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Fishing
Alabama's Bass Trail
February 2001 BASSMASTER MAGAZINE

   The 38-year-old guide grew up fishing this north Alabama impoundment of 67,100 acres on the Tennessee River, and he has many such stories to tell.  He remembers the 8-pound, 5-ounce smallmouth he caught two years ago...the three 10-pound largemouths he has caught and released...and the eight-bass string weighing 43-10 that he and a friend weighed in a decade ago to win a tournament.  Consequently, he makes a strong case when he suggests that few fisheries can offer as much as this one.

     "There are so many places to fish, and so many different ways to fish, that if you go to a different area in the lake, it's like you've left town, but you really didn't."
   Upper Wheeler, for example, offers grassbeds, lily pads and flats with stumps.  The lower section is lined with rocky points, and it boats sloughs with fallen trees.  Throw in riprap, bridge pilings, creek channels and boat docks, and you have an impoundment that fishes as "big" as its expanse suggests it might.  And in this big water are appropriately big populations of largemouth, smallmouth and spotted bass, along with whites, hybrids and stripes.
   Add a tailwater fishery below Wheeler Dam and another 15,500 acres of similar habitat in downstream Wilson Lake, and you have an 82,600-acre fishery that is one of the five crown jewels in the Alabama Bass Trail.
   Not suprisingly, Wheeler and Wilson long have been favorite stops for the BASSMASTER Tournament Trail.  Possibly the most historic tournament occurred in 1989 on Wheeler, when competitors set B.A.S.S. records for most bass (5,339), most weight (8,658 pounds), and most seven-bass limits(526).  More recently, Michigan's Art Fergurson won the 2000 BASSMASTER Top 150 Tournament on the impoundment with a string of 53-pounds, 5-ounces.   
   B.A.S.S. will return in 2001, this time making Joe Wheeler State Park its headquarters.  With its 72 rooms, 27 cottages, 116 campsites, restaurant,

 

  multiple boat-launch ramps and a full service marina with fuel dock, the park seems the logical choice for any organization planning a tournament on this leg of the Alabama Tournament Trail.
   Nearby communities, including Florence, Athens, Decatur and Huntsville, welcome such events with open arms, by the way, for tournament competitors pump millions of dollars annually into local economies through the purchase of tackle, food, lodging and fuel.
   And since tournament organizers strive to ensure the long-term survival of tournament caught bass, the Alabama Department of Conservation have found that competitive fishing and recreational angling can coexist nicely on Wheeler and other fisheries in the state.  The BASSMASTER Tournament Trail, for example, treats tournament-caught bass to guard against infection before dispersing them throughout the waters from which they were caught.
     But it's not just tournament fishermen who should give Wheeler/Wilson a try, says guide Whitt, who adds  that the wide-open spaces of his favorite lake allow for relaxing, as well as productive angling.
     "I guide people from all over the United States," he says.  "And a lot  of them talk about all the pleasure boats, cigarette boats and jet skis that they have on their waters back home.   It's not like that here.  We have a few jet skis in July and August, and a few pleasure boats passing through.  But nothing like those lakes up north."

 

 

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   Additionally, Whitt offers his clients the option of using threadfin shad for bait from fall into spring, an alternative nearly guaranteed to catch fish, even when conditions are tough.  Black bass, hybrids, stripers, drum, catfish and crappie all will take these live offerings.
   The best standby artificial is a 1/4-ounce Rat-L-Trap, which he fishes over flats and near weedbeds for largemouths and on rocky points for smallmouths.
   Those rocky points extend about 15 miles, from near Brown's Ferry Nuclear Plant down to the dam.  "You have miles and miles of them," the guide says. "And all have smallmouth on them,  You might not always catch them, but they're there."
   Upriver from the plant to Decatur lies some of the best water for largemouth bass, he adds. "On the north side are grass flats, creek channels and stump fields - acres and acres of them."
  Downstream from Wheeler Dam, Wilson offers 12 miles of deeper water and rocky banks, perfect for smallmouth bass. 
   Largemouth are most likely to be found in the stumps of Hawg Island, which at the mouth of Town Creek, and around milfoil beds in Blue Water and Shoal creeks.
Whichever lake you are fishing, fall is a good time for big smallmouths, while sping is best for lunker largemouth, says the guide. "Spring probably good for big smallmouths too," he says. "But I like to be fishing up around Decatur, catching largemouths."
From March through May, Whitt fishes for pre-spawn and spawning bass with lipless crankbaits, diving baits and jigs sweetened with pork trailers.
"The bass will be on the flats around the milfoil and stumps until the water rises to full pool on April 15," he says. "Then they will get right on the banks."
"If you find the right three or four stumps near deep water, you can catch 15 or 20 bass," the guide says. "But you want to be really careful with your boat because of all the stumps."
Usually by the end of May, he adds, largemouths take up residence in the sprouting lily pads of sloughs like Round Island, Mud Creek and Swan Creek. That's the time to catch them with spinnerbaits, buzzbaits and Texas-rigged worms.
   "I usually stop fishing the pads around the end of June, when the pad fields get too big and thick," Whitt adds. "Also, I like to go to the river channels at that time."
  Several times this past summer, Whitt caught largemouths "all day long" on green lizards rigged Carolina styleand fished in the channels from the power plant to Decatur. He casts into 6-feet of water and drags the lizard into 25-foot depths.
Texas-rigged worms, shallow crankbaits and spinnerbaits will catch bass from spring into fall, until the water starts to drop for winter poon and the bass back off into deeper water.
In the fall, the guide usually moves to the lower end of the lake, where he catches smallmouths on shad-colored crankbaits and on live shad. He stays there until spring.
In the upper lake at the time, the largemouths still are biting well, readilyhitting buzzbaits and floating rats and frogs puled over grassbeds.
Throughout the lake during autumn, "lower pressure and rain seem to make the fishing better," Whitt says. "In the bait shops, check out pictures of people holding gish and you'll see lots of'em wearing raincoats."
Below Wheeler Lake, the tailwaters provide yet another fall option. Live shad cach most of the bronzebacks, but more and more anglers are starting to throw1-ounce Ledgebuster Spinnerbaits (made popular on Wheeler by 2000 BASS Masters Classic champion Woo Daves). Other options include trolling with shad-pattern crankbaits and casting with plastic grubs in chartreuse or bone.
Stripers and hybrids often latch on to smallmouth offerings below the dam. And, especially during autumn, those hard pulling fish sometimes provide incredible fishing on the mail lake - like that enjoyed by Whitt and his clients last October.
"When you see gulls diving," the guide says, "that will tip you off that the stripers are schooling. Or, you might see them chasing bait in pockets and backs of coves.
"Smallmouths and largemouths will be with'em but you can't always catch black bass because the hybrids and rockfish get to the bass first."
That's not a bad problem to have, he acknowledges.
Another "problem" visting anglers will have to contend with, he adds, is deciding where and which species to fish for on Wheeler and Wilson. "Sometimes it's hard to make up your mind," Whitt says, "because you have so many different areas to fish and so many different ways to catch'em."

 
                                                                                             
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