Video Blog: Fall Muddin' Fun (Jim & Greg Do Late-Fall Bass, Part III)

Nov 16

Last week both Web Guy Greg and I wrote about a recent late fall bass trip that was, in many ways, a comedy of errors. 

Last week’s blogs left off with an outboard that had burst into flames and subsequent MacGyver-style repairs. It wasn’t like we had much of a choice—we could either fix the venerable Seahorse or go home and submit to our wives’ encyclopedic honey-do lists. 
 
No retreat. No surrender.
 
So, motoring up the Rum River in Huff’s Millennium Falcon we smiled the sh*&-eating grins of any n’er-do-wells who’ve escaped almost certain injury. I think Greg will agree at that moment we both felt a little bit like Steve McQueen’s character in the closing scenes of Papillon.
 
And like some kind of deranged and bass-obsessed Admiral Farragut-meets-Han Solo, Greg motored the boat ahead, his steely eyes scanning for something in the distance. 
 
I’d once seen this same glazed-over look in the jaundiced hard-boils of a Jamaican fishing guide who almost got me killed. (More on that in a future blog.) 
 
And it scared me. 
 
Greg motored ahead, past what I thought was primo smallie habitat: laydowns, bowling ball-sized rocks and sand-to-rock transitions with wood. 
 
And then we were there
 
You don't see this everyday ... 
 
 
Actually, it looked more like this:
 
The kind of place I've motored past hundreds of times to get to "better" smallie water ...
 
 
Greg’s countenance returned and he told me he’d fished this particular spot a year earlier with local bass pros Josh Douglas and Rich Lindgren and he knew the score, which involved tubes (no big surprise there, but here’s the kicker) fished in mud.  
 
Mud? And smallies?
 
While I’ve fished my share of smallies, I’ve seldom strayed far from classic rock, gravel and other textbook smallie locations to catch the majority of my fish. 
 
True, I’ve pulled bronzebacks from woody and weedy haunts, but I’ve never dialed in a mud bite. Never even thought of fishing the mud for smallies … that is, until Greg demonstrated how these river donkeys relate to it in late fall.
 
And it makes sense
 
Now, rather than me blathering on and on about how mud retains heat and attracts forage, simply watch the video Greg produced to see the pattern in action. My only regret? No engine fire footage! 
 
 
Let us know your experience with smallies in the mud … or other outside-the-box locations and patterns for catching bass! 
 
Thanks to Greg, Josh and Rich, I’ve got a new smallie trick up my sleeve.
 
-- Jim 
 

5 comments

# oceankayakjohn
Wednesday, November 16, 2011 9:52 AM
Great job Greg, Josh and Rich! I enjoyed the video. Big smallies. Wow!
# ariess
Wednesday, November 16, 2011 1:13 PM
HUGE FISH MAN!!
# Honesty
Thursday, November 17, 2011 9:55 PM
Right on some great looking fish and video!! Thanks for shareing it with us.
# bubaahotep63
Saturday, November 19, 2011 6:26 PM
Saterday, November 19th, 2011 6:25 PM
Just what I loke to see, Two guys catching a nice string of Smallies. Good Job. bubaahotep63
# Jim Edlund, Web Editor
Sunday, December 04, 2011 7:49 PM
All,

Thanks for all the comments. Yep, Greg and I had a blast. Expect to see more videos like this in the near future!

-- Web Ed. Jim

Post Comment

Only registered users may post comments.