Spring’s white-hot white bass

Annual spawning runs can bring nonstop action

Josh Sutton, left, of Wynne and James Therrell of Tulsa, Okla., are all smiles after catching this pair of nice white bass. During the spring spawning season, double hookups are common.
Josh Sutton, left, of Wynne and James Therrell of Tulsa, Okla., are all smiles after catching this pair of nice white bass. During the spring spawning season, double hookups are common.

The white-bass fishing on Oklahoma’s Grand River was incredible. My son Josh and I joined James Therrell of Tulsa, Okla., for a day of angling at Choteau Bend on the upper end of Fort Gibson Lake near Wagoner, and James guided us to one of the most enjoyable days of fishing we’ve ever experienced.

The morning started out unseasonably cold, with the temperature hovering around freezing. But as we soon learned, nothing warms you quicker than a fish at the end of your line.

“Got one,” James said, just after making his first cast for the river’s spawning white bass.

Beneath the surface of the fast-moving water, I could see the silvery form of a big white struggling against James’ line. Before James could boat his fish, however, another white nailed the jig Josh was retrieving. “I’ve got one, too!” Josh exclaimed.

At the same instant, I felt a hard thump on my lure. And almost as quick as we started fishing, we had a triple going. That was just the first of many two-man and three-man hookups we would enjoy.

The white bass fought furiously, as white bass always do. But we brought them quickly to the boat, removed the hooks, tossed them in the live well and cast again. Sometimes we’d crank the reel handle half a dozen times before we got a hit, but often the bass attacked as soon as the jig hit the water. Each weighed 1 to 3 pounds, and on our light tackle, they put up a battle all out of proportion to their size.

The action went on cast after cast for around three hours. During that time, we put 50 bass in the live well and released as many more. That short period of chunking and winding encompassed some of the most fun fishing action I’ve experienced in a long time. To say I enjoyed myself would be an understatement. I was ecstatic.

Throughout their range, white bass seek tributaries of major rivers and reservoirs for their spring spawning runs. It is during these runs, when thousands upon thousands of whites are concentrated in small creeks and rivers, that the vast majority of white bass are caught each year. In fact, for some white-bass aficionados, there is no season but spring. When the spawning runs end, so does the fishing.

Timing of the spawning runs varies widely throughout the fish’s range, but checking water temperature can help you pinpoint this activity. When it hits 50 degrees, you’ll find schools of white bass gathering near mouths of feeder streams. At 58 degrees, the upstream surge begins. On some waters, the spawning run can last as long as a month, but typically, it starts and ends within the span of two weeks.

White bass are a cinch to catch when they’re spawning, and many tactics can be used. Few could be any more effective, however, than the technique our trio used on the Grand River. We were fishing with 6-foot, light-action rods paired with spinning reels spooled with 4- to 6-pound mono. The lures we were casting were 2 1/2-inch Gene Larew Stroll’Rs (a soft-plastic crappie lure body) on 1/4- to 1/2-ounce unpainted (silver) jig heads. The jigs were cast near brush and exposed roots along the river bank, then worked slowly across the bottom with a lift-drop retrieve.

“Last week, a friend and I fished this same stretch of river,” James said, “and it was packed with boats. We were using the Bluegrass (blue and green) Stroll’R body on a silver head, and we caught white bass one after another right beside other anglers who weren’t catching anything. The Stroll’Rs have a distinctive action these bass really seem to like. They’re among the best white-bass lures I’ve ever used.”

When James, Josh and I finished our day, we started transferring the 50 white bass we’d kept into my 48-quart cooler. I should have brought two coolers that size. The one I had wasn’t nearly big enough, and we wound up giving 10 bass to a couple of other anglers who hadn’t enjoyed as much action as we did. The 20 bass I dressed when I got home produced enough fillets to fill three 1-gallon freezer bags.

That’s another thing I like about white bass. These linesides are good freezer-fillers because you can keep as many as the law allows (the daily limit in Arkansas is 25 per person on most waters) without hurting the fish population. And if you take time to remove all the dark-red flesh along the sides of the fillets, white bass are darn good eating.

If you want to get in on some of this action yourself, better get out there soon. The spring spawning runs will be in full swing in many Arkansas waters soon, and for super-fast action on hard-fighting fish, the white-bass run just can’t be beat.

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