Lee Bailey Fishing Factors™

Lee Bailey Fishing Factors™ is an excellent collection of tactics, tips and tricks for bass by Lee Bailey Jr.

 

 

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Fishing a Fall Pattern

December 5, 2023 by lbailey

I actually begin fishing a fall pattern when the water has cooled 10 degrees below its hottest point of the summer. This can vary greatly from body of water to body of water. A rapid temperature drop is best, for this can really put bass on the move from deep main river structure to shallow water. Bass react to cooling water by moving shallower to big flats, long points with a gradual taper and tributary arms.

Fishing A Fall Pattern Lure Choices

As surely as the seasons change, the behavior and location of bass change as summer passes into fall and fall into winter. Unfortunately, the exact changes the bass makes often seems as unpredictable as the fall weather.

Fishing a fall pattern starts when you see first signs of the fall cooling trend

Bass are more baitfish oriented now than in any other season. Look for large schools of shad, alewives, etc., on your graph. In most reservoirs, fishing a fall pattern as cooling water causes vast numbers of shad to migrate into tributary arms, and bass are close behind. Follow this migration by fishing the first third of creek arms in early fall, then gradually pressing farther back into the tributary as the surface temperature drops. I’ll often idle my boat up a creek arm, watching my graph for suspended shad schools or looking for bait flipping on the surface. Isolated wood cover or boat docks in the backs of creek arms are dependable fall bass patterns. In lakes that don’t have shad, bass feed heavily on bluegill and shiners, both grass-oriented species, so target weedy areas that still have living green weeds.

A large number of the fish relate to backwaters as well as main lake areas during the summer. From the first signs of the fall cooling trend, main river fast water fish begin a gradual move toward areas with limited current.

Identifying these reduced current areas is usually pretty simple. Look for the bass to move to big cuts on the main river, cuts and coves in the bigger creeks, and slack water ponds off the main current area.

For the rest of the story and much more….. BUY NOW! Lee’s Strategies For Bass.


How to fish Laydowns

December 5, 2023 by lbailey

How to fish Laydowns (cover) Taken from “Strategies For Bass” by retired Elite Series Pro Lee Bailey Jr.

How to fish laydowns

From the bank a tree fallen into the aquatic world is known as a laydown to bass anglers. Sometimes different depending on how long it has been in the water. The large trunk and heavy branches of a laydown offer ample shade and cover for bass. Here bass set up an ambush zone. As a result the algae buildup on the decaying tree attracts baitfish into the bass’ lair.

How to fish Laydowns (cover) Taken from “Strategies For Bass

How to fish Laydowns in bass fisheries across the country. They come in all shapes and sizes. Under the water is a bass haven full of thick branches Still have having tall tops attached that might only have a limb or two showing above the surface. Others might be slick logs with only a few stubby boughs left.

Lonely is a good thing

Would you rather fish a stretch of bank laden with great-looking laydowns or an area with just a single, solitary laydown? If you’d make a hard line to the isolated one, you’re ahead of the game. These isolated pieces of cover are very likely to hold quality fish.

“Don’t get me wrong, you can catch ’em on banks with a bunch of laydowns, but if you can find one by itself, your chances increase dramatically,” “If an area is void of cover, the bass will congregate on a single fallen tree. They don’t have many options for ambush points or shade, making them outstanding targets throughout the entire year.”

Whether you call it a laydown, a windfall or a fallen tree, this type of bass cover is found on just about any lake or river in the country. However, since a laydown on the bank is glaringly obvious it tends to receive heavy fishing pressure. Professional anglers avoid laydowns, believing them to be fished out, you may think. The reality is that many of the country’s most accomplished pros snatch countless bass from this prevalent cover.

Its fish-holding qualities make a laydown a prime target for Bassmaster Elite Series pros. No matter where they fish throughout the country…

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