Flipping & Pitching Fishing on Pymatuning Reservoir
Pymatuning Reservoir · Pennsylvania / Ohio · Northeast
Pymatuning is a large, shallow impoundment — average depth hovers around 10–12 feet — built in 1934 on the Shenango River watershed, making it one of the oldest and largest man-made lakes in the Northeast. The basin holds a mixed bag of largemouth bass, walleye, muskellunge, crappie, and perch, but its largemouth fishery is built on submerged timber fields, expansive weed flats, and flooded brushy shoreline cover. Water clarity tends toward stained or slightly turbid, especially on the Pennsylvania side, which pushes bass tight to visible structure and rewards high-contrast presentations over finesse.
Flipping uses a shortened line for pendulum-style presentations within 15 feet. Pitching covers 15–40 feet with an underhand cast. Both deliver baits silently into docks, laydowns, and grass edges. Big bass in heavy cover are the target — this is where giants live.
Flipping & Pitching Setup for Pymatuning Reservoir
| Rod | 7'3"–7'6" heavy or extra-heavy casting rod, fast action |
| Reel | 7.1:1–8.1:1 baitcaster |
| Line | 50–65 lb braid or 20–25 lb fluorocarbon |
| Weight | 3/8–1 oz pegged tungsten, matched to cover density |
| Hook | 4/0–5/0 straight shank flipping hook |
Seasonal Tactics on Pymatuning Reservoir
Lake: Largemouth push into the flooded brush and emerging milfoil flats in the 4–6 ft range as water temperatures climb through the mid-50s into the low 60s, typically late April through mid-May. The northern Pennsylvania shoreline shallows warm first and hold the earliest pre-spawn concentrations.
Flipping & Pitching: Pitch to buck brush and flooded timber during pre-spawn. Jig or crawfish-colored creature bait.
Lake: Post-spawn bass scatter to deeper weed edges and submerged timber lines in 8–14 ft of water as surface temps push into the upper 70s. Milfoil and coontail mat up through July and August, creating punching and frog opportunities along the main basin flats.
Flipping & Pitching: Punch through grass mats with 1–1.5 oz weights. Fish the shade under mats where big bass hide from heat.
Lake: Shad and perch schools drive bass into aggressive feeding windows from late September through October. Largemouth stack near channel edges and the deeper weed lines in 10–16 ft, responding well to swimbait and crankbait presentations targeting transitional depth breaks.
Flipping & Pitching: Target dock ends and remaining grass. Fish move shallower as water cools.
Lake: Ice cover is common from late December through February on Pymatuning, and ice-fishing pressure for perch and walleye is heavy. Open-water bass fishing essentially shuts down; any late-fall window before hard freeze finds bass lethargic in 12–18 ft near submerged timber, requiring slow-dragged jigs to generate bites.
Flipping & Pitching: Slow flip to deep docks and boat lifts. Swim the bait down slowly on the fall.
Best Conditions
Thick grass mats, laydowns, dock pilings, boat houses, flooded bushes; murky water; spawn and post-spawn; summer shade
Watch the line, not the water. Set the hook the instant the line twitches or moves sideways — bass in cover bite and spit fast.
More Techniques for Pymatuning Reservoir
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