Largemouth Bass #1: Flip A Jig
As such, in lakes from North Carolina to Lake Champlain in Vermont, Harris has been chasing largemouths, targeting milfoil and hydrilla with a jig.
“I’m a huge jig fisherman, I really love to flip,” says Harris. “Right now, I’m fishing anything from 8 inches of water to 15 feet. It really depends how they’re set up, but lately the largemouth bite has been great flipping a jig. Really, until we get into fall, these fish aren’t really in transition yet. Right now, you can find largemouths around weeds, docks, structure, and they’re not moving too far.”
When it comes to specific baits for this bite, Harris is fond of Team Ark Randall Tharp Flippin’ Jigs, 9 times out of 10 using a perch pattern to mimic predominant forage on a lot of his favorite lakes.
Largemouth Bass #2: Topwaters
“This time of year, the other thing I throw are topwaters, either a spook-style bait or buzzbait as fish are feeding up, whether that’s baitfish or panfish in a lot of these central or northeastern waters.”
Other baits that should be considered are Whopper Ploppers and any pencil- or cigar-shaped topwater, even old-school baits like Jitter Bugs and prop- or wake-style baits. Anybody who has fished these baits with confidence knows the bites are often spectacular.
Harris on Late-Summer Smallmouth Bass
For Harris, smallies can be a bit tougher to pattern, sending him searching everything from 3- or 4-feet to depths reaching 60 feet, depending on the day—as the fish can migrate back and forth daily, even hour-to-hour, given weather, temperature, sun, barometric pressure, all on the chase for their preferred forage.
“When it’s sunny out, I’m targeting August smallies in six feet or less. They get shallow in the sun and hunt,” notes Harris. “Cloudy days I’ll be working anything from 15 to 60 feet.”