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Bass are Building Nests!

Largemouth bass began nest construction this week as air temperature hit 80
degrees. Spawning is imminent with largemouth going first followed by
smallmouth a few days later. Warming is long overdue but may work to the
advantage of anglers who enjoy fishing for spawning bass. Expect to find
bedding bass in shallow water for the next 10 days. Lake levels are not
increasing at a quick rate so nests will be visible for the first spawn.
All of this is weather related. Bass move on nests as the water warms
quickly. This spawning trigger causes a quick reaction in bass that are now
overdue. Bass move on nests and spawn within a few hours. Males are actively
building nests today. Each male then spawns with one to two females on the
next warm day. On the third day the male drives away anything that comes
close to the nest including female bass and fishing lures. Aggression is
greatest right after the spawn and decreases with each passing day. By the
fifth day of nest tending the male is seen lurking near the nest but not
actively chasing. In warm water, eggs hatch and fry swim off in about 7
days. It takes longer if the water cools. Males stay with swimming clouds of
black fry for a few days and then spawn again. Each male may make as many as
6 spawns during a season if driven off the nest by cooling temperatures.
They renest as soon as the water warms once more.
Mike Beall, Page, AZ with
4-pound Largemouth Bass
It is fun to sight fish for bedding bass. Watching a slow
sinking senko or grub settle onto the nest creates an adrenalin rush as the
nest monster rushes to the attack. Enjoy the spectacle but return fish
caught on beds so they can protect the nest. If keeping a few bass for
dinner - keep the fish that are lurking on the extremities beyond the nest.
In the bass community, females are excess fish and should be the ones
harvested. The males are vital to perpetuate the species.
Striper fishing is excellent. In the south, stripers have moved into the
main channel. It is not necessary to fight the crowd at the dam any longer.
Large schools are found roaming the channel near Buoy 1 and 3 and from the
Power Plant intake to Buoy 9. The points in Navajo Canyon just past the
double islands are beginning to produce some nice catches. Main channel fish
tend to move to a slightly different spot each day so a good method to find
them is trolling the wall with a deep diving lure. When fish hit the
trolling lure, stop and drop bait to fill the cooler in a hurry. With
warming temperatures remember to put fish immediately in a cooler with ice
to keep the fish fresh. Do not place them on a stringer in warm water. They
deteriorate in a hurry unless kept cool.
In the north lake both bait and trolling are working. Moki Wall near the
mouth of the canyon is producing for bait anglers, as is the mouth of Lake
Canyon. Trolling with a deep diving lure like a Rapala X-Rap is working well
in the back of Bullfrog Bay, Red Canyon south of Castle Butte, and White
Canyon. Water is stained by runoff beginning at Ticaboo in Good Hope Bay but
it is not interfering with fishing until rounding the horn at 2 Mile and 4
Mile Canyons. The backs of these canyons are still clear enough to fish.
Crappie are showing up in modest numbers around brush in the backs of many
canyons. This is the best report of fishing conditions that I have been able
to write this year. Watch the weather reports and plan the spring trip now.
Try to fit it in between storm fronts for best results. |