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Oddly enough, most of the pre-fishing problems I see, are on waters
that are well known to the angler. If
you're on a strange lake, you're likely to put in the time to find
fish and develop several spots or a good pattern
or two. But put folks on a lake they know well, and they are very
likely to go fishing, not pre-fishing. There's a
BIG difference between the two and consistent winners know it!
First, a couple of guiding principles. On a pre-fishing trip, you're
out to find fish and find ways to catch fish,
NOT catch fish. The reward for a good day is lots of bites and only
a few fish to show for it. You're there to find
out something you DON'T know, not confirm what you do know. This
is a trip to learn, not execute what you've
already mastered. Come tournament day, you'd like to catch several
fish, and catch some big ones as well.
You know the conditions will change during the tournament, and you'd
like to know how to adapt to those
changes. You'll need a detailed plan for the tournament, and the
pre-fishing days are the time to make that
plan.
One very often asked question, one which I find amusing, is "When
is a good time to go pre-fishing?" The
answer is "Anytime!" There is absolutely no possible way
to have spent too much time pre-fishing for a
tournament. It doesn't matter the time of day or night, it doesn't
matter the conditions, it doesn't matter how
well you know the water. On even the most modest size lake, you're
not going to live long enough to try every
possible place with every possible lure in every possible condition.
Can't happen. You'll never know it all. The
very best you can ever hope for is to have a pretty good guess.
Oh, there are certainly times I'd prefer to
pre-fish, but even under the most bizarre circumstances there is
plenty out there to learn. Conditions, both
existing and expected, will dictate when the possible most profitable
time to pre-fish will be.
But unless you live right on the lake and have no other constraint
on your time, then you'll likely to have to
put up with what ever you're faced with on a given day and only
with extraordinary luck will it be the "best"
time to pre-fish. Now, I do know that most people asking this question
are trying to balance a full life with their
fishing time, so they would like to choose a good time for their
trip. But once you've developed your pre-fishing
skills, you'll find about any day is as good as another, it will
just influence how you go about it and what types
of information you can learn. The key portion of this mind set is
to remember that no day will let you learn it all
and that any day will let you learn enough to give you a
pretty good clue come tournament time.
Same story, second verse, for conditions. I don't care if it's snowing
in July, there is something extremely
valuable out there to learn. Your own good judgment will dictate
when it's dangerous to be out there, but
barring that, any condition is a good one. You obviously have no
control over the conditions come tournament
day, and the possibility exists you could be faced with similar
conditions. But far more useful is the concept
of "similar circumstances" where you group a set of conditions
into one or more categories and thus can learn
something about some other completely different conditions by what
happens today. We'll get a lot further into
this later.
The
Aims of Prefishing
It's a whole lot easier to accomplish something if you
know exactly what you're trying to do. The readily apparent answer
is get ready to win a tournament. One level down is to find some
fish and find out how to
catch them. But consistent with our earlier assumption, in general
you already know pretty much how to do
that. So, we need to get even more specific. We're looking for locations
and baits that one of two possible
classes of fish will fall into, a large number of fish and/or big
fish. As Larry Nixon once observed, "Anyone
can find fish, the trick is to find biting fish." So now we
can finally look at our real aims;
- find several
concentrations of aggressive fish;
- find out
what they will bite;
- find some
large fish for our anchors;
- find out
what they will bite;
- find out
how each of those categories of fish will react to the changes
of conditions occurring during a tournament.
I have to admit that I can't recall ever having left the lake on
any trip and really knowing the answer to all of
those questions even for that day, much less in general. With experience,
most of the time I had a pretty
good guess even before the day started to what the answers might
be. But the wonderful thing about this sport
is you're constantly surprised. What keeps you coming back is that
on some rare occasions, it's a pleasant
surprise.
On new lakes, I'm forced to spend a lot of my time learning the
water. I've got to run to the places I've
planned on a map, find the cover, if any, that exists on interesting
structure, learn to navigate quickly and
safely. This will burn up a lot of my valuable prefishing time.
But it does keep me from being bias on what I
expect to happen. On a new lake, I'm forced to let the fish tell
me what to do instead of trying to force them
to do what I'd prefer them to do.
The good news for a new lake is, in general, the fish will be biting.
That may seem like an odd statement,
but it's a pretty good assumption going in. The reason is simple,
schedule. If I'm heading for a new lake,
chances are it's a regional or national event and the sponsors will
schedule the event for the season and the
"normal" conditions which likely will produce a good bite.
There are, of course, exceptions and unexpected
conditions, but by in large the bigger events are held in "prime
time" during the spring or fall of the year.
Even if the tournament is going to be held in the middle of the
summer, I'll schedule a prefishing trip during
the spring when I think I'll have the best chance of getting a good
bite. You're always faced with finding the
right spot with the right bait, and learning a new lake is much
easier when the right spot is anywhere you
happen to stop, at least to get you started.
On a new lake, you're forced to play the percentages. Seasonal patterns,
prevailing conditions and popular
if over pressured spots will limit your search to a manageable level.
Unless you've got the luxury of several
days on the water, you'd better stick to the beaten path and leave
the off the wall stuff to those with enough
knowledge of the lake to make it effective. If the bite is strong,
finding a big fish bait in a well known spot will
pay off more often than finding some secluded area with a more traditional
offering. This truth is confirmed
time and again by the rather poor average showing of local anglers
competing in tour events. Under tough
conditions, sometimes those well hidden spots that you just can't
find in a few days will produce a winning
stringer. But like we said, sponsors don't schedule big events for
tough conditions.
The 90% case is prefishing a lake you already know. We'll assume
from here on out that you know
something about the lake you're fishing so you can spend your time
finding fish, not learning the lake. First
rule of Prefishing, "If you know a spot holding fish and you
know what they will hit, DON'T GO THERE."
Prefishing time is at least as valuable as tournament time, don't
squander it confirming something you already
know. Also keep in mind it's never a good idea to burn the
fish up in a spot you will need on tournament day.
If you have a secret honey hole, leave it alone. Along the same
lines, if you found some fish in a new area
yesterday, don't go back. Show some confidence in yourself and assume
if you found a concentration in an
area recently, you can do so on tournament day as well.
All of this leads up to my basic approach to prefishing. I'm normally
doing one of two things while I'm on
water I know; 1) Throwing baits I don't think will work in
a place I know there's fish; or 2) Throwing a bait I
know will work in a place I don't think there's fish.
I'm always looking for surprises.
Gettin'
Rigged
Along with many tournament anglers,
I take a lot of ribbing, especially when non-fishermen find out
I carry
about 10 rods in the boat at all times. On prefishing days, I'm
likely to have every one of them laying on the
deck. Just about every basic category of lure is represented. You'll
find flippin' sticks, jigs and worms,
Carolina rigs, spinner baits, top waters, crank baits, jerk baits,
floating worms or tube jigs, buzz baits, and
spoons all on the deck some place. I can cover just about any situation
just by reaching down for the appropriate rod. The day's partner
will have a similar collection on the back deck and we'll make point
to never
throw the same thing at the same time.
One important little tip is to keep a "baseline" lure
in the water when searching for fish. When you find a
lure that works on a given day, keep that lure in the water at least
on one end of the boat all of the time until
you find a bait that works even better. With my regular buddy club
partner, he'll start with a simple 6" Texas
rigged worm, (a bait that works under just about every condition),
and keep throwing it all day until I prove him
wrong. Proving him wrong means I get a couple of bites when he doesn't
get any. We're looking for baits that
are better than what we're already throwing, not just as good, (which
is still interesting to file away.) By using
a baseline lure when covering water, we're sure that if we wander
by catchable fish, we'll catch 'em while
looking for better lures all of the time.
The one other thing we'll do different when prefishing is use line
snaps, (not snap swivels, just the snaps.).
I don't really like snaps since I've lost good fish using them.
And I also think they can interfere with a lure's
action, (not to mention tangle most varieties of submerged weeds.)
But on prefishing days, I like have the
quick change capability offered by a snap and I'm not worried about
loosing a fish even if I get him on. Come
tournament time, when I've reduced the possible lures I'll throw
to the ones I know will work, I'll put small split
rings in the eyes and tie direct to them instead of a snap.
All of this excessive use of lures is leading to finding the 3 or
4 lures that work the best. On the tournament
days, you'll find a rather clear deck with only the proven lures
and rods out in the open. You do get fooled
sometimes and a bait you gave up on yesterday will be the best bait
today. But sticking with the percentages,
at least start with proven baits until the fish refuse them.
Planning
the Day
Anytime
you head out on the water you'd best have a plan. Pre-fishing is
no different. Before you ever get
to the lake, decide on what is most important to know coming out
of the trip. Are you looking for additional
spots? Do you need to know what lure they're hitting? Do you have
to find new water? What type of
tournament are you in? Are you looking for Big fish? Do you need
a morning spot worse than at mid day?
Are your fish shutting down at 10:00 when the sun get high? Figure
out the problem before you go looking for
answers.
The place I start is the type of tournament I'm entering. If it's
a small club event or local pot tournament,
then I'm going to concentrate on finding numbers of aggressive fish.
If it's a big event where a two pound
average gets you 122nd place and a Thank You for entering, then
I'll be looking for the Big Bite and forget
about smaller fish.
Once I know what type of fish I'm after, then I can decide on when
to go. If I'm looking for numbers, then I
figure my best chance will probably be early. I'll be in the water
by 4:00 AM and try to get a couple of hours of
night fishing in before dawn. The early morning bite is generally
just an extension of the night bite with the fish
feeding close to the same areas. If I can find some night fish,
then that spot might be my first hole on
tournament morning. This is our first example of that "similar
circumstances" thing. By starting a couple of
hours before dawn, I figure I have about 4 hours of practice to
locate areas that may only be good for the first
hour or two on tournament morning. But, if I can find the right
spots, I should have a quick limit to start the day
and my prefishing will be extremely successful.
If, on the other hand, I'm targeting big fish, I'll probably take
my time getting to the lake and plan to stay all
day. Those big bites do happen in the morning but only rarely will
a limit be caught early. More likely I'll be
flipping most of the day or fishing big baits down deep. In either
event, the bite is actually better from about
mid-morning on so there is no hurry. I'm going to be covering a
lot of water before dark so I'd better pace
myself. Didn't find an early bite? Then I'd stick around until evening.
If I can find fish moving into feed at dusk,
the chances are fairly good at least some them will be hanging around
for a morning bite as well. Again, that
similar circumstances thing.
Of course I'll already have done some homework, looking at seasonal
patterns, studying my maps, looking
at logs of past events and the like. I may have a list of 10 or
15 spots I'd kind of like to try, depending on how
the day goes. I'll divide those places into spots that I think will
be a morning bite, (points, feeding flats,
shoreline and such), and spots that should be OK later in the day,
(offshore humps, heavy flippin' cover, deep
ledges and grass beds.) With this plan in mind, I'm ready to hit
the water and have a productive day
regardless of what the day brings.
Adapting
to what You Find
I'll start the day normally at a spot where I'm pretty
sure fish are hanging out, but not necessarily
tournament grade fish. The first thing I'd like to establish is
my baseline bait for the day. Dinks will work for
this just as well as 4-pounders. So, if I can stop some place where
the small fish normally are and get a
couple of quick bites, then I've got a good starting point for the
day. I won't stay in any of these places long
regardless of what happens. If I do get a couple of quick bites,
then the bait is established and I'm ready to
search water. If I don't get a bite in 10 or 15 minutes, then I'll
skip around to a couple of other dink holes just
to get started.
Starting with dink holes also gives me an idea of how aggressive
the fish should be in my other, bigger fish
holes. If you can't get a dink to bite, then it could be a slow
day and every bite you get is very important. If the
dinks are active and feeding then I might just be up against the
worst possible scenario for prefishing, the day
they'll hit everything, everywhere. I just hate to pre-fish
on those days where I always catch fish. The reason is
simple, there's not much I can use later. If all of the fish are
active, how will I know which are the more
aggressive on a slower day? How can I tell if this particular spot
holds a bigger concentration of fish unless I
sit there and catch a bunch to prove it? On a good bite day, about
the best you can do is confirm those spots
that shouldn't have fish really don't. Not much water to eliminate
on those days. If, on the other hand, it's a
tough bite day, then if I do find some fish in a new spot or two,
that spot could be great on a better day and I
can eliminate water that only holds fish under the best conditions.
The biggest single factor in having a productive prefishing trip,
(or tournament for that matter), is to stay
acutely aware of everything going on around you. I see folks all
the time so intent on their presentations that
a school of ten pounders could come up right beside them and they
would never know it. You have to remain
aware of everything your lure is doing, but use your eyes, ears,
and nose to also stay aware of everything
around you. Everything that happens has some reason behind it.
Any good crappie fisherman can literally "smell them out"
by cruising around for that distinctive shad oil
smell. If you're in an area with the strong odor of shad oil, something
is having dinner down there. Most of the
time it's crappie or brim, but the bass are normally close. If you
see a single small shad skipping across the
surface in a panic, you can bet the retirement fund that something
is chasing him. This time it's normally a
bass and you're on fish whether you can catch them or not. If you're
not getting bit, time to change lures. On
a fairly calm day, I can see an active school of bass come up from
close to a mile away. I can hear them
without seeing them for close to ¼ mile. You just have keep looking
and listening for them.
Speaking of schooling fish, even if you don't want to depend on
schoolies for your tournament, there is no
better quick way of learning a lot about the fish than chasing schools.
First, you can quickly refine your
baseline lures by seeing what the schoolers will take. I normally
prefer to find a bait that they'll hit when they
go down since they could well hit anything that moves when they
are on the surface. Many times you'll find
major league fish holding just under or to one side of smaller schoolies.
But perhaps the most important thing to find is why they
are schooling there. Consistent schooling spots
just about always involve some type of structure and/or cover. It's
a place where the bass can herd the shad
for an easy meal by penning them against the surface. Points, humps,
steep ledges or other major structure
is common ground for schoolers. There may well be excellent cover
near by where the bass hold waiting for
bait during the off times. I have found countless excellent off
shore structures which have produced winning
stringers just by idling around where I notice a school was working.
The fish are telling me where to work and
giving me a good clue of what to throw. Listen to them.
You need to recognize the similar circumstances for the conditions.
What do early morning, late evening,
high wind, an approaching cold front, a summer thunderstorm, and
the middle of the night all have in common?
They are all low light conditions. If your low light baits such
as spinner baits or buzz baits are working under
one of those conditions, they could well work under all of them.
What do high wind, a main lake channel, and
a flooded creek all have in common? They all have currents associated
with them. If you're catching fish in the
spring during cloudy days in the middle section of a reservoir and
then you go out on a sunny day, move to the
upper end of the same lake. Why? Well, the lower light conditions
had a good bite going in clear water, so the
low light caused by the stained or muddy water from a major flow
source may be holding fish today.
OK, a simple one. You're on a big round natural lake in Florida
and there is a 15 mph wind from the west
today. In tomorrow's tournament, the conditions are still going
to be hot and sunny, but the wind is suppose to
be 10-15 out of the east. Where should you concentration some time
in finding fish near the shoreline reeds?
Me? Easy! I'm going to work the south side. If I find fish on either
the east or west side, conditions will be
entirely different as the wind shifts. I know I'm way down south
and a wind switch from west to east probably
means a low pressure area is passing through, which in turn means
the wind will switch to the south over
night, and depending on strength may blow out the fish on the north
side. The south side will be protected
overnight on the leeward side as the wind shifts. The south side
will have a wind induced current flowing in
front of the reeds today (from the west) and a wind induced current
tomorrow from the other direction, about
the same strength. All things being equal, the south side will be
the most likely location of similar
circumstances between today and tomorrow. If I can find fish there
today, it's my best bet of them staying
put over night.
Similar circumstances for locations is what pattern fishing is all
about. Find fish relating to one type of
structure and it's a pretty good guess they will be on similar structure
all over this part of the lake. So, when
you're pre-fishing and find some fish on a particular pattern, you
should work that pattern, right? Wrong! Let's
say you find fish on a main lake point in 15' of water around clumps
of hydrilla. You know about 3 other points
around here with pretty much the same conditions. Why check them?
You've got a limited amount of time
and if there are three other spots just like this one then you need
to isolate the pattern and look for other
spots, not confirm what you already know. If on tournament day,
you do find the fish in the same location and
you don't have much else going, you're going to give those other
three spots a try no matter if you get bit there
today or not.
A more productive use of time is to find a hydrilla field in 15'
of water not on a point and see if that's also
holding fish. If they are holding in hydrilla, then you need to
be looking for more of that, not points. If, on the
other hand, they aren't in your new hydrilla field, you need to
check a couple of bare points to find out if it's
just the point part that's important and the hydrilla is merely
interesting. After checking the other two spots,
you have all sorts of new options of things to look for by comparing
the later results with the original point.
Otherwise, you're just stuck with 4 points and have no place to
run if the fish move. Even if you don't get bit
the rest of the day, you still have the same 4 spots and a little
confidence that you don't have to worry about
other patterns.
So, you've found a good morning bite on spinner baits over heavy
weeds. From mid morning on, you've
found some nice 4 and 5 pound fish holding on main creek channels
in 20' of water. It's 2 o'clock and you're
getting cranky. Time to put it on the trailer? Nope, time to go
flippin'. You've established a couple of good
patterns you have confidence in, so you already have a plan. Now
is the time to establish a good back up if
things don't work out. You've got your deep fish if they don't suspend
and shut down. It's a little early to work
on a back up early morning pattern, so look for another pattern
for later in the day. A flippin' pattern is probably
as reliable as anything since you're looking for them where they
live. Flippin' is also a great option if a high
wind blows you off your open water pattern.
A truth long held about pre-fishing is you're out to eliminate water.
To do so, you'd like to cover as much
water as possible. How much water you can cover will depend on the
fish and their mood. If they are shut
down, you'll be forced to throw bottom bumpers and slow down enough
to work them effectively. If they are
kind of neutral, then you can speed along with spinner baits, jerk
baits and crank baits, covering miles in a
single day, looking for areas with aggressive fish. If they are
really aggressive, then you speed from spot to
spot trying to eliminate water looking for somewhere you don't get
bit. Obviously, it's tougher to eliminate off
shore water where you have to wait for your lure to sink 20' than
buzzing along a shore line. But keep in mind
as the day goes on, you can concentrate on the really high percentage
areas. If you're wanting to check an off
shore ledge, make a few casts to either end and maybe to a point
or cut along the length. If you get bit, you
know everything you need to know already so get out of there. If
you don't get bit, then why waste your time
running the rest of the ledge just to find one or two lonely fish?
Either way, you can pre-fish a deep ledge in a
few minutes, even if you'd spend 3 hours fishing the same structure
in a tournament.
So, what constitutes a "spot"? My definition is two quick
bites with one legal fish. A "quick" bite is two
within about 15 minutes. If I already stuck the first fish and knew
it was legal, then I'd try to shake off the
second bite. I won't be around for the third bite. When I find a
spot, then I'll move at least a hundred yards or
so away even if I'm just running a bank. If I think I might have
trouble remembering exactly where it's at, I'll
punch the spot's coordinates into my GPS as I'm moving away. Some
times I don't even have to make a cast
to a spot. If I know a strong pattern, say our point with hydrilla
example, if I motor over it with my depth finder,
I won't even stop. There isn't a need. Again, even if I don't catch
a fish here today it's a location which fits my
pattern, therefore I'll spend at least a few tournament minutes
here regardless. Why waste time casting?
Maybe I see a school of fish and motor over a deep weed bed near
by. What's the point of stopping? Just
punch it in and know where to come if you find the fish on that
pattern. Don't waste time on places you
know you're going to fish anyway.
I'll also have to admit I'm not above fishing with binoculars. If
I see someone catch a fish, I'll make note of
where and on what. If I haven't tried that bait, I may tie one on
just to compare. I almost never fish a spot just
because another boat caught one there, (bad practice, bad form,
and bad sportsmanship), but I'll sure as hell
look for something similar down the lake a piece. If you're polite
about it, most guys will tell you what they're
doing and how they caught their fish. Return the courtesy. Also,
at least try to stay out of the way of a boat
actively fishing a tournament. These guys were probably out here
last week and just watching them should tell
you everything you need to know about a potential spot. Remember,
they may be back out there pre-fishing
on your tournament day.
Interpreting
Your Trip
OK,
rest up after a long hard day on the water. What did you learn?
Rerun the day over and over in your
mind, looking for details. Obviously you'd like to remember where
you got your most bites, where you got the
biggest fish, what did those fish come on. But think through the
other things as well. What color was the water
for each of those fish? Were clouds forming or the wind picking
up? Was there a current? Where you near a
weed bed and if so, what kind of weeds? How deep were you when you
got bit? If you were flipping, how much
water was between the bottom and the bottom of the mats? Was the
sun angle consistent over your bites?
Was there a particular kind of stump or tree that the fish seem
to hang around? Did one lure color or size out
produce a slightly different one? Where did you see those splashes
and didn't get bit? Did you always see
shad jumping? Look for any similarities or a consistent thread
that you can think of. You'll be surprised of how
many things start to make sense when you look back over them with
a full day under your belt. What would
you do the same and what would you do different given the chance?
This is exactly the question you have to
answer before the tournament.
Come tournament day, you need to have a detailed plan. That does
not mean plan out and schedule every
hole. It does mean knowing what spots to try first, where similar
spots are if you do catch fish, where different
spots are if you don't catch fish. What is your primary pattern
going to be? How about your second, third and
fourth back ups? What is similar in conditions today as when you
pre-fished? What is different and how should
the fish respond to those difference? What will be your best bait
early? What will be your best bait later? What
kind of conditions, sun angle, or such should you look for to decide
to change? For each spot you're planning
to hit, how many fish from that spot would make you happy? How long
should you stick around each spot if
nothing happens? Decide all of this before you hit the water and
then all you have to do is execute.
Regardless of if you win the tournament or not, there is nothing
more rewarding than seeing your plan come
together just like you envisioned it. If I truly believe I should
run about a 3 pound average from the fish I've
located and weigh in 15 pounds at the scale, I really don't care
if the winner has 30 pounds because my plan
worked. Next time I'll just have to work harder and come up with
a better plan.
During the tournament, use the information you gained by prefishing.
If you get bit early and then they shut
down ask yourself where you went after they shut down last time.
If nothing else, remember that all the spots
you tried last time didn't work after they shut down and
try something new and different. If today is cloudy and
prefishing was sunny, where did you have the best luck first thing
in the morning on a low light bite? If the wind
blows you off your structure, try to remember where you get that
one flippin' bite last time. If they quit hitting
worms, remember your second or third best bait last time out. You
have to react to what you find on the water
but you can certainly use any recent experience to guide you in
that reaction.
Well, there is still a ton of things and tricks we haven't covered.
I haven't got into when not to use hooks and
go solely for bites. But we've been long winded enough for this
time. I hope you found something you can use,
but mostly I hope you realize that prefishing, along with everything
else related to bass fishing is pretty much
common sense. If there is a trick to it at all, it's remembering
what you're out to accomplish and avoiding
using up your tournament bite in practice.
Hope they are
all big ones….see you next time. Paul.
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