Finesse

Drop Shot Fishing on Lake James

Lake James · North Carolina · Southeast

Lake James sits at the base of the Blue Ridge escarpment in Burke and McDowell counties, impounded by Duke Energy as part of the Catawba River chain. The reservoir runs clear to blue-green, with visibility commonly hitting 8–12 feet in summer, and features a diverse structural mix of chunk-rock bluff walls, submerged creek channels, standing timber in the upper arms, and long rocky points that taper into 40–60 feet of water. All three black bass species coexist here, with smallmouth increasingly dominating the lower, more open sections and largemouth holding in the shallower, woodier upper arms.

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 Lake James

Rod7' medium-light to medium spinning rod, fast action
Reel2500–3000 size spinning reel, 6.2:1 or higher
Line6–8 lb fluorocarbon main line or 10 lb braid + 8 lb fluoro leader
Weight1/8–3/8 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 Lake James

spring

Lake: Largemouth push into the upper Linville and Catawba arms as water climbs through the low-to-mid 60s, staging on secondary points in 8–15 ft before moving onto chunk-rock flats to spawn. Smallmouth key on main-lake rocky points and bluff transitions in 10–20 ft — jerkbaits and tube jigs are the go-to during this pre-spawn window.

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.

summer

Lake: Thermal stratification sets up hard by July, pushing most bass off the main lake flats and onto deep rocky structure in 25–45 ft. Spotted bass are particularly active on main-channel ledges and submerged timber; a drop shot or a swimbait on a shaky head at 30–40 ft along the creek channel swings is the summer playbook.

Drop Shot: Go deep — 20–40 feet on main lake structure. Shake in place with minimal movement. Shad colors dominate.

fall

Lake: Shad schools move into the mid-lake flats and upper coves as water cools through the 60s, pulling largemouth shallow and triggering topwater and squarebill activity on rocky points. Smallmouth also go on a hard feed along wind-exposed chunk-rock banks — reaction baits like a 3/8 oz War Eagle spinnerbait in shad colors produce well into late October.

Drop Shot: Follow baitfish to secondary points and pockets. Faster retrieve works as fish get more aggressive.

winter

Lake: Clear, cold conditions push bass into a negative mood but not into deeper refuge than expected — fish often suspend in 20–35 ft on main-lake bluff walls and rock piles. A Megabass Vision 110 on a very slow cadence or a 1/4 oz football jig dragged along bluff bases with 10-second-plus pauses is the patient angler's game through January and February.

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

Pro Tip

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 Lake James

Crankbait (Shallow) on Lake JamesJig (Casting & Pitching) on Lake JamesJerkbait on Lake JamesWacky Rig on Lake JamesAll Lake James Info →

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