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Wednesday, December 3, 2025
BIG SMALLMOUTH ON THE PROWL
Big Smallmouth on the Prowl
Bill Cooper for 4-2-25
Smallmouth fishermen in the Ozarks know that smallmouth bass travel many miles upriver in Ozark rivers during the winter to find stable water temperatures, usually around large springs. The Meramec River is no exception and smallmouth in the upper Meramec often head to Maramec Spring. Trout anglers often catch good smallmouth during the winter catch and release season at Maramec Spring Park. I caught a sold 3-pounder there this winter.
By the middle of February, smallmouth bass begin to leave the spring fed waters and disperse back down the river. As water temperatures begin to rise they go on a feeding spree and feed up for the spawn, when they utilize an amazing amount of energy.
Smallmouth have been migrating for weeks now, but the spring feeding spree really took off a couple of weeks ago. Photos of really big smallmouth have been steadily turning up on social media pages.
Damon Spurgeon, of Rolla, enjoyed a stellar day on the Meramec two weeks ago, He caught lots of smallmouth, none of which were under 15-inches. In the process he caught his best smallmouth ever, a whopping 25-inch behemoth. I looked it up on the length charts. The charges said it could have weighed as much as 9.6lbs. However, I think the charts were made for lake fish, which are much stockier than our Ozark rivers smallmouth, which tend to be longer and thinner. Regardless, Spurgeon captured a monster smallmouth, but was not able to take it to be weighed and certified, because bass season has not yet opened on rivers and streams. He could not keep the fish in his possession. But, he knows where it lives.
Aaron Click, the owner of Table Rock Tackle, fishes further downstream on the Meramec. He posted photos of several very large smallmouth the same day as Spurgeon. Unfortunately, I mowed grass that day.
Several of the pictured fish sported extended bellies, indicating that they were females getting ready to spawn. Smallmouth fishing should remain spectacular until the spawn arrives.
For targeting smallmouth bass in the Ozarks during spring, consider jerkbaits, tubes, and crankbaits. Also, single-tail grubs, spinnerbaits, and soft plastics like lizards and baby craws can be effective.
Three favored baits for this type of fishing, especially as the spawn approaches, are a 4-inch Zoom Lizard in green pumpkin, Zoom's Baby Fluke in white, and Yum's 2 1/2-inch Baby Crawbug in black, blue and red. Smallmouths are in a defensive mode rather than a feeding mode -- thus the small baits. The fish will attack any intruder that approaches their nest.
In the meantime, short-billed crank-baits in chartreuse and black are often deadly on Ozark streams. This model will run 2-to-4-feet deep. Allowing the bait to dig into the gravel bottom will stir up the silt, and make more noise. Hungry smallmouth will attack these baits with total abandon. Any bait that imitates a crawdad, or a minnow can be effective on any given spring day.
When I head to the river, I rig a half dozen rods, each with a different bait. At the top of my list will be a Pico short-billed crank bait, a white or Chartreuse War Eagle spinnerbait, a Zoom Super Fluke in pearl white, a 5-inch YUM Dinger worm in Mardi Gras color, a 4-inch Ki-tech swim-bait on a 3/8-ounce jig-head and a War Eagle Buzzbait with a gold spinner. The topwater bait is usually the least productive, but I do occasionally see big bass chasing minnows. That is when I pick up the topwater rig. If I don’t get a strike within a half dozen casts, I go back to my previous bait.
Every smallmouth fisherman will have their favorite bait to throw at spring time smallmouth bass. Decades ago, every angler on the river had a box of jig and pig rigs. Some of the best smallmouth fishermen I’ve every known were die hard jig-n-pig throwers. Black and blue was often the favored color. And the old Uncle Josh #11 Pork Rinds tipped many of those jigs.
I've been fortunate enough to log hundreds of miles on Ozark streams, many of those miles in pursuit of smallmouth bass. A good number of those miles have been on the Meramec River.
The Meramec is a top producer of bruiser smallmouths. The fertile stream produces smallmouths in abundance from its headwaters to its confluence with the Mississippi, south of St. Louis.
First-time anglers would do well to head to Steelville, an hour's drive from St. Louis. Just west of Steelville, off Highway 8, the Meramec River Smallmouth Management Area begins at Scott's Ford and ends at the railroad trestle bridge at Birds Nest Lodge, a float distance of about 15 miles. Smallmouths spawn in April and May. This stretch of the Meramec produces some of its biggest smallmouths before the season opens on Memorial Day weekend. You can still catch and release fish prior to the official opener (which is a popular thing to do anyway). During the spawn, anglers can often sight-fish, which is one of the most enjoyable forms of smallmouth fishing. Nests lie in quiet water near the shoreline. Check behind clumps of willows or near stretches of water willow, a plant about 18 inches tall that grows in dense stands along the shore and into shallow water. Other nesting sites include calmer water behind large boulders and blowdowns. A high-quality pair of polarized sunglasses will help immensely with locating fish. Smallmouths are very defensive when it comes to their nests and eggs, so use lures that feign a threat to the nest, and you'll be in business. Salamanders are notorious egg-stealers, as are minnows and crayfish.The fish will attack the intruders. Rig the baits with oversized hooks. They won't spook fish during their super aggressive spawning mode, and hookups will improve.
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