Do
You Have The Right Lure For The Job?
For
many years, striper fishing with lures has been a favorite of
many anglers, but what is the right lure for the job? The key,
select your lures to do a specific job. Keeping and becoming familiar
with an assortment of baits will help you gain success. Topwater,
shallow baits, medium depth baits, deep baits, swimbaits
and bottom bouncers will all become part of your arsenal. Sure,
you will have a few favorites which best suit your comfort level,
but familiarity with the entire spectrum of options will also
help. Let's break it down a bit for you
In the topwater group, baits such as the striper or bass size
Chub Creek Knuckleheads, Pencil poppers, or Zara Spooks in chrome/blue
or black, red/white, black or rainbow trout patterns will do the
trick.
Shallow baits like your basic Rebel minnow, Bomber
Long A’s or Rapalas in chrome/blue or trout patterns are
good choices.
My
Favorite and most versatile baits fall into the Medium depth category,
are by far Rattletraps in 1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 ounce sizes. While
the original designed Rat-L-Trap
is tough to beat in the basic colors, the bleeding shad series
is rapidly becoming a go-to bait for me. Injured fish make erratic
motions, vibrations and sounds. All of these stimuli prompt aggressive
behavior in predators. Mix in a few drops of blood and fish cannot
resist. When bass spot a bleeding shad, they rush in for the kill.
Sure, nobody can completely duplicate nature, but the Bleeding
Shad Rat-L-Trap
comes very close, a Bleeding Shad Rat-L-Trap
closely mimics injured baitfish in both sight and sound. Their
Liv-N-Sound technology combines with bleeding gill effects and
fish-attracting Reflex Red hooks make this lure a “natural”
for all game fish
Striper Fishing with Dan Mathisen
Outdoors
Trollers
are most familiar with deep diving baits such as the deep diving
Rebel minnow or Rapalas, On the Delta the bright Orange, Pinks
and chartreuse patterns do well.
Bottom bouncing baits such as bucktails (Hair
Raisers) or Road Runners, Sassy shads in a variety of sizes are
hard to beat. The Road Runners and the Sassy shad type baits are
far more productive than the bucktails in most situations because
of their added vibrations.
Ok, so where do you try these types of baits?
Any rocky type structure can serve as a holding place for stripers.
Look for riprap banks, rocky jetties, rocky points or ballast
rock piles throughout the river. Another good location is sand
bars or long points where the current creates a distinct 'rip'
or break across them.
Some points will be good on the incoming tide
and some better on the outgoing, it is up to you to learn which
is better on each tide. Bridge pilings, bulkheads and old wharf
pilings are excellent places to find stripers and if you locate
grass beds, such as those so abundant in the flooded islands like
Frank’s tract, Sherman and others, you'll find linesides.
One area often over looked by most river anglers
is the flats. Generally, a flat with three to six feet of water
and a good gravel or hard sand bottom is where to start your search.
When you find the stripers on these flats, the bite is awesome.
The fish can be so thick that it is easy to confuse what you see
as carp. The stripers can sometimes be seen cruising in large
schools
During the summer and fall and into early winter,
good numbers of stripers can be found at different depths along
ledges close to flats. These flats may cover large areas but the
stripers can be located with your boats electronics.
Stripers are a low light feeder and the best
topwater bite will be early morning or late evening or even at
night. As the sun gets higher in the sky, switch to progressively
deeper running baits. Rarely, in our river systems is it necessary,
under most stable weather conditions, to fish deeper than 15 feet.
When
the bite is on you can catch 20 stripers a day, with most being
in the 5-8 pound class, and there is hardly a greater thrill then
to have a 20-pound plus striper smash Zara Spook. Striper fishing
can become addictive and require a change in your life. These
powerful fish have a way of doing that to a person. As the season
progresses we’ll talk about specific locations and applications
for some of these techniques and bait fishing. <(((><
Enjoy!
Dan
Mathisen
FishDelta.com
- All Species, All Delta
The
Ultimate Resource For California Delta Fishing
Would
you like to use this article to add content to your website or
newsletter?
Send an email to: articlerequest@fishdelta.com
Inlcude your name, your website, and the name of the article you
would like to use.
And we'll respond back to you within 48 hours or less with the
details