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THE SMALLMOUTH (Part I) To me, at least, one of the most fascinating things about our beloved
Bronze is their marvelous adaptability. They may turn up most anywhere
in this great country of ours, as well as that of our neighbors to the
North, several of the Canadian Provinces. From Nova Scotia to
California, from Washington State to Georgia, the only two states, to my
knowledge where they are absent are Florida and Alaska, and if someone
were to write in and tell me they were there as well, I wouldn't be
surprised!
Arguments have raged long and hard on both the River Smallies.com and
Bronzeback.com boards as to how they can be caught. That's arguing about
the wrong thing! They can be caught in just about any manner a person
can think of to catch any kind of freshwater game fish! I suspect it's
harder to find a proven fishing technique that won't catch them. Yet
here in Maine, I'm not sure everyone considers them a game fish. I have
read, in the popular sporting press, that to be consistently successful
at smallmouth fishing, you must down size your lures. I guess in some
places that MAY be true, but I have found it much more likely that doing
so is more likely to just down size the fish you do catch. I have read
that they are more easily caught on the bottom, and then, in other
articles, on the top! That too, MAY be true! You just can't prove it by
ME! We catch them, here in Maine, on the top, on the bottom, in between,
on large lures, on small lures, on middle sized lures, and just about
any other way you may imagine. If you can find them, they can usually be
caught!
My outlook is just a bit different from that of most folks. I'm a
working guide, kind of a commercial fisherman, but not one who kills his
catch. Most of my clients would as soon throw me out of the boat as to
kill a good smallmouth! The other side of that is that day after day,
year after year, they EXPECT me to put them on fish! Lots of fish! Some
BIG fish! I work with the smartest smallmouths in the world. They are so
smart they even make an old guide like me look like he knows what he is
doing, more often than not!
Now having said that, I have to tell you that there ARE no smart
smallmouths. Now I know when you are butt deep in almost freezing water,
with not a fish caught for your efforts, it's a tad tough to believe
that these fish are NOT smarter than you are. Look at it logically, you
are going to get out of the water and warm up. They aren't, therefore
you MUST be smarter! This points out many of the differences between you
and the Smallmouth. You have the ability to look ahead, they don't. You
have the ability to reason, why you didn't use it to stay out of that
ice water in the first place I don't know, but you had that choice and
they didn't! Choice, reason, logic, the ability to use tools, including
boats to keep your butt out of ice water, are all HUMAN traits and
abilities. The only things that they have working for them are their
INSTINCTS! But, and never lose sight of this fact, the fish we are most
interested in, the larger fish, have the most finely tuned instincts of
their species, and if they had turned them off, even for an instant,
ever, they probably would have never gotten large enough to interest you
and me!
Now we come to a "new" factor, the adaptability of these wonderful
fish. I always kind of just understood they were adaptable, but before
the internet came into being and I finally got smart enough to use it, I
never realized just HOW adaptable they really are. Somewhere on this
continent, there must be a basic model of Smallmouth bass! I don't know
where that would be, but it must be out there someplace. The people
fishing for that one are to be envied. The rest of us have to learn all
the tricks of that basic fish, PLUS all the adaptations that basic model
has made to thrive in the environment we have put them in! Now I suspect
this base model was designed to live and thrive, in a habitat like the
Great Lakes, before there were any dams or large bodies of water with
some flow in them.
Fishing for smallmouths today is kind of like buying a new truck. By
the time all the options are taken care of, the price has doubled and
the finished model only slightly resembles the base model! In all
honesty, anyone fishing for smallmouths in one part of the country can
fish with the same methods most anywhere with a good chance of success.
The biggest difference I see is between a lake environment and that of a
river. I guide regularly on two rivers and during the spawn I guide on
South Branch Lake, all above Bangor, Maine. I find it easier to locate
fish on the rivers than on a lake once the spawn is over.
To me, at least, currents, flows, and current breaks are the keys to
river smallies! The fishing press frequently talks about rocks. Most of
these folks, who are writing, don't even know what rocks ARE! Come on up
here, and I'll show you some Penobscot pebbles! I mean we HAVE rocks,
and many of them only rarely hold fish! Now this could be simply because
there are just not enough fish to go around, but a lot of us would find
that hard to believe. I don't think the rocks are the key, but rather
the current breaks changes around the rocks.
So, what do we have so far? The same fish. Constantly changing
habitat. Constantly changing climate. Constantly changing weather within
the climate. Different food bases. I would guess several distinctive
strains of bass to be dealing with. Other than the same basic fish, I
view all of these other things as "behavior modifiers". These are the
things that alter basic smallmouth behavior and we seem to have better
success when we fine tune our fishing to make some allowances for this.
A couple of weeks ago we caught several smallmouths out of Lake Powel,
on the Arizona-Utah border. When you held them up and looked closely at
them you could see no apparent difference in appearance from the fish we
had been catching all summer in Maine's Penobscot River. They looked the
same, fought the same, felt the same to my touch, but they had to be
different. I am used to catching fish that see water only 20 to 25 feet
deep throughout their entire lives. These fish came out of water that
had depths up to several HUNDRED feet! Now I'm not saying they were
caught out of water that deep, but it was available to them, and I'm
sure they utilize water there that is far deeper than anything my river
fish have ever been exposed to. The forage base is as different as the
water depths are and the fish have adapted to that environment!
I suspect that down the line we will be discussing this adaptability
at greater length. After all, it is one of the things that make our
Smallmouths the beautiful fish they are.
Read Cap'n Chuck's The Smallmouth - Part III
Published on River Smallies.com with permission
Chuck Duggins lives in Maine where he guides on the Penobscot River. He is a member of the Gary Yamamoto Inside Line Pro Staff and a regular contributor at Bronzeback.com.
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