Flipping & Pitching

Punch Rig (Mat Fishing) Fishing on Lake Millwood

Lake Millwood · Arkansas · South Central

Lake Millwood sits on the Little River in Hempstead County, southwestern Arkansas — a broad, shallow impoundment averaging just 8–12 feet across much of its productive bass water. Standing timber, flooded brushy flats, and a maze of creek channels define the structure, giving largemouth bass nearly unlimited ambush cover year-round. Water clarity runs from stained to moderately turbid, which keeps the bass shallow and aggressive far later into warm weather than clearer highland reservoirs tend to allow.

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 Millwood

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 Millwood

spring

Lake: Pre-spawn largemouth push onto shallow timber flats and creek channel edges in late February through March, staging in 4–8 ft before sliding into flooded brush as water temps climb toward 60°F. A 3/8 oz black/blue jig flipped to visible timber is the bread-and-butter presentation during this window.

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

summer

Lake: Post-spawn fish scatter into deeper creek channel timber and secondary points in 10–15 ft; topwater action on shad-patterned walking baits fires at first light before heat pushes fish deeper. Expect the morning bite to compress into a tight 90-minute window by July.

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

fall

Lake: Shad migrations pull bass onto main-lake flats and channel swings in October and November; a 1/2 oz chartreuse/white spinnerbait burned over submerged timber tops produces aggressively as water temps drop through the mid-60s.

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

winter

Lake: Cold-water fish congregate on the steeper drops along creek channel bends in 12–18 ft; a slow-rolled swimbait or a 1/2 oz football jig dragged at a crawl through channel timber can produce quality bass even in water below 48°F.

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 Millwood

Flipping & Pitching on Lake MillwoodSpinnerbait on Lake MillwoodCrankbait (Shallow) on Lake MillwoodJig (Casting & Pitching) on Lake MillwoodAll Lake Millwood Info →

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