Fish are shallow and aggressive. Topwater, shallow crankbaits, frogs over mats. Move fast, cover water.
Fish push to deep structure. Ledges, humps, creek channel bends. Deep crankbaits and drop shots.
Second feeding window. Topwater again, swimbaits along weed edges, spinnerbaits in low light.
Why It Works
In summer, bass move shallow to feed during low-light periods when water temperatures are most comfortable near the surface. The first 90 minutes of daylight is consistently the most productive topwater window of the entire year. Don't waste it — be on the water before the sun clears the treeline.
Where to Fish
Target shallow points, dock edges, weed lines, and matted vegetation. Largemouth will be holding just inside the weed edges or under dock shade waiting to ambush. Walk a Zara Spook or throw a SPRO frog across mats — the blowups in summer are the reason people get addicted to bass fishing.
Best Lures
Why It Works
When surface temps push above 80°F, bass seek out thermoclines and cooler deep water. In lakes and reservoirs, they congregate on underwater ledges, creek channel bends, and offshore humps in 10–25 feet. These fish are still aggressive — they're just not where most anglers look for them.
Finding the Structure
A fish finder is invaluable here. Look for the main creek channel on a topo map, then find where it bends or intersects with a point. Those bend intersections are fish highways in summer. Without electronics, fish the deepest end of every point you see on the bank — the underwater extension of that point is likely where fish are holding.
Best Lures
Why It Works
As surface temps drop in the evening, bass move back shallow for a second feeding window. This one tends to produce bigger fish than the morning bite because the largest bass are often the last to move shallow and the first to go deep. The evening bite peaks in the last 30 minutes of light.