Jig (Casting & Pitching) Fishing on Kerr Lake
Kerr Lake · Virginia / North Carolina · Northeast
Kerr Lake is a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers impoundment on the Roanoke River, impounded in 1952 and sprawling across approximately 50,000 acres between Virginia and North Carolina. The reservoir is defined by its massive creek arm network, submerged timber standing in 10–35 feet of water, and red-clay-stained clarity that typically runs 2–4 feet of visibility in the upper arms and clears to 4–6 feet on the main lake. Largemouth bass are the primary target, with a respectable smallmouth population in the rockier main-lake sections and a world-class striper fishery running through the same water.
A lead or tungsten head with a weed guard, skirt, and soft plastic trailer. Fished on the bottom by pitching, casting, or slow-rolling. The jig imitates crawfish and bottom-dwelling forage. More big bass have been caught on jigs than any other lure category — it's the lure that separates serious anglers.
Jig (Casting & Pitching) Setup for Kerr Lake
| Rod | 7'–7'3" medium-heavy casting rod, fast action |
| Reel | 7.1:1 baitcaster |
| Line | 15–20 lb fluorocarbon (cover) or 50 lb braid (heavy grass) |
| Weight | 3/8 oz standard; 1/2–3/4 oz in wind or deep; 1/4 oz finesse |
| Hook | Built-in, typically 4/0–5/0 |
Seasonal Tactics on Kerr Lake
Lake: Pre-spawn largemouth push into the upper creek arms and flat timber pockets as water temps climb through the 58–65°F range, typically mid-March through late April. Shallow laydowns and flooded red-clay banks in 2–6 feet hold the biggest fish; a 3/8 oz Strike King Tour Grade Swim Jig or a Texas-rigged Zoom Brush Hog fished slow along wood edges is the consistent producer during this window.
Jig (Casting & Pitching): Pre-spawn is prime season — pitch brown/green pumpkin jig to 45° bank transitions and rocky points.
Lake: Post-spawn fish scatter to main-lake points and submerged creek channel edges in 15–28 feet as the thermocline establishes by late June. Stripers stack on the thermocline break and pull largemouth into a competitive forage chase — a football jig dragged along the 20–25 ft timber line or a swimbait slow-rolled just above the timber tops produces when topwater stops working by 8 AM.
Jig (Casting & Pitching): Football jig on offshore ledges 15–30 feet. Swimming jig around grass edges at dawn.
Lake: Shad migrations into the creek arms in September and October trigger some of the most aggressive topwater action on the lake, with schooling bass chasing threadfin shad in the 4–8 ft range. A Heddon Super Spook Jr. or a whopper plopper 110 worked over submerged points at dawn is highly effective; anglers who skip the main lake and run deep into the secondary creek arms often find less pressure and more fish.
Jig (Casting & Pitching): Swim a jig around baitfish schools near points and flats. Shad trailer colors in fall.
Lake: Winter concentrates largemouth on the deepest available timber and channel swing intersections in 28–40 feet, with water temps dropping into the 42–50°F range from December through February. A 1/2 oz football jig (green pumpkin or brown) dragged with long pauses over submerged timber tops — counting 10 full seconds between hops — consistently outperforms the anglers burning a blade bait through the same depth.
Jig (Casting & Pitching): Slowest presentation — drag a 3/8 oz football jig on deep hard bottom. Barely move it.
Best Conditions
All seasons, all depths, all cover types; most effective in 50–70°F water; excellent in pre-spawn and when fish are on hard bottom
Match trailer to conditions: craw trailer in cold water (slower fall, bigger profile), swimbait trailer when swimming, chunk trailer for flipping.
More Techniques for Kerr Lake
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