Catching Suspended Summer Fish
In recent years on the BASS Elite Series Tour, we've been to places like California and south
Texas where throwing big, bulky swimbaits is the norm. Sure, big fish are caught that way, but those baits don't help me when I go back home to Alabama
or some other tour stop. Plus, they take up a lot of room in the boat and they are expensive!
Recently, Berkley released its new PowerBait Hollow Belly and it's the best swim bait
I've ever used. Not only that, but it works well wherever I go: I can skip docks on Lake of the Ozarks, fish for schoolers in place like Clarks Hill or
wind it deep at Amistad.
This is an important thing to keep in mind in any of the hot, summer months because of the ways
we have to adapt in order to catch bass this time of year. The summer is an interesting time for fishing. Typically, what I've found throughout the South
is that the fishing can be tough. Not everywhere; you can still catch fish in the summer, but I'd rather fish in the dead of winter if I were competing.
The reason fishing is so difficult is because the fish are so hard to find. They tend to suspend a lot but they will also take advantage of any available
cover and stay shallow or even go really deep. Hunting for fish - and not being able to consistently pattern them during this time of the year is the primary
reason why I don't enjoy it as much as other times of the year.
But fishing tournaments, I don't get to set the schedule. I have to fish whenever and
wherever the tournaments are. I may be in the first flight of the morning or I could be the last to blast off. But if I was fishing just for pleasure this
time of year, I would really focus my efforts on early morning and late evening. Typically during these times of day, the fish are more active and really
keying on bait - a perfect situation for throwing a PowerBait Hollow Belly.
There are lots of situations to use a Hollow Belly, but early and late-day schooling fish is
really productive. Cast it out over 30 feet of water where the fish are schooling, count it down to 10, and start winding it slowly back to the boat. This
bait will stay in the desired, 8-foot range all the way back to the boat. Doesn't matter if the fish are suspended in less than 10 feet of water or more
than 40, the Hollow Belly gets to where the fish are and stays there.
One of the reasons that the bait is so effective is because you can wind it slower than any other
swimbait I've ever used and still get the natural appearance and action. That's also the reason you can use it for so many things: wind it on the
surface, count it down for deeper fish, fish it in and around grass or skip docks - it does it all.
I rig the PowerBait Hollow Belly two ways. If I am fishing shallow, I rig it with the hook that
comes in the package and rig it weedless. You can have lower hook-up rations when you rig any bait this way because the hook has to pierce both the bait and
the fish's mouth. But the Hollow Belly is softer and - like the name says - has a hollow belly, making it much easier to get the hook in any fish that
strikes. If I am fishing exclusively open water I rig it with the treble hook. When rigging the bait this way, I take a slip sinker and put it inside the
belly of the bait. I then take a needle and thread it through the nose of the bait, through the slip sinker and out the belly. On the end of the needle I tie
my line. When I pull the needle through, it pulls the line through the nose of the bait, through the weight and out of the belly where I can attach the
treble hook. This is great for schooling bass.
When using a Hollow Belly, I use a medium-heavy casting rod - nothing shorter than 7 feet. If I
am using heavy line in shallow water, I will go with a heavy action rod, but the medium works best because you want the bass to actually eat this bait a
little before you set the hook. When I feel a bite, I drop the rod tip and make sure they are running with it before I set the hook - not a big, sweeping
hook set like fishing a crankbait. Plus, with the medium action, you can cast further and more accurately.
For line, I use 15-20 pound fluorocarbon line. You want that heavy line so you don't break
off on the hook set - turning those swimming fish can create a lot of shock on the line. Of course, the more cover in the water, the heavier line you will
need. If I am skipping docks with the Hollow Belly - a great way to catch bass in the summer - I will switch to smaller weights and monofilament line.
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Summer might be a slow time for me, but it won't be any more. With shad-patterned Berkley
PowerBait Hollow Belly baits pre-rigged for both open water and heavy cover, I can fish around cover, skip docks and target suspended fish all with the same
swimbait. There's a reason all the pros are in love with the Hollow Belly. And the summertime is the perfect time for anyone to give this bait a test
drive.
Boyd Duckett, from Demopolis, Alabama, is the 2007 Bassmaster Classic champion and currently fishes the BASS Elite Series.












