Lake Harris Summer Fishing Tips

TALLAPOOSA RIVER IMPOUNDMENT’S
LAKE HARRIS
Impounded 1983
Lake Level: Down 10 feet

Summer Bass Fishing Lake Harris on the Tallapoosa River System

DAY
When the temperature rises in mid-eastern Alabama the fishing gets hot at Lake Harris. Wedowee, Alabama is the closest town near this first impoundment at the headwaters of the Big and Little Tallapoosa Rivers.

What this impoundment means to the angler (and to the bass) is current, cool water and oxygen with very little pollutants. This 30 mile long impoundment is loaded with baitfish, crayfish and trophy bass in the 10 pound plus category.

Alabama’s youngest Lake (impounded in 1983), Lake Harris may also have the cleanest water in the state and a possible new state record largemouth bass.

Schooling largemouth and spotted bass, white bass and stripers can provide all day action all through the hot days of summer on Lake Harris. This surfacing action takes place lake wide, often enhanced by cloudy conditions, rain or evening thundershowers.

Early and late in the day can also be excellent times for these surfacing bass to suddenly appear.

Exciting, fun to catch, and quite easy (even for the novice angler) these schooling bass can number from a few dozen in one school, to over 100 in a frenzied wolf pack, feeding on everything that gets in their way.

Average weights on these schooling bass range from 1-4 lbs, but bigger bass are always nearby. They are either waiting down below, as they pick off injured baitfish the main school has attacked, or holding on some nearby piece of cover.

When this feeding frenzy takes place bass go crazy and will hit about any lure, but there are certain styles and techniques that will increase strikes.

When fishing for these schooling bass it often means having to cast lures long distances, so heavy lures with little wind resistance is the ticket to reaching these fast-surfacing fish, before they go back down.

Proven “schoolie” lures are half to three-quarters-of-an-ounce Bill Lewis rattletraps, Cordell’s rattling spots and other lipless lures, spoons (1/4-3/4 oz.) and inline spinners like rooster tails (1/4-1/2 oz.) are all good lure choices.

Also try crankbaits, topwaters such as the Heddon Zara Super Spook, Lucky Craft’s Sammie’s, Rebel Pop-r’s, prop-baits and the Excalibur Spittin’ Image.

Include jerk baits such as Excaliber’s suspending and floating models, Heddon’s Long-A Bomber Tim Horton signature series jerkbaits, J-13 Rapala’s (3 hook models) and Rattlin’ Rogues.

These and other minnow-type lures can all be cast long distances and they are very wind resistant. Most shad colored models are very similar to the baitfish these spotted bass, stripers and largemouth bass are feeding on.

Besides schooling bass, some big bass (loners and in those in large schools) are always found around main-lake points, islands, deep river bends and creek channel bends.

Try these lures;
Texas-rigged worms in sizes of 4-12 inches, Carolina-rigged plastics with leader lengths of 1-4 feet (varies), deep-diving crankbaits, slow-rolling or dropping heavy, half-to-one ounce spinnerbaits, spoons, grubs, lizards, crayfish imitations (jig & pig combos) and tube baits.

All of these lures take these bass from 1-20 feet deep.

Some bass are found even deeper!

Flipping or pitchin’ to piers and stickups is always good for shade-seeking bass during the hot days of Summer on Lake Harris.

All of these tactics are good during the entire summer, so when you find fish, chances are they will remain there for the remainder of the season. If it gets to hot, you can always go night fishing.

Night: Braving the night on Lake Harris can mean catching big bass, avoiding the daytime heat, not having to deal with a lot of boat traffic and usually having fishing spots all to yourself.

Aside from losing a good nights sleep a few downsides are, there are stickups are all over the lake (especially mid-to-lower sections) so navigation is hazardous.

A slot limit of 13-16 inches means throwing back any bass under or over these lengths and water patrols are checking creels day and night.

Also running lights are to be on at all times, even when fishing near the bank. Spotlights (for running) and black lights (for fishing) are suggested.

Catching bass at night on Lake Harris involves fishing very weed less lures among all the stumps, stickups and trees left during impoundment in 1983.

There are some huge bass in this lake, some have been taken weighing up to 16 lbs, including one floater weighing 17 1/2 lbs! Heavy line and stout tackle are a must for things that go bump in the night on Lake Harris.

Big lures emit more vibrations and provide a bigger target for bass to home in on at night. Big worms with wide, swinger type tails (or paddle tails), in sizes of 10-12 inches, get the bigger bass bite.

Jigs with oversized pork or crayfish trailers provide a large silhouette for the bass to target, on the fall, or when drug across the bottom.

Spinnerbaits with a single # 7 or # 8 size Colorado blade provides a helicopter fall (and more vibration) along deep drops where these big summertime bass spend their days and nights feeding.

Concentrate your efforts on the same places you fish during the day. But always try shallow water after midnight when these bigger bass, forage for baitfish and crayfish.

Always fish late evenings and early morning hours on these night fishing trips. These are times when most of the really big bass are most active.

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Good Fishin’

Reed Montgomery

About Reed Montgomery

Alabama's Oldest, Professional "Bass Fishing Only" Guide Service For Over 40 Years Fishing all of Alabama's Lakes for all Species of Bass and Striped Bass.

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