Bass Fishing From the Rocks: A Season in Review

Every season teaches you something different, and this one’s lesson was about timing rather than location or lure choice.

I fish the same handful of Pembrokeshire rock marks most seasons, and going in I expected the usual pattern – dawn and dusk producing the majority of fish, daytime being slow. That held true for the first half of summer. Then, through a stretch of unusually settled, overcast weather in August, some of my best fishing came in the middle of the day – overcast conditions seemingly removing the usual reason bass avoid bright daylight on shallow rock marks.

The other thing that stood out was how much a few degrees of water temperature mattered more than I’d given it credit for. A run of cooler nights in early September, dropping inshore water temperature by what felt like a small amount, coincided almost exactly with bass moving off the shallow marks I’d been fishing and onto deeper structure I usually associate with October fishing. Chasing that shift rather than sticking to my usual late-summer marks kept the fish coming when they’d otherwise have gone quiet.

Lure-wise, surface fishing produced through the calmer stretches, but soft plastics fished slower and deeper took over as the water cooled – not a surprising pattern in principle, but one that arrived a good three weeks earlier than I’d have expected based on previous seasons.

The takeaway, if there is one: watch conditions more than the calendar. This season’s pattern shifted earlier and in different conditions than my usual expectations, and the anglers who adjusted caught more fish than those who stuck to habit.

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