Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pro angler advocates flexibilit­y with bait choices to track bass

- IN THE OUTDOORS

Wyou enjoy fishing for trout, stripers, black bass or anything else that wriggles, there are few things as exciting as having a fish slam your top-water bait. And if you have been waiting for that opportunit­y, now is the time to rig your fishing rods and head for the water.

That’s the word from Henderson resident and pro angler Don Iglinski. The 62-year-old grew up fishing Lake Mead and Lake Mohave, so he has seen them evolve as fisheries.

After competing in the Western Outdoor News Bass U.S. Open tournament Oct. 15-17 at Callville Bay, Iglinski shared a few thoughts on competitiv­e angling along with some of what he knows about fishing Mead and Mohave as we move into late fall.

Iglinski fished his first tournament in 1986 when Western Outdoor News first started their circuit. “It went from a little subculture of guys who like to fish and everything, until now. I mean, that U.S. Open, 224 boats and trucks. Every rig there was like $120,000 or $130,000 between the boat and the truck,” he said.

While the amount of money competitiv­e anglers spend on the sport of fishing has grown over the years, Iglinski said they also contribute to the fishing industry as whole. Especially when it comes to the developmen­t of new baits.

“The stuff that these guys use and experiment with eventually gets to the public. Big manufactur­ers start producing the baits and everything that works. It’s kind of like a testing system for the general public,” Iglinski said. “Depending on who your sponsors are, you’ll get bags of baits that aren’t even available on the market yet.”

The anglers then try different ways of rigging and using the baits. When they have given them a test drive, they submit a performanc­e report to the manufactur­er.

“You give your opinion on the bait, ways that it can be improved or different colors that will work better, and different ways of rigging it,” he added. “And believe it or not, the fish really know the difference with good baits.”

One of the important things for anglers to recognize is the importance of flexibilit­y when fishing for bass. Iglinski recommends having at least three different patterns ready to go — something for shallow water, something for mid-depths and something for deep water. He also said you have to be prepared to make bait changes when the winds come up or even change direction.

As we move through October and into November, both weather and fishing conditions are changing at Mead and Mohave. Iglinski says it is the best time of year by far because it is nice in the morning and when the sun comes up it is comfortabl­e.

“With the water temperatur­e cooling off, the fish are concentrat­ing on feeding right now. That’s what they are doing. They’re feeding because the spawn is coming up next for them. The rest of October, and virtually all of November should be a tremendous top-water bite, a really good reaction bite with schools of fish. You could go out in one cove, get one fish on and you’ll see

10, 20 fish behind it,” Iglinski said.

The fish school up because it takes less energy when there are 20 bass chasing a school of shad than when there is one. Numbers enable them to trap the shad easier than when they are alone.

To take advantage of the feeding habits of bass, Iglinski recommends using spinnerbai­ts or square bill crankbaits around brush and grass beds.

“Especially the grass beds because there are some really nice deep grass beds out there right now,” he said. “Throw a Zara Spook, a Pop-r, any type of a walking bait or just a bait that sits on the surface and spits water. Throw it around grass beds, and I’m telling you, you’ll have a field day. You could get in one cove and catch a dozen fish in there.”

Freelance writer Doug Nielsen is a conservati­on educator for the Nevada Department of Wildlife. His “In the Outdoors” column, published Thursday in the

Las Vegas Review-journal, is not affiliated with or endorsed by the NDOW.

Any opinions are his own. Find him on Facebook at @dougwrites­outdoors.

He can be reached at intheoutdo­orslv@gmail.com.

 ?? Doug Nielsen ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Don Iglinski, with a Lake Mead largemouth taken on a chartreuse spinnerbai­t, recommends throwing spinnerbai­ts and square bill crankbaits along with tip-water stuff from mid-october through November.
Doug Nielsen Las Vegas Review-journal Don Iglinski, with a Lake Mead largemouth taken on a chartreuse spinnerbai­t, recommends throwing spinnerbai­ts and square bill crankbaits along with tip-water stuff from mid-october through November.
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