Finesse Jig Fishing on Lay Lake
Lay Lake · Alabama · Southeast
Lay Lake sits roughly 35 miles southeast of Birmingham on the Coosa River chain, impounded by Alabama Power's Lay Dam. The reservoir stretches narrow and river-like through much of its upper reach before opening into broader flats and creek arms in the lower sections. Water clarity tends toward the cleaner side for an Alabama impoundment — 2 to 4 feet of visibility is common — and the primary bass species is the spotted bass, though largemouth hold in the shallower creek arms and timber pockets.
A compact, lighter jig (3/16–5/16 oz) with a smaller profile skirt, typically fished on spinning gear with a small craw or chunk trailer. The finesse jig excels in clear water, post-cold-front conditions, and whenever fish are inactive and unwilling to commit to a larger bait. It's the bridge between full-size jig fishing and drop shot-style finesse.
Finesse Jig Setup for Lay Lake
| Rod | 7'–7'2" medium spinning rod, fast action |
| Reel | 2500–3000 spinning reel |
| Line | 10 lb braid + 8 lb fluorocarbon leader |
| Weight | 3/16–5/16 oz arky or round head style |
| Hook | Built-in 2/0–3/0 |
Seasonal Tactics on Lay Lake
Lake: Spotted bass stage on main-river bluff walls and rocky secondary points in the 8–15 ft range before pushing shallower as water temps climb through the low 60s; largemouth slide into the flooded brush and timber of creek arms like Weogufka Creek ahead of the spawn.
Finesse Jig: Pre-spawn on gravel and rock. Drag and hop on the bottom with a small craw trailer.
Lake: Thermocline formation pushes baitfish — primarily blueback herring — into the mid-column, and spots stack beneath them on main-channel ledges and submerged river bends in 20–35 ft of water; topwater schooling action at dawn and dusk along main-lake points can be fast and aggressive.
Finesse Jig: Rocky points and dock ends. Slower than casting jig, more subtle. Green pumpkin/black-blue.
Lake: Shad and herring migrations pull bass back toward the upper end of the lake as water cools below 65 degrees; spotted bass follow bait schools onto secondary points and gravel flats, making reaction baits highly productive through late October.
Finesse Jig: Natural baitfish colors on transition structure. Pairs well with a swimbait-style trailer in fall.
Lake: Cold-water bass concentrate on deep bluff ends and main-channel swing points in 25–40 ft; slow presentations — a drop-shot or a 3/8 oz football jig dragged at a crawl — outproduce almost everything else once surface temps drop below 50 degrees.
Finesse Jig: Excellent cold-water jig — smaller profile triggers lethargic fish that won't eat a full-size jig.
Best Conditions
Clear water, post-cold-front, rocky and hard bottom, pressured fish, 50–70°F water, shallow to mid-depth (4–15 feet)
The finesse jig excels on a 1–2 foot leader straight to the bait with no swivel. Keep the connection direct for maximum sensitivity to detect subtle bites.
More Techniques for Lay Lake
Ready to fish Lay Lake?
Ask Hank about current conditions, water temp, and exactly what to throw today.
Ask Hank →