Showing posts with label bass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bass. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 June 2009

So, so, so, so wrong

Four Wrongs ended up making a very big Right last Sunday. We were out drifting for bass with sandeels in the Overfalls area, and the first two Wrongs were that we were not using the prescribed bass tackle of braid and multiplier, our local bass guru had proved to me last year than mono and multipliers out-fished braid. So we were fishing mono with multipliers, and catching a few bass too. We decided on a move as the fish were small and not too numerous either. Unfortunately, as we lined up for the new mark the tide died away to nothing and with no wind and no drift we were sitting way off any semblance of fish-holding banks or features. So two more Wrongs: no tide and no mark! We dropped down anyway, and the leads had hardly touched bottom and we were both into fish - good ones. Well, these bass had not read the rule book because they hit the eels like crazy for a manic 15 minutes - until the tide started running. Then the fishing returned to normal - small to medium bass off the banks in a two knot tide. This chance encounter with bigger bass puzzled us until I was cleaning the keepers, and found them stuffed with enormous Launce. Presumably they had ambushed a shoal in the open - I guess it was pure luck that we happened to be over them at that point! If fishing was predictable it would be boring.

Monday, 8 December 2008

December Bass

I was going to post a report on my fishing trip last Sunday but my single cod was dwarfed by a 33lb 10oz monster caught on another boat on the same day - have a look at my Catch Reports page for a very impressive photo!


It was a great day: calm sea, sunshine and plenty of fish. What more could you ask for - in December of all months? I had a strange experience coming back in when I ran into a huge flock of seabirds spread over about a quarter of a square mile of sea about four miles offshore. I would expect that in smaller doses in summer when they hang around over mackerel shoals, but what were they doing in December? I stopped the engine and drifted quietly. Soon I noticed spiky fins cutting the glassy smooth surface of the sea, and looking down I could clearly see groups of panicking sprats. Bass, traditionally a summer fish, had met sprats, traditionally winter fish, right there in Hayling bay and they must have thought it was Christmas. Bass were hunting in their hundreds - thousands even.


I flicked out a small sprat-like lure which was immediately jumped on by a schoolie but then another strange thing happened: as I reeled it in I saw it was being followed by about ten of its brothers, keen to get in on whatever action was going. I popped him back and flicked out again, this time letting the lure sink further in the hope I might find larger fish and sure enough the next one was a plump two pounder. I changed up to a larger surface popper and spent the next half hour catching bass after bass as they lunged for my plug in great splashy takes. I could even see the fins homing in on the lure as they cut through the surface film. Tremendous fun and a great end to one of the best days fishing I have had this year. It is also encouraging to see so many small bass, let's hope they have a chance to grow bigger.

Sunday, 31 August 2008

Bass as a by-catch?

Chats with our local "characters" around the marina provide some interesting stories which can evolve into new ideas. Apparently, a Chinese man was fishing rather unconventionally nearby (and I won't incriminate him by saying where), using a shad. Now everybody knows that shads are used for "hopping" on rough ground or wrecks well offshore, and that's the way it is. This chap didn't know that and used a shad as a normal lure (just as they use shads elsewhere in the world actually) - and caught two very nice bass. My informant tagged a shad onto the bottom of his mackerel trace and guess what he started catching too. So when I went out on Saturday and was kept inshore by the wind, I tied a 4 inch curly tail shad on a short trace below the weight of my mackerel trace. I found that if I made the movements of the feathers more gentle than usual the shad did not tangle and in fact swam pretty well. And, yes I did. Not as big as the fellow below caught recently, but nice to catch all the same.



Sunday, 27 July 2008

Bassing

I had the good fortune to learn about drift fishing for bass from the apprentice to a long time bass angler recently. And even more good fortune to put that learning into practice and bag some bass! Some of the tips were contradictory to other advice, but they worked. Here's what I learned.

This is about drifting offshore banks such as The Overfalls with live sandeel as bait. You can find suitable banks easily enough, just go to The Overfalls (marked on the charts), and look at your fish-finder! Bait has to be live sandeel, everything else is a poor substitute although I have heard of good catches on shads and sandeel-like feathers.

Rods can be anything, but a light rod is more fun. A 10 foot carp rod would be ideal. Fixed spool reels allow fast drops and retrieves. Line has to be mono, not braid - about 15lb BS max. "That's wrong" I hear you say. Nope. We tried it back to back ,and mono out-fished braid 16 fish to zero. I suspect that braid makes the weight bang on the bottom, mono has more stretch and the weight may bounce more naturally.

Weight no more than two ounces, and let it drift waaay back from the boat, trundling along the bottom. Trace length is about a rod-length for convenience. Hook is a fine uptide pattern, 2/0 was recommended but after I lost a number of fish I upped to 4/0 and hung on to all fish after that.

Sandeels are hooked by passing the hook through the mouth and out through the gills, and just nicking the belly with the bend of the hook. If you still have a bait left at the end of a drift, put it in a bucket of water while you motor back for the next drift. It speeds up fishing if you have a pattern, one person manages the boat while the other checks and sets up both baits for the next drift.

Takes will be obvious, and there is no need to strike: the rod will heel over as if you have snagged but the snag will be moving. Just tighten up and the fish will be on. The take zone can be before, over or after the bank so make your drifts long enough to cover all possibilities. Bass shoals move around so if you have a few drifts without takes, try a different track or a different bank. A chart plotter track is invaluable, you can position exactly to cover a successful drift or try an area a few yards to the side.

Any area of sandy banks can hold bass at the moment. Big tides are much better, the commercial line fishermen don't bother getting out of bed for Neaps. That is all I can tell you. The other 98% is experience....