Mr. Bush,
I thought a little bit about what you had written and I responded to about the largemouth being VERY shallow, under muddy water conditions in the winter months. I didn't really have a lot of time to write before but some now so thought why not? Before the army I had left GA only a small handful of times and had done very little fishing outside of West Point, Jackson, Lanier, and Allatoona. Thanks to the Army I have had ample oppertunity to fish waters I never dreamed possible. I have now been able to ice fish, and won't do it again. But the point behind saying that is while everything I've been lucky enough to fish has been vastly different, all success can be measured in depth and speed. In addition I can say that I really feel for guys who simply "caint" find good water color. Well when that happens you have no choice but to go deep and that's where as Mr. Perry said the boys are separated from the men. Several years ago I thought that deep was 50'. Thanks to Alaska I have learned what deep really is. Mr. Lake trout taught me that he doesn't care what I think, bad weather and me and my wire were heading way down! That was one heck of a learning curve as Mr. Craig knows very well! Well I hate muddy water in the spring, always kicked my butt. But in the winter seemed to always be good. As far as you never noticing much with "cold fronts" in the winter I got to thinking if anyone would disagree or wander how we have to different statements on the same subject with similar variables. No one said anything but maybe they thought it.
WATER COLOR. Period.
The Fact that Mr. Douglas Bush is talking about little affect of the cold front on the fish in this particular lake...my lake...
sir...is because the pool level is drawn down considerably. The fish have only remained, say in the Yellow Jacket creek arm because there is sufficient water depth remaining for starters. So we know that there are fish there, where to catch them?
Mr. Bush is not saying, I don't think, that "bank chunking" is productive everywhere. Now this is only my opinion of the situation, and I have fished the EXACT same one for 15 winters in the SAME spots. What was in between the lines and in all caps was Water Color. The water color is muddy, red Georgia clay, muddy. The light penetration is such that the cold front affects may be reduced, eliminated, or at a minimum, mitigated. So with the water condition being Low Pool, Muddy(Low Light) where does that leave our approach. Seasonal, and shallow for largemouth.
The structures that the fish will be using in this particular flatlander, West Point lake at winter pool will be much more nearer to the surface. They are still winter structures. We (I) would fish the same structures if the water had never been drawn down. But since it has been, it makes our presentation much easier. In a flatlander we all know that there will be a lot, and I mean A LOT of good looking structures that are not productive. Also the structures that will be most productive are those existing at creek channel/ main river intersections. so if the top of the river channel breakline is at 32' feet, which in this lake a lot of it is, and the top after draw down is at 13 then heck we got it made. This means the fish are pretty much in a barrel! Now these winter structures that are formed at the intersections, happen to come all the way to the water edge now. they are still the same structures and thank God we only have to work down to 13' to nail the contact point.
Lastly on this, the comment of straggler trolling was made. This may seem odd to some from the north. Others may have never been able to do so due to ice on. Yet what Mr. Bush said is no different then what I had said, he just talked about presentation where I spoke of movements and location. He(Mr. Bush) and all of us know that the fish will be scattered. With that being the case we know that trolling is the best option. To better the situation even more. We have the fish in a barrel and our spoonpluggs will be the gun to shoot them. You can literally troll from structure to structure and never leave potentially productive water. Heck your trolling threw their house. Just remember, stay on the bottom, if you don't and your in "muddy" water esp., then good luck bud, I'm not that good or lucky!
Joshua Douglas Travis