Drop Shot Fishing on Houghton Lake
Houghton Lake · Michigan · Midwest
Houghton Lake sits in Roscommon County in northern lower Michigan, a natural glacial lake covering approximately 20,044 acres with a maximum depth of just 22 feet and an average closer to 8–10 feet. The lake's shallow, weedy character dominates — dense cabbage, coontail, and emergent reeds define the fishable structure more than any hard-bottom or ledge system. Largemouth bass are the primary target, with a modest smallmouth population concentrated near the rockier northeast shore, and heavy panfish and walleye pressure shaping year-round fishing traffic.
The drop shot suspends a soft plastic bait above the bottom on a fixed line, keeping it in the strike zone longer than any other rig. Originally a West Coast technique, it now dominates clear-water and finesse situations nationwide. Works vertically over structure or on a long cast.
Drop Shot Setup for Houghton Lake
| Rod | 7' medium-light to medium spinning rod, fast action |
| Reel | 2500–3000 size spinning reel, 6.2:1 or higher |
| Line | 6–8 lb fluorocarbon main line or 10 lb braid + 8 lb fluoro leader |
| Weight | 1/8–3/8 oz tungsten drop shot weight (heavier in current or deep water) |
| Hook | #1 or #2 Gamakatsu Finesse Wide Gap, 6–18 inches above weight |
Seasonal Tactics on Houghton Lake
Lake: Largemouth stage in 4–8 ft of emergent reed edges and isolated cabbage clumps from mid-May through early June; beds appear soonest on the protected northwest and south shorelines where dark bottom absorbs heat fastest. A 3/8 oz swim jig parallel to the reed walls is a go-to before and after the spawn.
Drop Shot: Target staging fish on points and drop-offs in 8–20 feet. Nose-hook a 6" Roboworm or Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Flat Worm.
Lake: Post-spawn bass push to the outer edges of cabbage and coontail beds sitting in 8–14 ft of water, often suspending just below the thermocline in late July and August when the lake's shallow basin warms nearly top to bottom. Topwater action on the inside weed edges can be exceptional at dawn before lake traffic picks up.
Drop Shot: Go deep — 20–40 feet on main lake structure. Shake in place with minimal movement. Shad colors dominate.
Lake: Cooling water in September and October pulls bass back shallow and aggressive; shad-pattern squarebill crankbaits like the Strike King KVD 1.5 worked across the tops of dying cabbage produce well through mid-October. Weed edges compress as vegetation dies back, concentrating fish that were scattered all summer.
Drop Shot: Follow baitfish to secondary points and pockets. Faster retrieve works as fish get more aggressive.
Lake: Houghton Lake freezes reliably each winter and draws one of Michigan's largest ice fishing crowds, particularly for walleye and perch; largemouth become lethargic and cluster in the deepest available water (14–22 ft) near the old river channel in the southeast basin. Ice anglers occasionally take bass on small jigging spoons, but it is not a targeted winter bass fishery.
Drop Shot: Slowest presentation of the year. Dead-stick a 4" finesse worm at the bottom. Let it sit 10–15 seconds between shakes.
Best Conditions
Clear to stained water, pressured fish, cold fronts, post-spawn suspended bass, deep structure in summer
Use a Palomar knot and leave the tag end pointing up to keep the hook riding correctly. Most anglers tie it wrong.
More Techniques for Houghton Lake
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