
Didn't see that many spawning peacock bass... there were a few, but the only time we were looking for them was when a lure hung up in the grass or a tree and we moved in close to shore to free it.
Most of the peacock bass strikes came on small white plastic baits worked slowly at the surface. Twitch it a little, or just a steady reel so it made a wake at the surface. The strikes were coming anywhere from right at the shoreline to right beside the boat. If the lure was in the water... you could get hit. Lots of action everywhere we fished.

Water visibility was about 4 to 5 feet up the north fork.... and the largemouth bass were schooling. They didn't stay on the surface for long and always seemed to be "over there" out of casting distance... but when you got a lure in the bust... hook up.
I wanted to catch a fish on my Alabama Rig... but nothing doing... all afternoon. Shane kept throwing, I gave up and started catching bass on a gold CastMaster, a crank bait, a stick bait, a Sinko.... I even took one of the twister tails off the Bama rig and caught with that... but NOT A STRIKE on the Bama Rig.
Then Shane got the speed or depth or something right and caught one.
First fish I've ever seen caught on an Alabama Rig. Only single fish, not 2 or 3 or 4 or 4 at a time like on the sales videos.


As the sun hid behind the clouds, the action picked up. Healthy largemouth bass chasing schools of shad... lots of shad. All about 1 1/2 to 2 pounds. Never did catch any peacock bass with the schooling largemouth.
Then just as we were about to leave... Double. Two fish on the Alabama Rig.
Perfect end to a great day of fishing.
