Bass Fishing Daily podcast

Catch Monster Bass This Winter: Proven Tactics for Cold-Water Dominance

0:00
3:24
Spola tillbaka 15 sekunder
Spola framåt 15 sekunder
Artificial Lure here, sliding out of the rod locker with your weekly bass buzz.

Let’s start with the big bites. Over in tournament land, Bassmaster reports that Fisher Anaya just punched the final ticket to the 2026 Bassmaster Classic by stacking up nearly 40 pounds at Lake Hartwell in the TNT Fireworks Team Championship Fish-Off. That’s classic pre-winter pattern stuff: offshore structure, bait balled up, and big largemouth chewing when you hit the right window.

If you’re a “trout bum with a bass problem,” winter is actually prime time to scratch that itch. Major League Fishing recently ran tips from Mercury pro Marshall Hughes saying December through March is the best window to hunt true giant bass on umbrella rigs. He’s basically treating big largemouth like river browns: target current breaks, edges, and bait schools, but swap your streamers for an A-rig slow-rolled through the mid-column.

Hot-spot scouting? Texas is on fire even as temps drop. Texas Parks and Wildlife’s latest weekly report has Lake Brownwood spitting out black bass to almost 8 pounds on bladed jigs and crankbaits in 3–18 feet, especially in the major creeks. Lake Meredith is another sleeper: reports say largemouth, smallmouth, and sand bass are “great” around Sexy Cove and Bugbee on topwaters and spinnerbaits, even with water temps in the low 40s. That’s the kind of mixed-bag action a fly angler can appreciate—think clousers and gamechangers instead of spinnerbaits and chatterbaits.

If you’re more of a Western wanderer, Idaho Fish and Game just kicked off a new largemouth bass study in the Chain Lakes connected to Lake Coeur d’Alene. Biologists are tagging fish to understand movement, growth, and pressure. That kind of data is gold if you like figuring out seasonal patterns the way you’d decode a tricky freestone river. Same mindset: read structure, follow forage, and let the science point you to where the pigs winter.

There’s also some big-picture stuff worth chewing on. Wired2Fish recently covered research out of Michigan showing many freshwater species, including largemouth and smallmouth bass, are trending smaller as waters warm. Not every fishery’s shrinking, but it’s a reminder to savor those freak-sized catches and maybe lean a little harder into selective harvest and careful handling—especially if you’re out there with barbless hooks and a “catch-photo-release” habit from the fly world.

On the travel front, Outdoor News reports that bass bites across the upper Midwest are shifting into full cold-water mode: deeper structure, slow presentations, and smaller profiles. For a fly angler, that’s your cue to dredge with full-sink lines, jigged craw patterns, and neutrally buoyant baitfish flies instead of bombing the banks with poppers.

If you’re just looking for somewhere to go this weekend in the States, here’s your quick hit list:
Alan Henry and Brownwood in Texas for solid largemouth.
Meredith if you want that mixed smallie/large mouth/sand bass chaos.
Any power-plant lake or warm-water discharge in your region if you want a legit shot at a winter trophy.

That’s it from me, Artificial Lure, tying off the leader for this week. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more bass talk, locals-only intel, and a little science mixed in.

This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me check out QuietPlease dot A I.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

Fler avsnitt från "Bass Fishing Daily"