Fishing frogs early in the morning




The sun has not made its appearance yet on the horizon, but it won't be long. This is the time of the day to be on the lake with a topwater lure working the shallows, listening for the tell-tale plop of bass feeding somewhere on the top. Topwater lures like buzzbaits, and poppers are not weedless. An angler has to be quick on the draw with one of these baits if he or she is working weedy areas, floating hydrilla, lily pads, slop or other cover just waiting to grab the lure. You need to have one of the popular soft plastic frogs tied on. There are two primary ways to fish a frog. While holding your rod tip in the hookset position, slowly turn your reel handle in short bursts with long pauses. If that action is not provoking any strikes, work your rod tip in a downward motion while slowly turning your reel handle. Making sure to pause when close to cover or in open pockets. When the sun is out and the sky is clear and you know the fish are holding to cover, let the frog pause a little while longer when next to cover that is holding fish. Let the frog land and the surface disturbance to settle then start reeling with your rod tip down. The goal is to cover water looking for active fish. Twitch the bait once or twice, then stop for a few seconds and repeat. When the frog comes to a pocket, weed edge, lily pad or something else different to key on, let it sit, and sit, and then sit some more. Some frog aficionados often let the frog sit there for as long as 15-30 seconds, and sometimes up to a minute. It can be well worth the wait. If there hasn't been a blow up, just barely twitch it without moving the bait much at all. This will make the legs quiver a little, and most often this is when the strike occurs. High speed or slow speed retrieve? Anglers can play around with the cadence and speed of the frog retrieve based on how the fish are reacting. If they are aggressively hitting, speed up the retrieve and cover more water. If they are taking time to strike or are slurping the frog instead of attacking it, slow down on the reeling. Subtly shake your rod tip. This will create a big commotion on the surface and will also keep the frog in the strike zone longer. Different models of frogs are numerous. Choosing the right frog again is the one you have confidence in. The hollow-body frog would probably be my go-to bait. It features a hollow, pliable plastic body with a double upturned hook. The body snugs against the hooks to make it weedless, yet is soft enough to collapse and hook a fish when it strikes. Popular hollow body frogs include the Booyah Pad and the Lunker Frog. I hear some people say the frog is irresistible to bass; a guaranteed hook-up. I think that was probably one of the frog lure manufacturers talking. But all joking aside, they are a very realistic bait, and they do get their share of bass. If you haven't tried one yet early in the morning before the sun comes up, tie a frog on and see if you can tempt a frog eating bass.




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Lake Fork Weather Forecast

Monday

Slight Chance Rain Showers

Hi: 87

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Mostly Clear

Lo: 71

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Lake Fork

Fishing Report from TPWD (May 28)

GOOD. Water Stained; 73 degrees; 0.32 feet above pool. The shad are still spawning on main lake points. Target bass feeding on the shad early in the morning with square bill crankbaits, chatterbaits, spinnerbaits, and topwaters. Shaky heads in 3-6 feet are good on points and the edge of grass around bream beds. Carolina rigs are good 12-15 feet on points and road beds. Deep diving crankbait bite is starting to pick up over deep water jumps in 22 feet. Report by Marc Mitchell, Lake Fork Guide Service. Lily fields are filling in, and hydrilla and milfoil are reaching for the surface. Fish this type of cover at mid day when bass are seeking cover. Frog patterns are working in the shallow vegetation early and late. Drop a clouser on isolated cover for black bass. Large bream have moved shallow, wooly buggers are producing good fish. Channel catfish are cruising 2-4 feet, clousers are a good choice. Report by Guide Alex Guthrie, Fly Fish Fork Guide Service. Crappie fishing on Lake Fork is a lot of fun right now. The lake has a tremendous population of black crappie and they are stacked up on all kinds of structures all over the lake in 12-28 feet. White crappie are also loading up on certain trees. You can find black crappie on some bridges, underwater bridges, roadbeds, brush piles, lay downs, tire reefs, points and the base of timber. I have seen some lay downs the past week that may have over 1000 crappie on them. The only problem is finding black crappie over 10 inches when you have so many fish on spots. It is a lot of fun to catch hundreds of crappie per day even if you cannot keep all of them. One of the hottest spots for numbers right now is the big reef in front of the 154 public ramp. Any electronics will find it straight out from the ramp just before the boat lane. It’s very large and easily visible on traditional electronics. The bottom is covered with structures of different kinds and crappie. You can fish minnows just off the bottom or swim small jigs just

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