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Curse Strikes Mason's Smallmouth Fishing Bonanza

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Guide Jimmy Mason shows off a trophy smallmouth landed on Pickwick Lake. Photo courtesy of Jimmy Mason

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

Veteran Tennessee River guide Jimmy Mason had been on a roll recently until a phenomenon known only to a specialty segment of the media and their numerous guides struck. That phenomenon is known as the outdoor writer鈥檚 curse.

Mason guides mainly on Pickwick and Wilson lakes in northwest 黑料天堂, and his clients had landed eight smallmouth bass that weighed 6 pounds or better. For those who aren鈥檛 familiar with smallmouth fishing, that 6-pound mark is the holy grail, similar in accomplishment to catching a 10-pound largemouth bass.

The day before I headed to Florence to join Mason for a day of fishing, the weather forecast indicated only a miniscule chance of rain. When I got to the destination, the rain chances were upped to 40%. Yep, you guessed it 鈥 it rained on us almost the entire time we were on the water.

Meanwhile, Mason had to borrow a friend鈥檚 bass boat because of trolling motor issues on his new boat.

Undaunted, we launched at McFarland Park and headed for the Wilson Dam tailrace on Pickwick, expecting the smallmouth that had been so willing to bite during the previous week to still be cooperative.

 Wrong. We were throwing the favorite swim baits into the current in all of Mason鈥檚 honey holes and basically came up empty. After a couple of unproductive hours, I asked him if he鈥檇 ever heard of the outdoor writer鈥檚 curse. He had no idea what I was talking about. I texted one of my outdoor writer buddies from Huntsville and told him how tough the fishing was. His response was 鈥渙utdoor writer鈥檚 curse.鈥

I finally hooked a fish and thought the drought might be coming to an end, but I soon realized it wasn鈥檛 a hard-charging, drag-stripping smallmouth on the line. It was a blue catfish, about 4 pounds.

The next strike, about an hour later, had me a little more excited because of the fight. Nope, it was a 4-pound hybrid striped bass.

After hitting all of Mason鈥檚 favorite spots, he said, 鈥淟et鈥檚 load the boat and head to Wilson.鈥

About 30 minutes later, we were putting the boat in near the Wheeler tailrace on Wilson, where Mason has had great success.

鈥淗ow long has it been since you鈥檝e been skunked,鈥 I asked.

鈥淎t least a couple of years,鈥 Mason said.

鈥淵ou probably had an outdoor writer in the boat,鈥 I responded.

Mason finally connected and thought the day might be improving, but it was a 2-pound largemouth. He caught another largemouth and a hybrid before we finally cried 鈥淯ncle.鈥

To cap the frustrating day, and at least add a comical ending to it, I managed to accidentally pull the cord on my inflatable life jacket as we got out on the boat ramp and ended up looking like Chris Farley in the movie Tommy Boy.

I asked Mason when the best time is to catch a trophy smallmouth.

鈥淯ntil today, I would have said right now,鈥 he laughed. 鈥淵ou know Pickwick is known for its smallmouth. So many of my clients come here for that smallmouth of a lifetime. Pickwick and Wilson, which I look at as almost interchangeable, are two of the best lakes to have a chance to catch that 6-pound smallmouth. This time of year, they鈥檙e moving up in that pre-spawn feed.鈥

Mason said the smallmouth bite can happen as early as February when north 黑料天堂 has a warm spring, but with normal weather patterns, the smallmouth pre-spawn feed happens during March and can extend into April.

鈥淐urrent is such a big deal on the Tennessee River,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e looking for eddies. You鈥檙e looking for areas where the current will bring the bait to them, like rock piles, gravel bars, shell beds and high spots, anywhere the fish can sit in the slower water and wait for bait coming by in the faster water.鈥

Mason said those conditions could be available in a variety of water depths from 3 to 5 feet to as deep as 10 to 12 feet.

鈥淒uring the pre-spawn feed, a lot of fish will get right on the rip-rap banks, the bluff banks,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when you can go with crankbaits, like the 200 Bandit in red colors or a Bomber Flat A. You want a bait with a tight wiggle that will get down to 6 to 8 feet. You鈥檙e looking to imitate a crawfish. You鈥檝e got to get tight to the rocks, making those long casts parallel to the rocks. The fish are sitting in those little current eddies along the rocks.鈥

Mason's clients display some of the smallmouth caught in the last two weeks on Pickwick. Photo courtesy of Jimmy Mason

As the spring progresses, the smallmouth start transitioning to spawning activity, but Mason said it鈥檚 not like flipping a switch.

鈥淎s the water temperature gets into the low to mid 60s, the fish go from looking to feed to spawning,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd not every fish will spawn at the same time. You鈥檒l still have some pre-spawners.

鈥淢ore so on Pickwick than Wilson, Pickwick is a drawdown lake, and the fish won鈥檛 make a big spawning push until the lake comes up to full pool, which is usually around mid-April.鈥

When the spawn commences in earnest, Mason switches tactics and baits. He goes from a fast-moving bait, like a swimbait with a 陆- to 戮-ounce jighead and 4 陆-inch grub in shad colors, to what he calls a dragging bait, like Yum Dingers, Wacky rigs or small Shaky Head baits.

鈥淵ou seldom see a smallmouth bedding in Pickwick because they spawn in 4 to 8 feet of water, deeper than you can see,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e actually only seen one visibly on the bed, so it鈥檚 blind bed-fishing. You鈥檙e going into those areas with slack water near current with a hard bottom. Using finesse plastics is by far the best way to catch them. When you feel that gravel in the slack water, you know you鈥檙e in the right area.

鈥淭he Horseshoe is one of the big spawning areas on Pickwick, but anywhere up and down the lake where you have gravel and slack current, you鈥檒l find spawning smallmouth.鈥

He also will sometimes use a specific spinnerbait in the spring, a Booyah with a single willow-leaf blade.

鈥淭hat Hildebrandt blade has really got a lot of thump to it,鈥 Mason said. 鈥淥ne of the key deals in the current is a single No. 5 willowleaf will not rise nearly like a double willowleaf or a willowleaf-Colorado. Those are really hard to keep down in a heavy current.鈥

When the spawn comes to an end, the fish are hungry again. Mason then returns to his pre-spawn tactics.

鈥淧ost-spawn is a really fun time because the fish are back in the feeding mode,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ne of the cool things at that time of the year is the topwater bite gets really good. That鈥檚 about the time the shad spawn begins, late April to mid-May. You鈥檒l get a good topwater bite on the rock banks in the morning.

鈥淲hen you get down to the mid-lake section where there鈥檚 a lot of grass, the shad spawn is really heavy down there from the Colbert Steam Plant down to Waterloo. You can get a good topwater bite on a Super Spook Junior or a half-ounce spinnerbait with double willows so you can cover water fairly quickly through the grass. The key that time of year is when you see shad follow your baits, you know the smallmouth are around. That鈥檚 a super fun time of the year. That usually lasts two to three hours in the morning. Then you can go back with the soft plastics, like a Carolina-rigged creature bait, or you can slow-roll a spinnerbait in a little deeper water. Those fish will pull out just a little bit on those same bars.鈥

Visit to learn more about booking a trip with Mason on the Tennessee River. Just remember not to invite an outdoor writer to go with you.

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In the past two weeks, Mason's clients have landed eight smallmouth that weighed 6 pounds or better. Photo courtesy of Jimmy Mason