It’s key to remember that depth is relative and how deep you fish all depends on the lake you’re fishing. Some lakes only get ten feet deep, while others are forty or fifty feet deep. If bass like to spend their summers at a depth of ten feet in a given lake, head out to where it gets thirty or forty feet deep. If they spend their summers in three feet of water, head out to where it’s ten feet deep.
It tends to be helpful to situate your boat near the deeper parts of the lake, but this doesn’t mean you have to be right on top of the deepest part of the body of water. You also have to monitor water clarity. In many ways, clarity is even more important than water warmth, so you may want to consider some innovations in bass fishing like the Humminbird 360 Image Trolling Motor System so you can see the bottom as well as all around your boat for the best fish.
As a general rule, the dirtier the water, the shallower the baitfish will be. The clearer the water, the deeper the baitfish will be. Bass will follow the baitfish even though they aren’t feeding like they were in the fall or summer. Like everyone else, they just like to be near their food source, and, for this, clarity is a better determinant than water warmth of how deep the bass and the baitfish will swim. |