Neko Rig Fishing on Lake Seminole
Lake Seminole · Georgia / Florida · Southeast
Lake Seminole straddles the Georgia-Florida line near Bainbridge, Georgia, formed by the impoundment of the Flint and Chattahoochee rivers behind Jim Woodruff Dam. The reservoir blends two distinct river arms with a broad main lake body, creating a patchwork of flooded timber, hydrilla and eelgrass beds, submerged creek channels, and shallow grass flats that favor largemouth bass almost exclusively. Water clarity shifts significantly between the tannin-stained river arms and the clearer open-lake sections, and that contrast shapes how the fish behave across every season.
Insert a 1/16–1/8 oz nail weight into the head of a straight-tail worm and hook it in the middle with a wacky-style hook. The weighted head sinks nose-down while the tail floats up, creating a shaking, quivering posture on the bottom. Incredibly effective in clear water on pressured fish that have seen every other presentation.
Neko Rig Setup for Lake Seminole
| Rod | 7' medium spinning rod, fast action |
| Reel | 2500–3000 spinning reel |
| Line | 8–10 lb fluorocarbon or 10 lb braid + 8 lb fluoro leader |
| Weight | 1/16–1/8 oz nail weight in worm nose (VMC Neko Weight) |
| Hook | #1–#2 wacky hook with O-ring through middle of worm |
Seasonal Tactics on Lake Seminole
Lake: Pre-spawn largemouth push out of the river arms and stage on secondary points and grass edges in 4–8 ft of water through late February and March before moving shallower to spawn in coves with flooded timber and buck brush. Bladed jigs and swimbaits work well along the staging transitions, while spawning fish in the shallows respond to soft plastics worked slowly over beds.
Neko Rig: Post-spawn recovery fish in clear water. Natural and green pumpkin colors on rock and gravel.
Lake: Fish retreat to deeper hydrilla and eelgrass edges in 8–14 ft, often suspending just above the grass canopy during the hottest months. Punching dense mats with a 1 oz tungsten weight becomes the go-to mid-day tactic, while early and late topwater action over submerged grass holds fish through August.
Neko Rig: Deep rocky points and humps. Drag slowly along bottom, let it stand between pulls.
Lake: Shad migrations pull bass up into the river arms and onto main-lake points as water temps drop through the 60s. Reaction baits — squarebill crankbaits, ChatterBaits, and swimbaits — produce well as fish actively chase bait in 4–10 ft over grass and timber.
Neko Rig: Excellent on transition structure. Baitfish-colored worms when shad are present.
Lake: Cooler months concentrate fish on the deeper timber piles and channel swings in the Flint and Chattahoochee arms, where 55–62 degree water holds through January. A slow-rolled swimbait or football jig dragged through 18–25 ft of timber-studded bottom tends to separate the committed angler from everyone else.
Neko Rig: Effective in cold water — very slow drag, long pauses. The standing action triggers lethargic fish.
Best Conditions
Clear water, pressured fish, rocky and hard bottom, post-spawn, finesse situations when drop shot and ned rig aren't producing
Use an O-ring to rig the hook through — it prevents the worm from tearing and gives you dozens of fish per worm instead of one or two.
More Techniques for Lake Seminole
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