Pay attention to bass strikes to learn how to catch more bass by Dan Osullivan

professional bass anglers learn from each bite

Christina and my families converged on Rainbow City for the occasion – of course I scheduled time to take them fishing. I took my dad fishing one week, and my father-in-law fishing the next.

We have had unusual amounts of rainfall over the past month or so, and as a result, the Coosa River – like every body of water in the state – is high and muddy. When I was thinking about where to take my dad, I thought I would go downstream;

because, the water was

a little cleaner after the

rains. The water was still

dirty, but it wasn’t the

“tea with cream” color

that was predominant

upstream.

Instead of doing

what I was planning on,

I was talking to a friend

who does very well

on Neely Henry, who

told me that if he was

taking someone fishing

for fun, he would fish

around the City Ramp

in Gadsden, where all

of the tournaments

release their fish.

DONE! I changed

my mind and took

my dad there, and

we caught one fish;

gratefully, it was dad

who caught it.

The next week, I

followed my gut and

took my father-in-

law downstream

to fish the less

Dennis Gregory with Coosa River Spinnerbait Largemouth - photo by

Dan O’Sullivan

dirty water. We started out with some swim jigs on the deck, a few

Flippin’ rods, a

couple crankbaits

and a pair of 1/2-ounce chartreuse

spinnerbaits with a single size 5 or 6 Colorado blade,

painted florescent chartreuse.

We started out slow rolling the spinnerbaits

around shallow, riprap points with water willow

on them, but it wasn’t until we got distracted that

the pattern began to take shape. My father-in law

made a cast next to a laydown tree, and at that

precise moment, I started saying something. He

was listening to what I was saying, and paused his

retrieve for a moment.

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