When the water temperatures plummet in fall, tournament bass angler Rich Lindgren employs numerous cold-water tactics, relying largely on one 搄ack of all trades bait?called the Kompak Craw for finicky bass in waters below 50 degrees.
揧ou can fish the bait a lot of different ways, depending on the situation,?says Lindgren. 揑 typically have rods rigged with the bait on a shaky head, football head jig, finesse rig, Neko rig卝ust for starters. I like having one bait that I can fish so many different ways. Let抯 me concentrate on fishing, not lure selection.?
SHAKY HEAD RIGGING
Lately, he抯 been fishing Evolve Bait Co.抯 Kompak Craw on a thin wire 3/0 or 4/0 EWG shaky head and says it recently out-fished the stalwart tactic of dragging tubes over rocks for fall smallmouth an impressive 13 to 1.
揇ragging tubes definitely catches fish梖rom the Great Lakes to southern smallie waters梑ut there抯 something about the Kompak Craw on a shaky head that lights up smallmouth bass. Rather than a horizontal drag, a shaky head orients the bait at 45-degrees梞imicking a fighting craw or goby feeding on the bottom. A simple drag, shake and dead stick is typically how I fish it. More sitting, though, than shaking.?
The bait抯 design lends itself to shaky head rigging, as there抯 a bump in the plastic that holds the hook barb just barely under the plastic, eliminating the need to expose the hook. 揈ven during tough, short bites, hook-up percentages are super good.?
Lindgren says the shaky head routine is a go-to for cold, clear waters less than 15 feet deep. Anything deeper and he抣l fish the Kompak Craw by itself on football jig head or as a trailer on a tungsten football head jig.
Evolve Bait Co抯 KOMPAK Craw
FOOTBALLIN?
There抯 nothing like knocking helmets with bass in deep water. Football head jig aficionados will tell you they live for the 憈hump.?And while effective on deep structure bass all season long, the football head bite definitely comes alive in fall and early winter, typically around sunken islands, isolated rock piles, points and ledges in waters from 15 to 40 feet.
To find these high-probability areas, Lindgren says he studies digital GPS mapping and uses Humminbird Side Imaging to look for fish on these deep water spots, marking waypoints for precise casts.
揇uring summer months I抣l fish a football head jig with large, flappy craw trailers, but as the water temps go down, you really need something subtle. Fish are moving slower and they won抰 eat if it takes too much energy. The Kompak Craw is precisely the thing, whether I skewer it onto a bare football head, a football head jig with silicone skirt, or my favorite, a combination silicone and hair football head jig. Hair moves in a way that mimics life even at a standstill,?says Lindgren.
Kompak Craw rigged on a shaky head
FINESSE JIG TRAILER
On natural lakes ?especially those of the Midwest ?Lindgren searches for remaining green weed clumps in 8 to 10 feet of water, relying on a finesse jig to slowly and methodically find willing largemouth bass.
揑抣l idle just off of weed flats, using Side Imaging to find isolated clumps, funnels and spaces in the larger beds. Again, I抣l mark waypoints and go back and strategically work those areas with a tungsten finesse jig with Evolve Kompak Craw trailer, which pulls through the weeds without collecting debris. I have a rod rigged with blue and black jig and Leech Fleck or June Bug Kompak Craw, and a rod with green pumpkin jig and Pumpkin Oil or Cali-Melon Red Kompak Craw.?
He抯 also a big fan of fishing finesse jigs on reservoirs. 揑n fall and early winter, I look for areas of chunk rock and gravel around secondary points that transition into coves and creek arms. You can intercept a lot of fish in these locations with finesse jigs as bass move in and out.?
custom, hand-tied football head jig
IKA RIG
A lesser-known, yet very effective, late season tactic is called Neko rigging. Basically a highly-refined finesse tactic that takes wacky-rigging to an extreme, it excels in shallow waters and around docks. Although typically used with stick worms, Lindgren says the Kompak Craw is perfect for the Japanese finesse technique. 揑 invert the bait, insert either a nail or small tungsten screw weight into bait抯 head and run a weedless wacky style hook through the side of the bait. When retrieved, the vertically-oriented bait puffs the bottom much like a cat ?揘eko?in Japanes ? in a litter box, hence the name.?
Lindgren says the Neko Rig is ideal for dock skipping and bottom-hopping shallow flats, shoreline cover and points, even when water temps are extremely low. 揈specially in stained waters, you抎 be surprised how many fish you抣l find shallow in late fall and winter.?
Evolve Bait Co抯 KOMPAK Craw
PUNCH BAIT
During cold bluebird skies and cold fronts, bass will cling tight to cover ?especially weed mats and clumps ?for warmth. That抯 when Lindgren turns to the Kompak Craw for punching right into the bedrooms of big, lethargic bass.
揊lorida waters are a good example of where cold water punching can definitely pay off. And rather than using a bait that抯 too obtrusive and can spook fish, the Kompak Craw is streamlined and punches great. It抯 thick enough that it displaces water and fish know it抯 there but it doesn抰 flail; the appendages stay close to the body, moving just the right amount to draw strikes.?
Lindgren fishes the bait on a straight shank 4/0 flipping worm hook with weight stop and ?to 1 ?ounce tungsten bullet weight, tied to 25-pound fluorocarbon for clearer waters or 50-65 pound braid in dirtier waters.
DROP SHOT
Yet another way Lindgren likes to fish the bait is on a drop shot, particularly over deep brush piles that he spies with his electronics. 揑 simply nose hook the Kompak Craw and let it flutter as I ply deep brush, barely shaking it, keeping my eyes on my Humminbird 2D, which I set to 200/83kHz for the widest transducer cone, with my chart speed jacked up all the way to ten. That refreshes data the fastest. It抯 like sight fishing with electronics.?