Flipping & Pitching

Punch Rig (Mat Fishing) Fishing on Lake Jackson

Lake Jackson · Florida · Southeast

Lake Jackson sits in Leon County just north of Tallahassee and covers roughly 4,000 acres of naturally shallow, nutrient-rich water averaging 6–8 feet in depth across most of the basin. The lake is defined by dense emergent vegetation — bulrush, hydrilla, and lily pad fields — along with cypress-lined shorelines and a handful of deeper holes pushing 12–15 feet near the causeway. What separates Jackson from most Florida bass fisheries is its documented history of natural basin-drainage events, where sinkholes open and drain portions of the lake, forcing a biological reset that has produced multiple boom cycles of exceptional bass growth.

A heavy tungsten weight (1–2+ oz) pegged above a 4/0–5/0 straight shank hook with a compact, heavy-wire-hook-rigged creature bait or craw. The streamlined profile punches through thick surface mats that frogs and standard Texas rigs can't penetrate. The fish under mats are the biggest, most undisturbed bass in any grass lake.

Punch Rig (Mat Fishing) Setup for Lake Jackson

Rod7'6"–8' heavy to extra-heavy casting rod, fast action
Reel8.1:1 baitcaster (fast pickup critical for setting through mat)
Line65–80 lb braid
Weight1–1.5 oz tungsten pegged tight; 2 oz in thick mats
Hook5/0 heavy-wire straight shank (Gamakatsu G-Lock, Owner Beast)

Seasonal Tactics on Lake Jackson

spring

Lake: February through April is prime time as largemouth push into 2–4 ft of lily pad and bulrush edges to spawn; topwater frogs and hollow-body swimbaits over pad fields draw explosive strikes during warming trends when water temps reach the low 60s.

Punch Rig (Mat Fishing): Not prime season — mats haven't formed yet. Switch to frog and standard Texas rig.

summer

Lake: Bass retreat to the deepest available structure — 10–14 ft holes near the US-27 causeway and deeper grass lines — during peak heat; early morning topwater schooling activity on open flats can erupt briefly before the bite compresses tight to shade and submerged hydrilla edges.

Punch Rig (Mat Fishing): Prime season. Mats are thick, bass are under them all day escaping heat. Most productive midday.

fall

Lake: Cooling water in October and November pulls fish back out of deep holes onto mid-depth grass flats in 4–7 ft; shad-pattern swimbaits and medium-diving crankbaits covering the outside edges of vegetation produce sustained action as forage schools up.

Punch Rig (Mat Fishing): Fish as mats die back — work the pockets and edges as vegetation thins.

winter

Lake: Cold fronts push bass into the deepest basin pockets and submerged timber near sinkholes; slow-rolling a 3/8 oz swimbait head with a Keitech Swing Impact Fat or dead-sticking a finesse worm in 10–14 ft during stable high-pressure windows accounts for most winter fish.

Punch Rig (Mat Fishing): Not applicable — mats are gone and fish have left shallow vegetation.

Best Conditions

Thick hydrilla and milfoil mats, lily pad fields, surface vegetation in summer, shallow and stained water, midday heat

Pro Tip

Drop straight down through the hole, let it hit bottom, then give it one or two shakes. If nothing in 10 seconds, pull out and punch the next hole. Speed is the game.

More Techniques for Lake Jackson

Drop Shot on Lake JacksonCrankbait (Shallow) on Lake JacksonChatterBait / Vibrating Jig on Lake JacksonTopwater Popper on Lake JacksonAll Lake Jackson Info →

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