Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Not Your Grandfather’s Jigging Spoon

Recently I had the chance to fish with Brian Thrift, one of the hottest upcoming FLW bass anglers on the tour. Brian wound up finishing in the top five on the FLW tour this pat year, and we were doing a photo shoot and some bass fishing at Lake Wylie on the North Carolina/South Carolina border.

The weather had turned cold and the lake’s large population of threadfin shad was bunched up thick deep in the tributary creek channels all over the lake. It’s not inconceivable that an angler could be fishing just a couple of boat lengths away from a concentration of bass and never get a look because of the sheer mass of shad between the angler and the fish.

“It’s hard to get their attention when they’re like this,” explained Thrift from the bow of his Ranger bass boat. “Look at them on the graph and it’s just wall-to-wall shad.”

One of Thrift’s tools for trying to attract attention in this “needle in the haystack” situation is to get over the top of the fish and the bait and put a jigging spoon on them. I love the jigging spoon but was surprised when I saw what he had tied to his line. I’m used to fishing a heavy chunk of metal with a painted or hammered finish. The beauty is you maintain complete contact with the bait — even during the fall — because of the weight of the jig.

Thrift’s lure was a Flutter Spoon, a Lake Fork Tackle product that he had customized with an additional treble hook on the tie end. The bait still had enough weight to maintain good contact, even on a long cast. He put the lure in play and continually ripped it through the schools of shad.

“Every so often you’ll wind up with a shad or two on the hook, but that just means you’re fishing it right,” Thrift said.

It wasn’t long before he got the attention of one of the chunky largemouths that were keeping a watchful eye on the “herd” for strays. His rod soon bent double with a nice winter bass. That’s when I realized he was on to something — this wasn’t your grandfather’s jigging spoon.

For more info on the Flutter Spoon, check out www.lftlures.com.

Phillip Gentry
pgentry6@bellsouth.net

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Finesse Angler Creates “Cult” Following

We’ve started getting some cold weather in South Carolina, and for the last few mornings the recent rain that collected on the cover of my boat has turned to ice. Locally, our resident lake temperatures have dipped into the mid to lower 50s, and by all accounts it looks to be an early winter.

The only pleasant thing I can say about winter crappie fishing is that I’m a member of a crappie “cult” following that a local bait manufacturer has amassed — followers of the Slabtail jig. You see them on every lake within 100 miles of here. Boats camped out under bridges and over brushpiles, anglers intently staring at the limber rods in their hands. To say the tactics, gear and attitude of Fish Stalker Lures proprietor Tom Mundy are finesse oriented is a gross understatement. Mundy’s tactics shine when our lakes — and particularly Lake Murray — turn cold and crappie move deep into brushpiles to sit and shiver.

While fishing with Mundy last winter during my indoctrination to his finesse style of crappie fishing, he handed me a rod he had made using a 6½-foot ice-fishing rod blank. The corresponding reel was a discontinued Zebco 33 spin-cast model spooled with 4-pound Mr. Crappie camouflage line. The rod quivers in your hand, it’s impossible to hold still. A local outdoor TV show host, another follower, told Mundy that “if your heart is beating, that rod tip is quivering.”

On the business end of the line is a 1/64-ounce jighead and a Fish Stalker Slabtail jig body. The plastic tail is simplistic in design, a 1½-inch solid body with a flat, pointed tail. Mundy hooks the bait flat so the tail flaps up and down and not side to side.

The key to the presentation is that Mundy drops the tiny bait straight down into a deep brushpile, a feat that takes a little time with such a small bait. The small gap in the tiny hook rarely hangs in the brush. Mundy then engages the reel and slowly turns the handle on the smoothest low-gear-ratio reel I’ve ever fished. Regardless of how deep the fish are or where they bite, he always goes to the bottom and inches the bait upward.

He asked me to watch the rod while he retrieved. Trying to exhibit my crappie fishing prowess, I watched with eagle eyes as he reeled.

“See that?” he asked.

“I didn’t see anything,” I protested.

“Exactly,” he said with a sharp upward snap of his forearm and proceeded to reel in a cold-water slab that weighed just over 2 pounds.

“What just happened?” I asked, confused.

“The rod quivers during the retrieve,” he explained. “When it stops moving, a crappie just inhaled the jig. The combination of deep brush, tiny baits and an in-your-face presentation is more than the crappie can stand.”Link
With a little practice, I was soon hooked too.Link
For more information on Mundy’s finesse tactics and tackle, visit his website at www.fishstalker.com.Link

Phillip Gentry
pgentry6@bellsouth.net