Dream Catcher Guides is Western North Carolina's premier guided fishing service. Founder and professional angler Austin Neary talks and writes about his favorite tips and techniques throughout the year.
Monday, February 29, 2016
Lake Chatuge Fishing Report
It appears that the groundhog may have actually been right this year and spring is starting early! March weather is here and with it comes warming water temperatures across the entire mountain region and the big fish factory called Lake Chatuge. With water temperatures warming the big bass are returning to shallower water. The big female largemouth are moving to shallower structure and cover staging for the prespawn and spawn. I consider the early part of March the pre prespawn period. The biggest fish will be in the transition from 15ft of water to 2ft of water. You can do some serious damage to some giant bass flipping a jig around wood, docks and other shallow cover! A shallow crankbait on rock and wood will catch some good fish as well. If there is a little chop and breeze you can hang some hammers with a jerkbait. I like a deeper jerkbait this time of the year but I will mix it up when the conditions call for it! An olive green X-Rap deep will put some good ones in the boat! A big swimbait will entice the big fish to get a large easy meal! I will combo a big swimbait and jigs on shallow docks and wood with a high warm sun and the water warming. The ultimate battle is quantity or quality. You can run points and pockets with a jerkbait and catch numbers but to get a big largemouth you need to punch your ticket on shallow cover!
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Lake Glenville Fishing Report
Visit: DreamCatcherGuides.com to book and reserve your trip this spring!
It's currently late winter, the water temperature is in the low 40's but there is warming water on the horizon! Even with water in the low 40's you can find a good population of largemouth and smallmouth bass pushing herring on points across the lake throughout the day. Don't hesitate to fish shallow on warmer days when the sun gets up. Big largemouth will get on dark pieces of cover that retain heat and wait for an easy snack to swim by! Finding the main channel in pockets or a deep bowl in coves could pay dividends as well. Big largemouth and smallmouth will get down into the warmer stable water and feed on passing schools of herring. A football jig or finesse swimbait could be your ticket to those deeper fish!
Bait Selection
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Fishing Report Fontana Lake
Winter time on Fontana is without question one of the most challenging, fun and rewarding bites to get on. Challenging because you never know what the weather will bring, fun because the fish are gorging shad and rewarding because the fish you catch can be STUDS! The fish in Fontana are always aggressive, their lives revolve around eating Threadfin Shad!
The water is around 47* and the smallmouth, spots and largemouth are feeding heavy in the 15ft- 30ft zone all around the lake! Best advice we can give you, chase the wind! People often think that the"wind blows the schools of shad." This is indirectly true, wind blows the shads food source and the shad follow! Now what baits to throw...
Jackall DD Jerkbait
Shadalicious Swimbait- Sexy Shad
Spy Bait- American Shad
Visit DreamCatcherGuides.com to book your trip for the biggest bass in the hottest spot on
Fontana Lake!
Thursday, February 11, 2016
Dream Catcher Guides 3 Favorite Top Water Techniques
Top water fishing is without question the most fun fishing in the world! There is nothing like seeing a largemouth, smallmouth or spotted bass come out of the water and strike a lure so violently! It'll make you jump, flinch and even scare you half to death if you're not ready for it. There are quite a few top water techniques we utilize here in the Smoky Mountains but today we will focus on Dream Catcher Guides Top 5.
#1 Buzz Frogs/ Whopper Plopper/ Hollow Body Poppin' Frogs:
Late Spring - Middle Fall: Water temp 65*-77*
When the bream spawn is over and you cruise down the banks and see schools of a hundred bream, bluegill and shell crackers we guarantee there will be packs of giants close by! The big bass will pack up in what we call a "wolf pack" and push these schools of bream down the banks. We will take a Reaction Innovation Trixie Shark, Keitech Noisy Flapper, R2S Whopper Plopper or a Spro Poppin' frog and run down the bank at a pretty fast pace until we run into a wolf pack and we'll destroy them!
#2 Wake Baits/ Bomber Long A:
Early Spring - Late Spring: Water temp 50*- 65*
You probably wouldn't believe it unless you saw it but some of the best top water fishing we do in the mountains is when it is 50* water! Those big smallmouth and largemouth push herring on to points early in the morning and if you have a slow (and I mean slowwww) retrieving wake bait like a Bomber Long A you can catch some big ones!
#3 Walking Baits/ Lucky Craft Sammy
Late Spring - Early Summer & Fall: Water Temp 55* -70*
Whether it is schooling fish, walking them over points or fan casting pockets and shore line, there is always a good fish or two that will inhale a walking bait. When it get's to be post spawn and those big females are ready to start eating again you can run these over points and pockets and put some quality sized fish in the boat! On lakes like Glenville or Chatuge you always have to keep one tied on because you never know when they will come up schooling!
\https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVSVvR4-Bdc&feature=youtu.be
#1 Buzz Frogs/ Whopper Plopper/ Hollow Body Poppin' Frogs:
Late Spring - Middle Fall: Water temp 65*-77*
When the bream spawn is over and you cruise down the banks and see schools of a hundred bream, bluegill and shell crackers we guarantee there will be packs of giants close by! The big bass will pack up in what we call a "wolf pack" and push these schools of bream down the banks. We will take a Reaction Innovation Trixie Shark, Keitech Noisy Flapper, R2S Whopper Plopper or a Spro Poppin' frog and run down the bank at a pretty fast pace until we run into a wolf pack and we'll destroy them!
#2 Wake Baits/ Bomber Long A:
Early Spring - Late Spring: Water temp 50*- 65*
You probably wouldn't believe it unless you saw it but some of the best top water fishing we do in the mountains is when it is 50* water! Those big smallmouth and largemouth push herring on to points early in the morning and if you have a slow (and I mean slowwww) retrieving wake bait like a Bomber Long A you can catch some big ones!
#3 Walking Baits/ Lucky Craft Sammy
Late Spring - Early Summer & Fall: Water Temp 55* -70*
Whether it is schooling fish, walking them over points or fan casting pockets and shore line, there is always a good fish or two that will inhale a walking bait. When it get's to be post spawn and those big females are ready to start eating again you can run these over points and pockets and put some quality sized fish in the boat! On lakes like Glenville or Chatuge you always have to keep one tied on because you never know when they will come up schooling!
\https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVSVvR4-Bdc&feature=youtu.be
Monday, February 8, 2016
No cover, No Structure... No Problem!
Close your eyes and dream of the ideal "honey hole"... You may imagine some form of aquatic grass, lily pads, a stump field, fallen timber, a dock, deep brush, a point, a rocky bank, a culvert pipe or some other kind of structure/ cover. We are visual creatures, we like visualizing a strike, we like to picture what our lure is doing when it is hopping and weaving through the brush as we anticipate a strike! But what if there is nothing visual to throw at? No trees, no grass, no rocks, stumps or docks...
We are so enamored with "beating the bank." It's like a magnet that pulls us in! We grew up learning how to fish from shore and that cover/ structure is where a majority of our bites came from. And when we don't get bites on our favorite stuff we say "they're just not biting." Here in the Smoky Mountains the lakes are pulled way down to winter pool and there is either very little or no structure/ cover in the water. This keeps a lot of anglers off the water because "they don't bite in the Winter" or (there is nothing to throw at, which can be intimidating).
Here's a little secret, as long as a fish is living it is burning calories, as long as it is burning calories it needs to eat! The only reason why a fish gets locked on to cover or structure is because it holds food. Being that we have an abundance of shad (and I mean an abundance) the fish continuously gorge because they have to eat! When there is nothing to throw at, the schools of SHAD BECOME YOUR STRUCTURE AND COVER! If you find shad or some other kind of bait you have found where the bass will hold! Shad very rarely swim directly on the bank but will often swim in the middle or top of the water column. So the question becomes "How do you find shad?"
Shad eat plankton which are often on the top 1/3 of the water column. Wind creates surface current and will blow plankton, the shad follow the plankton, the bass follow the shad and we follow the bass! I call it "chasing the wind." Using your electronics are also very helpful in keying in on what depth the schools of fish are active as well as where the specific schools of baitfish are located! This will then help you narrow down your bait selection to match the hatch!
If there is one thing to remember when the lakes are pulled down with nothing to visually throw at, the bait or SHAD BECOME YOUR STRUCTURE AND COVER! Match the hatch!
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