
Lake Berryessa
Drop Shotters Find Best Bass Action
(Napa) A very nice married couple called me last week and wanted to go bass fishing - for the first time! said Larry Hemphill, fishing guide. They had never bass fished before and wanted to learn more about it and about Lake Berryessa. They were great people and we had a great time learning!
The weather was cloudy and very cool. After lots of instruction about rod and reels, baits, areas to look for bass in different seasons, we started fishing, he said. Soon they were casting spinning outfits very well and seemed to be working worms and other plastics very well. As one would expect, they lost their first few bites. Setting the hook for bass is always a learning process for beginners.
In the afternoon they did land a few bass, but they were small. Funny - the small ones were in an area that usually produces bigger bass. One never knows! Great people and think I got them hooked, said Hemphill.
Drop-shotting Robo Worms in shad colors seemed to work the best for them. Most bites came from 15 to 30 feet of water, he noted.
The water temperature was 60-62 degrees and the water clarity was 4+ foot visibility.
Bullards Bar/Englebright Lakes
7-1/2 Lb. Spotted Bass Tops Catches
(Dobbins) If you like solitude, you’ll find plenty of it at Bullards Bar Reservoir now, since hardly anybody is fishing the lake.
However, one angler, Manuel Nevarez, reported experiencing solid bass fishing on a recent trip to Bullards Bar. His biggest spotted bass topped the scales at 7-1/2 pounds, reported Bob Boucke of Johnson’s Bait and Tackle.
Drop shotters fishing Robo Worms and other plastics in deep water generally find the top action on bass this time of year.
Trout fishing should be picking up for trollers using spoons, spinners and nightcrawlers behind dodgers and flashers, but again, very few anglers are going out trying.