
Fishing in May is always a unique experience. Expectations for targeting a
certain fish species often go unfilled only to be replaced by an even better
success. The lake begins to fill in a respectable manner and then the river
gushes forth with reckless abandon. It seems bass and crappie go deeper but,
in actuality, they stay where the original nest was placed. The rising lake
level covers the nest with more water. The net result is that successful
fishing requires angling in deeper water and using different cues to find a
successful pattern.LeeAnn Heder
and Russ Muir -
Stripers on Moki Wall
Every year in early May striped bass get
lost. Contributing factors are warming that triggers spawning, but then
cooling messes that up leaving fish confused. Stripers aren't sure if they
should go to the channel to spawn or to the back of the canyon to feed. So
they do both. Finding striped bass now requires moving from deep to shallow
water constantly watching the graph. When a school is found the rewards are
great.
Additionally, spawning mode makes stripers become more active at night and
dormant during the day. May will be the only month when bait fishing may be
good. Reports last week of good catches of stripers on Moki wall near
Bullfrog indicate a stop in the main channel at the normal locations (Dam,
Power plant intake, Navajo Canyon, Padre Bay, Rock Creek, Moki wall, etc.)
should be a part of the fishing plan. Do not spend the whole trip waiting
for a school to bite. Actively seek them out by using a graph to mark
schools and then fish where schools are seen. Troll and cast in shallow
water. Fish bait in deep water.
Bass fishing will remain excellent for
another week. Cold weather moved bass off nests. Current warming will put
them right back on. Fishing in the brush for largemouth bass and crappie
will remain good. Weightless senkos, spinnerbaits and other weedless
offerings work well in brush. Smallmouth bass will be on outside rock
structure where plastic baits with exposed hooks will work fine. Top water
baits are working early and late on bass.
Shad have begun to spawn. Gizzard shad
have been spawning for the past two weeks. With new warming threadfin will
spawn soon. They spawn at dawn and attract all game fish in the immediate
vicinity. Look for shad spawning on the surface around driftwood and plants
in the back of canyons and coves. Fish around active spawning schools by
casting shad colored crankbaits and rattletraps to catch a wide variety of
game fish.
This is the time of year when all fish are vulnerable. Line up on a rocky
shoreline with a favorite crankbait or plastic offering and catch
largemouth, smallmouth, crappie, walleye, sunfish and catfish.
Fishing remains as good as it has ever been on the big lake. Fish on a fair
weather day to make some remarkable family fishing memo
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