I found out that a bunch of lakes were shock tested for warmwater enhancement studies in the early 2000's. Ive been able to find some of these reports with google and it determines the biomass by percentage in a lake. Then, I call the local wdfw biologist for that region to find out if the various soecies are naturally occuring or stocked. If naturally spawning, I ask for an estimate of spawning period and how much they grow and try to guestimate lure size and color from that. If stocked, I ask how big they are at stocking. If they are prey sized, I look at the stocking report to see if there was a recent stock.Mikeel1987 wrote:Is there a better way then guessing? I want to focus on quantity of fish right now that aren't dinks.
For me, I don't deviate much in color with lures that draw a reaction strike. I'll change spinner blade colors for water color but seem to stick to white, chartreuse and black skirts.
If the fish gets a good look, I try and match the hatch. Seems like anything in the bluegill/perch/baby bass realm will do well anywhere out west. I prefer darker baits with darker water. Even jigs, I tend to have better luck with bluegill colors unless there is definitely crayfish around