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Bedding Fish

I was out taking a look around yesterday, and found lots and lots of bedding fish. Even some areas where the beds have already been abandoned. Amazingly, long casts with a wacky stick worm on top of bedding fish resulted in some good hookups. While there are plenty of times when another bait will catch a lot more fish I am beginning to think that aren't many times when that rig won't catch them. I know where I'll be fishing today.
Bob
Feb 13
2005
Last spring I had luck throwing a trout colored 4" Senko at beds on a wacky rig. Many other presentations failed, but when I put that wacky rig out there, the bass came running.

Rich P

Rich
Feb 13
Is bed fishing good for our sport...I don't think so, I don't do it but that's just me. uscgret
Feb 13
Personally, I think that as long as the fish is caught, photo'd and immediately released, it doesn't harm a thing.

When it gets fuzzy is when bedding bass are caught under tournament conditions. I've read studies that say it can harm a fishery, leaving unprotected nests. By the same token, I've read studies that claim it doesn't hurt a fishery in the long run. I just wish I could put my fingers on both studies

Steve
Feb 13
I tend to agree with all you said. Personally, I don't fish tournaments, so all are released right over their beds after being caught. I don't like the idea of them being removed from their beds and released near a dock after weigh-in, but I know of no studies that indicate it harms the population in a healthy lake.

------ The DNC - Building a bridge to the 20th Century.

Eric
Feb 13
Like I said, I wish I could find both of those studies. It made interesting reading, and both studies made some very valid points. But it's pretty much immaterial as like you, I like to release the fish back to their beds. Steve
Feb 13
Bedding fish already? Wow you lucky stiff. How is the fishing in Ariz.? I hear about Florida, Texas & California. Must be similar. Are the huge Florida Largies? Here in Pa. we still have to deal with snow. Sigh. Good luck, Carl

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GrayGhostYankee
Feb 14
While you are looking for those two studies, see if you can find one that gives an idea how many of those bass released at the dock live. It is my guess that organized tournament fishing depleats bass much faster than bed fishing. On the small lake that I live on, Pomme de Terre in Missouri, we can have as amny as 20 tournaments on some weekends. That is just too damn many boats and too much organized fishing for any lake. The bass population is down drastically from 5 years ago. The crappie population, which has not seen the same increase in pressure, is holding its own. We were once a great bass lake. Today we are a fair crappie lake.

Win

Win
Feb 14
   

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