By Terry Brown
When the bass move to the points, big worms, jigs and big
crankbaits are proven fish catchers. In recent years, companies have added deep
divers to their arsenals and anglers have clamored to them. Strike King started
the XD Series, Spro added the Little John DD and several other well know lipped-diver
manufacturers added suit with offerings of their own.
The evolution of these deep divers has rendered the medium diver a thing of the
past. Those baits that dive from 12 to 14 feet are often not thrown, but rest
assured, they have a place on points and channel swings that can be an advantage
when the school is pulled off the area they were initially holding.
Many anglers do not understand that crankbait fish are
easily influenced. How many times have you caught a bass to see several others
running to the boat with it? That is moving the school. Even though the chasers
may move back they may not move all the way back as most crankbait casts are
normally very long.
After two or three fish on a given spot with the deep diver, we like to pick up
a medium diver like the Bandit Series 400 to pick off those fish heading back
or suspending after one of their buddies got a boat ride.
We like to use off the wall colors, not necessarily matching the hatch, for
this approach. For example, if we are throwing a sexy shad or shad color for
the deep runner, we may switch to a firetiger or silver blue back on the medium
diver. Varying the retrieve cadence on the medium diver can be the key.
Grinding the deep diver then stop and go with the medium one can mean more
fish.
This past spring, I had the day of all days with a five-fish
limit weighing more than 28 pounds by doing this very thing. While fishing a
creek channel swing off a flat, I caught an 8-pounder and a 7-pounder on
consecutive casts with a Spro Little John DD. I made several more casts without
a bite and switched to a firetiger colored Bandit Series 400 and picked up three
more fish out off the 14-foot ledge. Moving the school wasn’t bad, it just took
a different technique to catch the other fish in the area. With that knowledge
it was easy to replicate that pattern on like spots on other places on the
lake. That night I caught 22 fish 4 pounds or heavier. This all happened in a three-hour
window.
The beauty of the Bandit Series 400 is multi-fold. It’s a
true runner right out of the box, and it has a very unique wobble when run at
slower speeds. Combined with exceptional colors and a built in rattle chamber,
the Series 400 compliments the silent running Spro Little John DD. The rattles were a variable that made this
combination different and seemed to fire the school up after a cast or two. The
combination of baits was the ticket.
Give the medium divers their due and don’t forget about
running two types of divers the next time you find a mega-school. It can
definitely take a great day to the best day when the conditions get right.
To read more about mid-range depth fishing, check out our article from March about Finding your Mid-Range Game.