes a short hop
uplake to a steep bank with some scattered rock. “There’s not a lot of rock in
this lake, and I want to make sure I hit it
when I can find it.” He grinds the
Tennessee Crank around the rocks. “It’s
not as deep here as it looks — only about
5 feet — but those rocks should hold
crawfish.”
» 10:24 a.m. Walker runs back to the retaining wall where he bagged his first
keeper and works the area over thoroughly with the Tennessee Crank and the
“These fish definitely
aren’t stacked up. It’s a
one bite here, one bite
there kind of deal.”
jig. “These fish definitely aren’t stacked up. It’s
a one bite here, one bite there kind of deal.”
» 10:43 a.m. The wall has so far failed to produce another fish. The wind has picked up,
and although it’s blowing from the south, it’s
bitterly cold. “Why didn’t I do this article in
May?” Walker laments as he pitches the jig to
some shallow stumps.
» 10:50 a.m. Walker opts to try the umbrella
rig; it’s rigged with several 4-inch Z-Man
Diezel Minnowz, three of which have hooks in
them. “Some guy in east Tennessee makes
these rigs in his garage. I want Bassmaster
readers to understand that I’m totally selling
out by fishing this rig! I’m glad they don’t allow them in B.A.S.S. tournaments; they require absolutely no skill. You’re nothing more than a glorified rod holder when you fish it!”
» 10:51 a.m. Walker flings the U-rig to the retaining
wall and reels it in slowly and steadily. About halfway
back to the boat, his rod bows under the weight of a big
bass! His second keeper of the day is a long, lean
4-pound, 3-ounce largemouth. “That fish was suspending right out in the middle of nowhere. What’s it doing
way out there, anyway? It’s crazy! You spend years trying
to perfect your presentations with lures that require
skill to use properly, then you pick up this stupid rig and
catch a 4-pound bass on your first cast. Go figure.”
» 11:15 a.m. Walker has worked his way back along the
retaining wall with the U-rig, craw crank and jig without getting another bite. What’s his take on the day so
far? “There are some good quality fish in this lake, but
getting them to bite hasn’t been easy. Even though it’s
late fall, the fish are on a midwinter pattern. The biggest surprise is how poor the jig bite has been; normally
a jig is my go-to bait in water below 45 degrees. The fish
seem to be very scattered, too, so I’ll keep moving
around and keying on areas with deep water close by,
especially places with some rock cover.”
(Continued)
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IN T H U SA
E
November/December 2014
BASSMASTER 63
Day {David Walker}
on the
Lake
3 HOURS LEFT
» 11:23 a.m. It’s “warmed up” to around 35 degrees, but
the wind, now blowing out of the west, makes the air
temp feel like it’s below zero. Walker makes a slow run
downlake to a main-lake point. “Talk about brain freeze;
you can’t stand running very far or fast in this cold!” He
retrieves the U-rig across the point.
» 11:25 a.m. Walker tries the jerkbait on the point without success. “Another big surprise is that I’ve had absolutely no action today on jerkbaits.”
» 11:37 a.m. Walker is an extremely patient angler. He’s
worked the point over from every conceivable angle with
the jerkbait, trying a variety of cadences. Finally he
switches to the U-rig, slow rolling it across the structure.
“Compare the skill sets required to fish a jerkbait or jig
vs. an umbrella rig, and you can understand why they
outlawed the U-rig in B.A.S.S. competition. A chimpanzee could catch bass on this thing.”
» 11:41 a.m. Walker spots a dead bass floating on the
surface. “Poor thing probably froze to death! Is there a
Dunkin Donuts around here? I sure could use some hot
coffee.”
» 11:45 a.m. Walker slow rolls the U-rig around the
channel bank and concrete retaining wall he fished early
in the day but hauls water. “Hear that? The bass are
laughing at this thing!”
» 11:55 a.m. Walker retrieves the Tennessee Crank parallel to the concrete wall.
» Noon Walker dredges the craw crank around an elaborate boat dock with a covered walkway. “I’ve never done
that good around fancy boat docks; the big fish like to
hang around crummy old wooden docks that are falling
apart.”
» 12:10 p.m. Walker spots a submerged Christmas tree
at the end of another dock. He pitches the jig to the
cover; it comes back unscathed. “I always say a
Christmas tree isn’t any good unless it’s got some tinsel
on it.”
» 12:15 p.m. Walker idles into a deep cove lined with
boat docks. He casts the craw crank and jig to a sunken
brushpile in 10 feet of water. No luck here.
2 HOURS LEFT
» 12:20 p.m. Walker rakes the U-rig past a dock. “I re-
ally wish you’d refrain from taking any more photos of
me fishing this rig!”
“The big fish hang
around crummy old
wooden docks that
are falling apart.”
64 BASSMASTER
November/December 2014
» 12:35 p.m. Walker exits the cove and runs straight
across the lake to some vacant marina slips. As he idles
toward the slips, he spots a submerged patch of rocks in
10 feet of water on his graph. “Whoa, that’s the kind of
place that could hold a really big fish this time of year.”
He backs off the rocks and casts the Tennessee Crank to
the cover.
» 12:41 p.m. Walker crawls the jig across the rocks.
“The fish must not have gotten word that they’re supposed to be there.”
» 12:47 p.m. Walker cranks a cement block retaining
wall near the rockpile. No luck here, either.
» 12:51 p.m. Walker runs a white 1/2-ounce
Hildebrandt double-willow spinnerbait through a submerged brushpile near the wall. “I don’t fish spinnerbaits
all that much, but the water looked too perfect not to try
one here.”
» 12:55 p.m. The jig also fails to produce a fish from the
brushpile. “They are hatin’ that jig today.”
» 1:01 p.m. Walker makes a short run to a channel bank
that terminates in a long, flat point. “It’s deep right up
against that bank, so there ought to be some fish there.”
He tries the craw crank on the structure without
success.
» 1:04 p.m. The pro moves out to the end of the point,
but his crankbait dredges up slimy grass here. The wind
has switched again; now it’s blowing out of the north. He
checks his watch. “I need to get something going pretty
soon.”
» 1:15 p.m. Walker has worked the long point over thoroughly with the craw crank and U-rig without a strike.
He picks up his trolling motor, lashes down his rods and
makes an achingly cold run uplake to the retaining wall
where he caught his 4-pounder. “You wouldn’t think you
could get that cold running up the lake in a tin boat with
a 90 on it, but you’d be wrong!” He tries the craw crank
along the wall but can’t score a strike.
1 HOUR LEFT
» 1:22 p.m. Walker hangs a wad of fishing line with the
craw crank. He clears the hooks, then tries the umbrella
rig around the retaining wall. “There’s got to be another
big, stupid fish around here somewhere!”
» 1:25 p.m. Walker switches to the jerkbait without success. “The wind has changed direction about 16 times in
the past half hour. No wonder the fish are screwed up!”
» 1:29 p.m. Walker has reached the area where he
caught his 4-3. He tries the U-rig here again, but apparently it’s lost its charm.
» 1:31 p.m. He hangs the U-rig in some submerged
brush and retrieves it. “Rats, I was hoping I’d break it
off!”
» 1:40 p.m. Still working over the retaining wall with
the U-rig.
» 1:42 p.m. Walker pauses to retie a couple of crankbaits. “It’s so cold, I hate taking my gloves off, but I’d
hate it even more if a big fish broke me off because my
line was abraded.”
» 1:49 p.m. Walker abandons the retaining wall and
runs to the extreme upper end of Lake N. The water here
is murky and 43 degrees. “I’ve spent all day in clear water; with the afternoon sun hitting this murky water,
they just might be moving up shallow to feed on
crawfish.” He ties on a LiveTarget Square Bill Craw
in the chartreuse copper craw pattern and casts it
toward a culvert. “There’s a ditch lined with rocks
running out from that culvert.”
» 1:55 p.m. Walker roots the square crank
around some rocks adjacent to the ditch, and a
lunker bass plasters the lure! He hops off the front
deck, works the bass closer and lip-lands his
third keeper of the day, 5 pounds, 3 ounces.
“Check out this fish; it’s about a yard long! It was
on some rocks lining the side of the ditch. Looks
like runoff from that big rain they had here the
other day is washing in through this culvert and
staining the water.”
» 2:03 p.m. Walker casts the square bill to the
center of the ditch, retrieves it a foot and gets another strike; this fish comes unbuttoned. “Aww,
man, that felt like a good one.”
» 2:06 p.m. Walker tries the Tennessee Crank
around the ditch.
» 2:09 p.m. Walker catches his fourth keeper, 1
pound, 8 ounces, off the side of the ditch on the
Tennessee Crank. “I’ve got just enough time left to
catch a 9-pounder!”
» 2:13 p.m. Walker tries the jig around the rocks.
10:51 a.m. Walker
He detects a tap, swings and misses. “What do you
know, I finally got a bite on the jig! Too bad my time bags a 4-pound, 3-ounce
bass on his first cast
is up.”
with an u­ mbrella rig.
» 2:20 p.m. Back to the boat ramp. Walker has
managed to mine some gold from frigid Lake N,
boating four bass with a total weight of 14 pounds even.
2
The Day In Perspective
“This is one of the coldest days I’ve ever fished,” Walker told Bassmaster.
“It actually feels colder now than when we started, due to the wind. Even
though it’s technically still fall, bass were on classic midwinter patterns, either suspending in open water or holding around submerged rocks. The fish
ignored jigs and jerkbaits, two lure styles that should have worked well in
these conditions; three of my four fish came on crankbaits. Notice that my
biggest fish, that 5-3, hit later on in the day, after that murky water in the
upper end had been exposed to sunlight for a while. If I were to fish this lake
tomorrow under these same conditions, I’d definitely spend
more time cranking and less time jigging and jerking. And,
yeah, I’d probably have to break out that stupid umbrella
rig again!”
Where And When David Walker Caught His
Keeper Bass
1
3 pounds, 2 ounces; submerged brushpile; chartreuse
root beer Koppers LiveTarget Tennessee crankbait;
9:58 a.m.
4 pounds, 3 ounces; open water off retaining wall;
homemade umbrella rig with Z-Man Diezel Minnowz
swimbaits; 10:51 a.m.
5 pounds, 3 ounces; submerged rocks near ditch;
­chartreuse copper craw Koppers LiveTarget Square Bill
Craw crankbait; 1:55 p.m.
1 pound, 8 ounces; same place as No. 3; same lure as
No. 1; 2:09 p.m.
TOTAL: 14 POUNDS
2
3
4
1:55 p.m.
Walker’s biggest
bass of the day,
a beautiful
5-pound,
3-ounce largemouth, ate a
LiveTarget
square bill
crankbait
around some
submerged
rocks.
November/December 2014
3
BASSMASTER 65