Feast on High Water

Drought and low water is famine, reducing habitat, fish populations, and is detrimental to spawning success and bass growth. High water is a feast, providing spawning enhancement, increased lake fertility, and abundant feeding opportunities. Our largemouth bass reap the rewards with improved size structures, growth rates, and body weights today.

The past 5 seasons of fishing have produced the heaviest, most abundant largemouth bass catches I can ever recall, rivaling some of my memories from the last high water era of the early 1990’s when I was just graduating from a snoopy rod and graduating to beginner status with a Zebco-33. High water levels and submerged shoreline cover is unquestionably responsible.

Seepage lakes benefit the most from excess rainfall and run-off, as they evaporate quickest and recover slowest. Drainage lakes are affected and impacted less due to creeks and inflows, but if they dry up there isn’t much discharge to replenish these systems.

Take advantage of high water opportunities. Once the next drought cycle settles in, our lakes will experience another lake life reduction and habitat elimination. However long it lasts is unknown.

We cannot control rainfall and snowfall, but it’ll control and maintain our water levels. As long as this current high water cycle persists, be advantageous and extract big bass from flooded lake habitats and locations whenever and wherever possible. Largemouths frequently visit them throughout spring, summer, and fall. High water flood fishing presents a unique experience with reliable and predictable fishing opportunities.

 

Andrew Ragas splits time between the Chicago area and Wisconsin’s Northwoods. Based in Minocqua, WI, he specializes in trophy bass fishing and offers guided trips from May thru October. While big bass is the passion, he dabbles in multi-species as well. He may be visited online at www.northwoodsbass.com

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