Drop Shot Fishing on Prior Lake
Prior Lake · Minnesota · Midwest
Prior Lake sits in Scott County, roughly 25 miles southwest of Minneapolis, and is one of the Twin Cities metro's most fishable glacial lakes at approximately 1,440 acres. The lake features a mix of hard sand-to-rock shoreline, submerged points, weed flats extending to 10–14 feet, and a maximum depth pushing 58 feet, giving both largemouth and smallmouth bass distinct seasonal holding zones. Water clarity trends clearer than many metro lakes, often stretching to 8–12 feet of visibility in summer, which shapes bait selection and presentation angles significantly.
The drop shot suspends a soft plastic bait above the bottom on a fixed line, keeping it in the strike zone longer than any other rig. Originally a West Coast technique, it now dominates clear-water and finesse situations nationwide. Works vertically over structure or on a long cast.
Drop Shot Setup for Prior Lake
| Rod | 7' medium-light to medium spinning rod, fast action |
| Reel | 2500–3000 size spinning reel, 6.2:1 or higher |
| Line | 6–8 lb fluorocarbon main line or 10 lb braid + 8 lb fluoro leader |
| Weight | 1/8–3/8 oz tungsten drop shot weight (heavier in current or deep water) |
| Hook | #1 or #2 Gamakatsu Finesse Wide Gap, 6–18 inches above weight |
Seasonal Tactics on Prior Lake
Lake: Pre-spawn largemouth push into shallow bays and sand-flat coves as water temperatures climb through the low 50s into 60°F; the north and northwest shorelines warm first and hold fish earliest, making a 3/8 oz swim jig or a Ned rig on transition rock-to-sand edges productive before the main spawn push. Smallmouth stage on deeper points and mid-lake humps in 12–20 feet before sliding shallow to rocky banks when temps hit 58–62°F.
Drop Shot: Target staging fish on points and drop-offs in 8–20 feet. Nose-hook a 6" Roboworm or Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Flat Worm.
Lake: Post-spawn bass settle into two distinct summer zones: largemouth hold in coontail and cabbage weed edges in 8–14 feet while smallmouth gravitate to mid-lake rock humps and main-basin points in 15–25 feet, where clearer water demands a drop shot or finesse football jig over faster moving presentations. Topwater activity on calm low-light mornings over submerged weed flats can be exceptional through July, but the bite window narrows fast once the sun climbs.
Drop Shot: Go deep — 20–40 feet on main lake structure. Shake in place with minimal movement. Shad colors dominate.
Lake: As surface temps fall through the 50s, both species pull off structure and chase shad-style forage on main-lake points and drop-offs in 15–22 feet; a swimbait or a 3/4 oz football jig dragged along rock-gravel transitions produces well into October. Largemouth scatter into dying weed edges and can be caught on a jig-and-craw or a slow-rolled Keitech Swing Impact Fat 4.3" on a 3/8 oz head through mid-fall.
Drop Shot: Follow baitfish to secondary points and pockets. Faster retrieve works as fish get more aggressive.
Lake: Ice fishing is the dominant winter approach on Prior Lake, with panfish and walleye drawing most pressure; bass are catchable through the ice on small finesse jigs near remaining green weeds in 8–12 feet but are largely a secondary target. Open-water bass fishing effectively ends by late November as water temps drop below 45°F and fish become lethargic near deeper basin structure.
Drop Shot: Slowest presentation of the year. Dead-stick a 4" finesse worm at the bottom. Let it sit 10–15 seconds between shakes.
Best Conditions
Clear to stained water, pressured fish, cold fronts, post-spawn suspended bass, deep structure in summer
Use a Palomar knot and leave the tag end pointing up to keep the hook riding correctly. Most anglers tie it wrong.
More Techniques for Prior Lake
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