Spinnerbait Fishing on Brookville Lake
Brookville Lake · Indiana · Midwest
Brookville Lake sits in the rolling hills of Franklin County, impounded by the Whitewater River and shaped by steep, rocky banks in its upper arms and flatter, more gradually tapering points in the lower pool. Water clarity trends cleaner than most Indiana reservoirs — visibility of 3 to 6 feet is common outside of heavy rainfall events — which gives the fishery more of an Ozarks character than the stained flood-control lakes of the western part of the state. Largemouth dominate the flatter coves and brush, but a legitimate smallmouth population lives along the rocky main-lake points and riprap, and spotted bass show up in the deeper, clearer stretches of the upper Whitewater arm.
A wire-arm lure with one or two rotating blades and a skirted jig head. The blades produce flash and vibration that triggers reaction strikes from bass that may not be actively feeding. Exceptional in low-visibility water, around grass edges, over submerged structure, and during cloudy or windy conditions.
Spinnerbait Setup for Brookville Lake
| Rod | 7'–7'3" medium-heavy casting rod, moderate-fast action |
| Reel | 6.4:1–7.1:1 baitcaster |
| Line | 15–17 lb fluorocarbon or 30 lb braid |
| Weight | 3/8–3/4 oz (lighter in shallow, heavier for deeper retrieves) |
Seasonal Tactics on Brookville Lake
Lake: Pre-spawn largemouth stage on secondary points and chunk rock in 6–12 ft before pushing into the backs of coves; a 3/8 oz Strike King Tour Grade football jig or swimbait worked along chunk rock transitions is the consistent producer when water temps hit the mid-50s. Smallmouth begin their own staging push onto gravel points in the upper arms around the same time, often two to three weeks behind the largemouth calendar.
Spinnerbait: Best season for spinnerbaits. Slow-roll a 1/2 oz through shallow grass and over submerged timber in pre-spawn.
Lake: Bass push to main-lake structure and deeper channel edges in 15–22 ft as surface temps climb into the mid-80s; drop shots and finesse football jigs on the long main-lake points keep contact with suspended and bottom-holding fish when topwater action dies by 9 AM. Early morning topwater around main-lake docks and riprap can be exceptional through late June before the heat fully takes over.
Spinnerbait: Slow-roll deep along grass edges and main lake points at first light. Night fishing with black spinnerbait is excellent.
Lake: Shad-driven schooling action picks up on the main lake in September and October, with bass running baitfish to the surface near channel swings and the mouths of major coves; a 1/2 oz white or chrome War Eagle spinnerbait or a Heddon Super Spook Jr. covers water fast during these windows. As water cools below 60°F, fish stack back on chunk rock points and transition to slower jig and swimbait presentations.
Spinnerbait: Match shad patterns — white/chartreuse with willow blades. Cover water fast along shoreline transitions.
Lake: Winter fishing at Brookville slows considerably but doesn't shut down for patient anglers willing to work a Ned rig or finesse drop shot on main-lake points in 20–28 ft; fish school tightly in the cleaner water, and locating one often means locating a dozen. Water temps in January and February typically sit in the low-to-mid 40s, demanding counts of 10–15 seconds on any bottom bait before the next move.
Spinnerbait: Slow-roll a heavy (3/4 oz) spinnerbait along steep banks and points at the slowest possible retrieve.
Best Conditions
Stained to muddy water, wind, overcast skies, grass edges, spring pre-spawn, post-cold-front recovery, shallow flats
Trailer hook is not optional in open water — bass swipe at spinnerbaits and miss the main hook constantly. Add a #4 trailer hook always.
More Techniques for Brookville Lake
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