Jerkbait Fishing on Melton Hill Lake
Melton Hill Lake · Tennessee · Southeast
This 5,470-acre TVA impoundment on the Clinch River near Oak Ridge presents a diverse bass fishery. Its defining feature is the steady water flow from Norris Dam, which creates unique current breaks and deep-water opportunities for anglers targeting both species.
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 Melton Hill Lake
| 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 Melton Hill Lake
Lake: Bass migrate into shallower coves and creek arms; largemouth stage on flats while smallmouth favor main lake points near current. Squarebill crankbaits and jigs are often effective.
Jerkbait: The pre-spawn jerkbait bite is legendary — fish moving up to spawn stack on points and react to jerkbaits voraciously.
Lake: Deep ledges, humps, and channel seams become prime targets as bass relate to current during generation cycles. Football jigs, deep diving crankbaits, and swimbaits are essential presentations.
Jerkbait: Less effective in warm water — switch to deeper presentations unless targeting suspended fish on main lake.
Lake: Cooling water temperatures spur baitfish migrations, drawing bass into creek mouths and onto main lake points. Topwater lures, jerkbaits, and spinnerbaits can yield aggressive bites.
Jerkbait: Strong late-fall bite as water cools below 60°F. Shad colors mimic dying baitfish.
Lake: Bass consolidate in deep holes, channel swings, and around standing timber, requiring a patient approach with finesse jigs, blade baits, and slow-rolled swimbaits.
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 Melton Hill Lake
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