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| You Are Here: | Game & Fish >> Fishing >> Bass Fishing | ||||
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Top Spots for Natural State Bass
Wherever you turn in Arkansas, noteworthy bass angling is nearby. We spoke with biologists in all parts of the state to determine where the action will be hottest this year.
After 11 interviews, one conclusion jumped out with the certainty a bucket-mouthed bass inhaling an injured shad: Regardless of whether you like to tangle with largemouths, smallmouths or spotted bass, there’s plenty of good news in the Arkansas bass outlook for 2005.
The rainy spring season of 2004 created excellent spawning conditions at many lakes through much of the state. After the adult bass did a better-than-average job of making baby bass, they rewarded themselves by gorging on the rich array of foods available in the flooded timber. Thus, biologists confirmed good growth rates on many lakes during the past year. And the bad news? Really, the only bad news is that we still have the problem of sorting out the best places to cast our lures as we choose from 600,000 acres of lakes and more than 9,700 miles of rivers and streams. Fortunately, the fisheries experts who know our bass fishing waters inside-out were willing to provide this annual report on the state of bass fishing in the Natural State. NORTHWEST CORNER District 1 covers Benton, Carroll, Washington and Madison counties in the fast-growing northwestern corner of the state. Thanks to high water levels during recent spring seasons, the bass (and everything else with fins) in Beaver Lake are growing fast, too. “High water means more surface area, which leads to better survivability for young fish, and there’s more cover and food in flooded timber,” explained Clinton Ricker, a fisheries technician for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. This 28,000-acre lake will continue to be reliable this year. For anglers with physical challenges, Ricker recommended the Prairie Creek access on Beaver Lake, which accommodates wheelchairs and includes nearby fish-attracting structures. “Lake Elmdale has bass of good size and numbers of fish,” Ricker said, bragging on this 200-acre jewel in northwestern Washington County. “We shocked up a 10-pound bass three years ago, and anglers frequently catch 6- and 7-pound fish there,” he said. Ricker also recommended Lake Fayetteville and Lake Bob Kidd in Washington County, where studies show good bass populations in addition the well-known crappie fisheries. NORTH-CENTRAL “The bass up here are probably growing as fast as northern-strain largemouth bass can grow,” reported Mark Oliver, the biologist in charge of District 2 in north-central Arkansas, which includes lakes Bull Shoals and Norfork. “In 2002, we had extremely high water and good spawns for largemouth bass. Plus, we had a huge amount of nutrients that washed into the lake and helped to produce forage for them. It’s as good as I’ve ever seen it, and I’ve been here 24 years.” Oliver rated both lakes equally for 2005. “We’re seeing lots of 3- to 5-pound fish and anglers always catch some 6- to 7-pound fish, which are big fish in this district,” he said. Because these U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lakes and nearby Table Rock Lake also stretch into Missouri, consider buying a border lakes license, which covers both states. “For $10, you get 59,000 more acres to fish,” Oliver said, “and Missouri people get 51,000 acres of some of the best fishing in the world. It’s a great deal. “Smallmouths are going really good. In 2003, we still had nutrients left in the lakes from the high water of 2002, and we got good growth on smallmouths.” In the late 1990s, many anglers won bass tournaments with stringers of smallmouths, and there’s no reason to expect that trend to change. NORTHEAST CORNER “Lake Hogue is our best-balanced lake,” said biologist Sam Henry, who works in District 3. Those who hadn’t heard of the 280-acre lake may have seen headlines last summer as the state record for tilapia, an imported panfish, was broken at Lake Hogue at least four times. Lake Hogue lies within the AGFC’s Earl Buss/Bayou DeView WMA in western Poinsett County. In recent years, Lake Charles has been swamped with undersized bass — and it still is, to a degree. “While we were taking samples for largemouth bass virus testing (in the fall of 2004), we were pleasantly surprised,” Henry said. “The bass were bigger than in the past, and their condition looked good.”
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