Exploring New Lakes And Ponds With Small Fishing Boats

By Paul Fisherson

Many lakes these days don't allow huge motorboats. A great deal
of seasoned anglers like to fish these lakes, because they don't
have weekend warriors blowing all over the place, showing off
their green glitter bass boat. There are thousands of lakes and
ponds across the country that have great large motor
restrictions on them. This keeps all the fair weather fisherman
far, far away from the fattest fish in the land. These heavily
restricted lakes are like gold mines of above average fish.
Especially, if you use a small fishing boat or a canoe to
navigate their hot spots.

Many no motor lakes have rental boats that cost a pretty penny
to rent out by the hour, and then you have to abide by their
rules and regulations, and have the boat in by a certain time of
day. Die hard fisherman don't like to have their fishing
interrupted by normal civilized hours. Buying your own canoe,
raft, or kayak is the way to go. It will provide you with years
of fun if you take care of it. Additionally, having a smaller
watercraft will force you to start thinking about smaller bodies
of water to visit. Tons of anglers prefer exploring small bodies
of water that have virtually no one on them.

A small boat with or without a little motor can get you up into
shallow coves and stream channels that people can't get to by
foot(because of mud). A lot of the time, today's lakes and
reservoirs are dammed up, and the streams leading into them are
far away from parking areas. No one has the desire to travel by
foot or paddle all the way into the nooks and crannies that hold
the biggest fish in the lake, except the die hards. In the
summer, many species of fish love to migrate to stream mouths,
especially if the body of water is relatively shallow, because
they need to find some cooler water. Sometimes there will be
thousands of fish stacked up around a stream mouth. When you
glide over them with your boat, you will be in absolute shock at
the sheer number of them. Many lakes and ponds have this type of
scenario on them. You just need to get out and do some
exploring.

While you navigate from place to place in your small boat, you
can throw out a line or two, and troll. The lure you choose to
troll with has a lot to do with how deep the body of water is.
But, one of the best lures to troll with is a spoon. It has
great flash and action no matter what speed you are traveling
at, and you can find them in tons of different sizes to get to
just the right depth. If you are moving around a shallow cove,
you can cast out a top water lure far behind your boat, stick
your rod in a holder or some make shift holder, and just cruise
around. A bass will easily be able to set the hook on themselves
when they explode onto the lure. Using live bait in small lakes
is of course productive, but with a small boat you can get out
into deeper water and fish directly above the fish. When you
cast from shore you often can't control the depth you want to
fish, and the deeper water is where all the fish tend to hold,
especially in the hot summer months.







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