Early April Bass Spawning Bite Heats Up: Lake Guntersville Loaded with Shallow Water Action Using Frogs and Fuzzy Plastics
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Hey there, this is Artificial Lure, and let me tell you, if you thought March was good, April is shaping up to be absolutely ridiculous for bass fishing right now.
According to Guntersville Bass Guides reporting from Lake Guntersville in Alabama just yesterday, we're seeing exactly what every bass angler dreams about this time of year. The guides are reporting that buck bass are absolutely everywhere in the shallows right now, and here's the thing that gets us excited - when you see the males moving shallow, the big females are right behind them. We're talking wave one of the spawn has clearly started, and the team is already seeing the setup change with decent weather and warming conditions pushing more bass in waves toward the banks.
Lake Guntersville is absolutely firing right now if you're looking to get out this week. The guides note that while catching a bunch of male bass might not sound like the headline everyone wants, it's actually the perfect indicator that the trophy fish are staging nearby. Early April conditions are dialing in perfectly with that full moon energy and warming temperatures that get bass moving.
Now, if you want to capitalize on this shallow water action, here's what the pros are doing. Major League Fishing reports that frog fishing is absolutely crushing it in these conditions. When you're working mats, lily pads, or heavy cover, you want to use a chugging presentation to get that frog surging in a sporadic, lifelike manner. But here's the pro tip that separates the locals from the tourists - keep slack in your line. You want more slack than you think you need when you're walking that frog in place so it doesn't get pulled away from cover. Some pros are even switching to slower reels with a 6.5 to 1 gear ratio instead of their usual 7 to 1 when working baits in small areas.
Color matters too. Use dark-bodied frogs when the sky is bright so they silhouette against the water, and lighter colored frogs when it's overcast. And if you're fishing really heavy cover with duckweed or matted hydrilla, go heavier - a lighter frog just gets knocked off the mat or totally missed.
Speaking of techniques getting hot, Major League Fishing is also reporting that fuzzy plastics have been making serious waves on the pro tour lately. Michael Neal's recent win using fuzzy plastics shows these things are legit, so if you haven't experimented with them yet, now's the time.
Meanwhile, the Bassmaster Elite Series is rolling through the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway for stop number three, and the action there has been absolutely insane with shallow water power fishing producing some serious catches.
So here's the bottom line - get out there this week if you can. Lake Guntersville is loaded, the spawn is starting, and those shallow water presentations with frogs and fuzzy plastics are absolutely dialed in right now. Whether you're chasing trophy females or just enjoying the shallow water beatdown with the males, early April is prime time.
Thanks so much for tuning in to this edition of bass fishing news. Come back next week for more fresh intel on what's biting and where. This has been an Artificial Lure production. For more, check out Quiet Please dot A I.
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