Jerkbait Fishing on Lake Wallenpaupack
Lake Wallenpaupack · Pennsylvania · Northeast
Lake Wallenpaupack sits in Pike County at roughly 1,160 feet elevation in the Pocono highlands, covering about 5,700 acres with a maximum depth near 60 feet and a mean depth around 22 feet. The lake is a Pennsylvania Power & Light impoundment from the 1920s, and its glacial origins left it with a rocky, irregular bottom, hard-sand flats, and scattered submerged timber in the back coves — a structure mix that supports both largemouth in the shallower, weedier arms and smallmouth along the main-lake rock transitions. Water clarity tends toward the clearer end for a northeast reservoir, typically 6–12 feet of visibility depending on season, which puts finesse presentations and natural color palettes at a premium.
A slender, minnow-shaped hard bait that suspends in the water column and darts erratically on a jerk-jerk-pause retrieve. The pause — where the bait sits motionless and quivering — triggers strikes from cold, lethargic fish. Water temperature is the key variable: the colder the water, the longer the pause.
Jerkbait Setup for Lake Wallenpaupack
| Rod | 6'10"–7'2" medium casting rod, moderate-fast action |
| Reel | 6.4:1–7.1:1 baitcaster |
| Line | 10–12 lb fluorocarbon (neutral buoyancy critical — heavy line sinks, light line rises) |
| Weight | 3–5 inches, 1/4–1/2 oz (Megabass Vision 110, Lucky Craft Pointer, Rapala Shadow Rap) |
Seasonal Tactics on Lake Wallenpaupack
Lake: Pre-spawn largemouth push into the protected coves on the northern end as water temps climb toward 55–60°F in late April and early May; smallmouth stage on main-lake rocky points in 10–18 feet before moving shallower to spawn. Jerkbaits on the rock transitions and Texas-rigged creature baits flipped to laydowns in cove timber both produce well.
Jerkbait: The pre-spawn jerkbait bite is legendary — fish moving up to spawn stack on points and react to jerkbaits voraciously.
Lake: Thermoclines establish by July, pushing smallmouth to suspend over 25–40 ft basin areas near main-lake structure; largemouth hold tight to emergent vegetation and dock edges in 4–8 feet. Topwater early morning on the weedy flats gives way to drop-shot and tube rigs on the deeper rock structure by midday.
Jerkbait: Less effective in warm water — switch to deeper presentations unless targeting suspended fish on main lake.
Lake: Falling water temps in September and October trigger smallmouth to chase shad and shiners on main-lake points; largemouth feed aggressively in the back coves before the turnover. Swimbaits, inline spinners, and lipless crankbaits cover water efficiently during this feeding window.
Jerkbait: Strong late-fall bite as water cools below 60°F. Shad colors mimic dying baitfish.
Lake: Wallenpaupack is a popular ice-fishing destination once it freezes, typically January–February; open-water bass fishing slows sharply but finesse jigging with small tubes or blade baits over rocky structure in 20–35 feet can still produce smallmouth on unseasonably warm afternoons.
Jerkbait: Prime season. 5–10 second pause between twitches. Let it sit — the fish will come to it.
Best Conditions
Cold water (45–60°F), clear to slightly stained water, post-cold-front, early spring and late fall, suspended fish
Tune your jerkbait to suspend perfectly — in 60°F water with the correct line weight, the bait should slowly rise or hover motionless. Adjust with suspend dots if needed.
More Techniques for Lake Wallenpaupack
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