HomeOutdoorAll Eyes on September as Shad Transition Begins

All Eyes on September as Shad Transition Begins


   08.30.24

All Eyes on September as Shad Transition BeginsAll Eyes on September as Shad Transition Begins

September is a month eagerly anticipated by many in South Louisiana for a number of causes. It brings the return of quieter properties as youngsters head again to high school, and it alerts the start of soccer season. However maybe essentially the most thrilling a part of September is the arrival of the primary chilly entrance of the season.

For Chris Basey of Covington, nevertheless, September holds a particular significance.

“That is the month when the shad begin shifting again into these small cuts and canals off the principle river,” he explains, referring to Bayou Bonfouca. Basey spends the 12 months focusing on the rivers and bayous on the Northshore of Lake Pontchartrain. September provides him the chance to transition from the principle river to shallower waters.

“Oh man, I like this tim of 12 months!” he says. “When the baitfish begin piling into the cuts, I do know the bass received’t be far behind.”

All Eyes on September as Shad Transition BeginsAll Eyes on September as Shad Transition Begins

On his newest journey to Bayou Bonfouca in Slidell, LA, Basey ventured right into a canal close to Palm Bayou. The shoreline was lush with vegetation, and the floor teemed with exercise.

“I knew it was going to be an ideal thrip after I entered that canal. Not a second glided by  that I didn’t see shad skipping or wakes being thrown,” he recollects.

It was early within the morning, and Basey reached for his rod with a frog lure tied on.

“I like to begin the day with a frog,” he says. “I normally catch my heaviest fish in the course of the early morning hours utilizing a hollow-body frog.”

After recognizing a disturbance between some lilies and the marsh line, he solid the frog onto the shoreline and labored it into the water.

“is was a line of salvinia grass that I threw into. I noticed a wake push in direction of the bait and the fish exploded on it,” he recounts.

Basey waited a second earlier than setting the hook, then the battle started.

“All I stored pondering was, ‘Please don’t come off, please don’t come off,’” he says. Fastidiously, he maneuvered the fish by means of the lilies and finally boat-flipped it. He kicked off his day with a five-pound bass and went on to catch a number of extra within the two to four-pound vary.

Whereas Basey begins his morning with a frog alongside the shoreline, he quickly switches to a spinnerbait. His go-to is a 3/8-ounce white spinnerbait with an Indiana blade, adjusting the blade coloration primarily based on the water.

“When the water’s stained like a root beer coloration, I’ll use a gold blade,” he says. “When the water is clear, I swap over to silver.”

Basey ties his spinnerbait onto a 7-foot medium rod with a reasonable tip, permitting the bass to completely take the fast-moving bait with out it being pulled out prematurely. “There’s a ton of forgiveness in that rod, which helps land extra fish after I use a spinnerbait,” he stated.

From the northernmost level the place Bonfouca begins to the southernmost part the place it empties into Lake Pontchartrain, there are 44 canals that present anglers with an escape from the principle bayou. Discovering a canal to fish isn’t tough. When selecting the place to solid, Basey presents a number of pointers.

“Search for canals with loads of grass alongside the shoreline,” he advises. “Additionally, take note of wharfs, bulkheads, and different buildings that break up the shoreline.”

Basey usually begins on the mouth of the canal the place it meets the principle bayou and works his approach again. The farther the canal extends, the higher, he says. He explores the whole size, establishing a sample that guides him to fish in different canals.

With shad beginning to transfer into the cuts this month, you may count on them to stay there by means of winter, till they head out once more after the spring spawn.

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Keith Lusher is an award profitable out of doors journalist that resides in Covington, Louisiana. He owns and operates NorthshoreFishingReport.com and writes a weekly out of doors column for the Slidell Impartial Newspaper. He additionally writes for the St.Tammany Parish Tourism Fee’s VisitTheNorthshore.com. He’s the previous host of The Northshore Fishing Report Radio Present and is on the board of the Louisiana Out of doors Writers Affiliation. Keith contributes to quite a few publications each on-line and in print and prides himself on selling South Louisiana’s distinctive fishery. To contact Keith e mail: keithlusherjr@gmail.com