Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • Root Admin
Posted

By John Neporadny Jr. March bass fishing at Lake of the Ozarks can be as unpredictable as the early spring weather.

Situated in central Missouri, 54,000-acre Lake of the Ozarks rarely freezes over completely during the winter, but some sections can still be covered with ice in early March. The lake is usually still drawn down to winter pool during the month and the water temperature can range from the high 30s at the beginning of March to around the 50-degree mark by the end of the month.

The fickle weather of March plays a key role in finding bass at the lake. ?You can get some pretty drastic temperature changes in March,? says Greg Stoner, Missouri Department of Conservation fisheries biologist for the lake. ?If there is a warm spell in March those fish can move in shallow fairly rapidly.? But if a late winter snowstorm hits, the bass will seek refuge in deeper water once the front passes through and bluebird skies prevail.

Accomplished tournament angler Brian Maloney notes he has never seen any bass spawn on his home lake during March. Most of Lake of the Ozarks largemouth and spotted bass are in the prespawn stage by the end of the month and the fish usually spawn from mid-April to mid-May, according to MDC biologist Greg Stoner.

In early March, Maloney searches for bass making the transition from winter havens to the prespawn staging areas. ?The water temperature at the beginning of March is around 40 degrees and when we start to get 45 to 46 degrees we start to see the fish pull off of the channel swings and rocky banks and get up on the pea gravel where they start biting a Wiggle Wart (crankbait),? says Maloney. Since the lake is low throughout the month it is easy to follow the migration route of Lake of the Ozarks bass as they move along the transition areas where the bank changes from slab rock on the main lake to chunk rock in the coves, then to a mixture of chunk rock and gravel and finally to pea gravel pockets.

Lake of the Ozarks has a reputation of being a good place to throw suspending stickbaits in cold water, so Maloney recommends jerking Smithwick Rattlin? Rogues or LuckyCraft Pointers for prespawn fish in the early part of the month. A jig or Chompers twin-tail plastic grub worked slowly along the drop-offs of channel swings and rounded points will also produce strikes during early to mid-March.

By the end of March the water temperature has climbed above 45 degrees and prespawn bass have moved up to the pea gravel banks where Maloney catches these fish on small crankbaits. ?You still have to be relatively close to deep water but the fish are starting to feed shallower and sun themselves.? He finds that three or four days of sunshine in late March usually prompts Lake of the Ozarks bass to move up shallow on the spawning banks, which are typically a mix or pea gravel and sand in the back half of long coves.

No matter what the weather is in March you will have a good chance of catching a heavyweight bass during the month.

For information on lodging at the Lake of the Ozarks or to receive a free vacation guide, call the Lake of the Ozarks Convention & Visitors Bureau at 1-800-FUN-LAKE or visit the Lake of the Ozarks Convention and Visitors Bureau web site at funlake.com.?

Copies of John Neporadny’s book, “THE Lake of the Ozarks Fishing Guide” are available by calling 573/365-4296 or visiting the web site www.jnoutdoors.com.

Lilleys Landing logo 150.jpg

  • Members
Posted

thank you for the timely information phil. it looks like next week with the weather warming up quite

a bit might be a really good time to get out and start to use some of these techniques............anyone else

want to throw out their bass or crappie tips for this time of year? they are always appreciated!

Posted

Nowadays the A-rig beats all on the channel swings but since I like to enjoy fishing the jerk bait bite or a jig on wind blown south facing secondaries would be my approach this weekend for bass. Later in the day crappie may move in on those banks with brush.

Mike

Posted

Nowadays the A-rig beats all on the channel swings but since I like to enjoy fishing the jerk bait bite or a jig on wind blown south facing secondaries would be my approach this weekend for bass. Later in the day crappie may move in on those banks with brush.

Mike

My routine also. I may stick with a finess jig until either the sun warms the shallows a few degrees, or switch to a jerk bait around mid morning. A 4" craw would be rigged texas style on a rod also.

This time of year can be tough. There are usually a few baits that will get ya bit atleast some part of the day. Find that bait, and fish it til your arm falls off.

TinBoats BassClub.  An aluminum only bass club. If interested in info send me a PM. 

Posted

Ok guys this might sound like a dumb question but when a cove is facing the south are you talking about the back of the cove being on the north side and the mouth being more south oriented? I think o get the concept I usually just refer to it as fishing the coves on the north side of the lake.

Posted

Ok guys this might sound like a dumb question but when a cove is facing the south are you talking about the back of the cove being on the north side and the mouth being more south oriented? I think o get the concept I usually just refer to it as fishing the coves on the north side of the lake.

For the most part, yes. Banks taking direct sunlight for most of the day and with wind bringing the bait to the fish in a funnel fashion as well are what I look for. To your point, at LOZ one of the best sections early is known simply as the "North Shore", but within that area not all banks are created equal - pea gravel transitioning to mixed rock are best for me. By the same token, there are areas on the south side of the lake that meet those same criteria but they are less numerous. This would just be my starting point; obviously conditions change and there are no absolutes.

  • Members
Posted

I've been reading where the ned rig works so well at table rock and i'm sure other places but i don't recall

seeing anything about it being a go to bait on lake of the ozarks. does anyone fish the ned rig on LOZ?

i would think it would work just as well here as table rock right? is it a secret on LOZ? is anybody talkin???

maybe i'm going into unchartered waters.........so to speak

Posted

I can guarantee you that evey bait known to man has been fished at LOZ. Its a great fishery, and gets pressured with folks from new to Pro caliber guys.

TinBoats BassClub.  An aluminum only bass club. If interested in info send me a PM. 

  • Members
Posted

i brought up the subject because i read about it being used on table rock and because i was at bass pro shops the other day

and i asked the guy in the fishing department about the ned rig, i've never tried it and i wanted to give it a shot at LOZ, he spoke

highly of it and said he used it at a number of different lakes but that he never used it at LOZ which i thought was odd. he went

to help someone else and i never found out why.

Posted

I'm sure it will work. I just tend to lean toward the old bass fishing rule "big lure = big fish..." and have not tried it.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.