Bellying Bass On The Marsh©
By Rich Johnson
The day
started as the alarm sounded at 4 a.m., well before dawn and a leftover light rain falling
from thunderstorms that rolled through the evening before. So far so good, as cloudy and
overcast is always preferable when it comes to fishing and filming. Anyway, I was looking
forward to a great day of bass fishing with the boys from Causeway Bait and Tackle
(www.causewaybait.com or 516-785-3223) in
Wantagh, Bobby Turturello and Greg Keegan.
Id
been after Bobby Turturello of Causeway for three years to do a television show
with me on the art of bellying bass
along the sod (marsh) banks of the South Shore. Bobby is a well known pro at
this technique and well respected on the bay. We tried this show last season, but had to
cancel three times as bad weather and a blown engine were the culprits. Bobby doesnt
like using chum pots for his bellying and was taught by some of the old timers on the bay
the fine art of squeezing bellies for big bass. Anyway, this trip was long
over due and I was excited about the possibility of learning a few new tricks for catching
large bass with Bobby and Greg.
METHOD. Chumming with clam bellies is a technique
of catching bass where you can see high numbers of bass and sometimes-BIG bass as well.
Its also a controversial method of striper fishing because if youre not
careful you can gut hook fish on occasion. Its been around for many,
many years, but in the last 10 years or so, it has reinvented itself. Clam bellying for
bass is easy, theres a ton of fish around and anybody can do it. You can chum
bellies at any bridge, inlet of marsh bank and one thing is for certain is it works.
The key is
anchoring up tide of a bridge, cut in the bank or hole along side the marsh and float
bellies back into the strike zone. Many old timers dont use chum pots,
but rather squeeze their bellies while many of the newcomers prefer the chum pot. If you
prefer to squeeze, take your bellies and place them in a 5-gallon bucket. Take a handful
of bellies and squeeze them over the side, breaking them apart and releasing whatever is
left into the current. Keep doling them out and the fish should respond within minutes
most of the time.
The advantage to squeezing bellies is you
can control how much bait you put in the water. You can get the fish boiling in the water
behind you or find them laying way back in the slick. If this is the case, increase the
chum in the water to bring them closer. If they are being caught close to the boat, slow
down the amount of chum so you dont overfeed them. Meanwhile take a whole skimmer
clam and place it on your hook and float it back in the current with the chum youve
been putting out. It is important you release your baited clam no faster or slower than
the speed of the current. Too fast and there is too much line in the water and you
wont feel the strike and too slow the bait will fight the tide and rise to the
surface. Dont let bass run with the clam bait, when you feel the bite set the hook!
RIGGING
. We used a
36-inch stretch of 30-pound leader material tied to our
running line with a 90-pound
barrel swivel and a 5/0 or 6/0 black, Daiichi Octopus Wide (model D18Z) hook tied to the
business end of the leader. We do not use circle hooks in bellying bass because we want to
set the hooks ourselves as the fish were biting light on this trip. Circle
hooks are fine when current is very strong or the rod is placed in the rod holder and the
hook will then set itself. Some anglers may opt for fish finder rigs which is fine, but in
this art of presenting clam bellies to bass, we want to make sure our clams were not tied
to the bottom, but drifting just above it in the current. We also used a small rubber core
sinker just ahead of the barrel swivel to get our baits deep in the current and the amount
of weight is to be adjusted as to the depth of the water, strength of current and bay
conditions. Each person on the boat should use a different weight rubber core to search
the water column. The fish will let you know where they are. After catching a few you can
all switch to the correct rubber core weight.
TACKLE. The best tackle for chumming bellies is a
rod with a soft tip for presentation, but with enough backbone to set the hook into the
maw of a big bass. Ive found the (heavier) Seeker BA85-7 or (lighter) Fenwick 708M
to be the perfect rods for this type of fishing. For a reel to compliment my rod choices,
I use the Ambassadeur 7000 level wind reel or the Ambassadeur 6500UC. Dont go
smaller than the 6500 or similar sized reel and spool with 25 to 30-pound Berkley Big game
line or 50-pound Whiplash braided line
I
had a great time and loads of fun with Bob & Greg, ending our trip in a howling
northwest wind of 25 knots, the tide petering out and the fish with a serious case of
lockjaw in the high pressure system that had now taken hold. It was a slow pick, but that
happens every now and then and between the three of us we had a five fish day with two
keeper bass and a 10-pound bluefish. You can see all the fun we had along with the
techniques and the fish we did catch this Saturday on The Fishing Line
television show as Bobby and Greg join