What's
Up With Cold Fronts and Bass?
A high-pressure system trailing a
cold front is the best of worst situations a bass angler can face.
Without fail, this force of nature will temporarily shut down
fishing activity and leading the problem is changing barometric
pressure.
Ask
yourself, what does barometric pressure have to do with bass?
Does it affect only shallow- water fish? Or does it reach to deepwater
bass, as well? Ask these questions, and everybody has an opinion
based on personal angling observations.
For better understanding cold fronts, anglers
need to know what barometric pressure is and how it can affect
fishing activity.
Simply, barometric pressure as nothing more than
a measurement of pressure, which is nothing more than the weight
of air above a certain point — in this case a lake or body
of water.
Generally, a front passes through the area and
pressure rises. Cold air is denser and therefore heavier than
warm air. When a cold front comes through, heavier air replaces
lighter air. Also, dry air is heavier and moist air is lighter.
There are other factors in the atmosphere that produce pressure
changes, but if you reduce everything to simple terms, pressure
is nothing more than the weight of air above a certain point.
Theoretically, low pressure should prevail on
a lake prior to a front, with a moist south wind blowing. As the
front approaches barometric pressure will rise, with drier and
colder air pushing moist air out.
In simple terms, pressure will be lower ahead
of a front and may stabilize before the front passes. The pressure
increases to a certain point, then stabilizes again until a second
front passes.
With the basics of barometric pressure in mind,
anglers need to know how it relates to water and how it can affect
bass. Simply, as barometric pressure rises there is an in creased
pressure in water.
How deep does the effect of barometric pressure
reach?
Ever notice that the deeper spots of Melones and
McClure seem to keep biting? Studies have shown that normal rises
in barometric pressure rarely affect layers of water more than
20 feet deep. Pressure changes in deeper water are caused by falling
temperatures.
From studies of tracking fish before and after
barometric changes, many experts have come to believe deeper fish
are less affected by pressure and fish weighing more than 7 pounds
show little regard to pressure changes.
A dramatic barometric change affects all bass.
It takes about a 25-degree temperature change to affect the larger
fish, and it lasts only a short time. High winds also will affect
them, as will large amounts rain.
Basically, you have two kinds of bass. Let’s
call them the rat patrol these smaller fish are generally more
shallow and go dormant after a cold front. They will hold motionless
near a stump or brush pile for long periods of time until the
barometric pressure begins to drop. The studies have shown smaller
fish ceased activities along weed lines, while the larger fish
don’t seem to break there daily routine of cruising along
several hundred yards near a weed line in 8 feet of water.
Unless the shallows are colder than 50 degrees,
bass will move to them and feed on a daily basis.
Basically, bass weighing more than 5 pounds do
not break the pattern from one season to the next. They go to
the same place to feed, and cruise the same territory each day,
12 months a year. The only modification will be how shallow they
go. If shallows are in the 40s they cruise deeper 16 to 22-foot
ledges.
For me, these pressure changes are dominating
factors. It affects deepwater fish as it does shallow fish. Several
times I’ve graphed large groups of fish holding over deep
structure and caught them good the day before a front. The following
day, after a front moved and those bluebird skies signaled a tough
day ahead, I chased the same fish. They backed off structure,
refusing all baits. The after the front passed, the fish so times
moved back to structure fed maybe 15 minutes, compared to hours
before the front.
If it’s not high barometric as the front
passes, what else can move fish that deep off structure quickly?
Just
some thoughts that may help us continue to learn the changes of
bass during this stormy fall winter periods.
Enjoy!
Dan
Mathisen
FishDelta.com
- All Species, All Delta
The
Ultimate Resource For California Delta Fishing
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