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Let us be clear: we LOVE fall fishing on Lake Cumberland, and you should too. Sure, there are plenty of reasons to love spring fishing (and we do), but there's something truly special about fall. You can feel the sunsets creeping earlier, the evenings growing colder, and the air getting crisper. The sweaty summer slog is over. The wakeboats and jet skis are gone, and now is the time to catch some true giants. So why fall? The Fall Feed.
The Fall Feed.
Bass, like many animals, need to feed up before winter. This means they're not only bigger in weight than during summer or winter, but they're also more actively feeding. However, there's a catch—fall fishing can sometimes produce some frustrating days on the water. We've caught some absolute tanks in the fall, and we're here to share our high-level approach focused on fall patterns. For more detailed examples, check out our posts for specific days and patterns.
Fall fishing can be divided into three main periods: Early Fall Transition, Peak Fall ("The Fall Feed"), and Late Fall Transition. No matter where you are in the country, the general cues for the fall season are the same: air temperatures dropping, water temperatures decreasing, and shorter days with less light.
The key to early fall fishing? **BAIT, BAIT, BAIT**. The focus during this period is all about finding baitfish, as bass are moving to follow their food source. Baitfish are transitioning to the shallows, and the bass are right behind them, chasing them into creeks, pockets, shoals, humps, and flats.
Bass will often stop on breaks in the path to the back of the pocket—these could be main points, secondary points, lone docks, trees, or patches of grass. It’s all about staying mobile and following the bait.
This is the period where bass are **gorging, eating, schooling up, and chasing bait**. With water temperatures in the high 60s to 70s and the leaves changing color, the bass have followed the baitfish all the way back into creeks and flats.
At this point, it's less about transition and more about location—the fish are already where the food is, and they’re aggressively feeding. Expect bass to be highly concentrated around the biggest bait schools. This is prime time for fast-moving baits like crankbaits and topwater lures.
Late fall is when the bass begin to **leave their fall locations and transition toward their winter patterns**. Temperatures drop significantly, and you can feel the difference in the air. This period can be the trickiest time to fish in the fall.
Bass will exit the shallow areas they were feeding in, often stopping at points or structures they used during the early fall—anything that breaks the contour, like points, humps, or rock piles. The movement is similar to early fall, just in reverse.
During the fall, bass can generally be divided into two groups: **shallow bass** and **deep bass**. Understanding where each group is likely to be found can help you target them more effectively.
Shallow Bass: These bass are found around the backs of creeks and coves, along grass lines, and up against hard cover like laydown trees, docks, and rock piles. As the vegetation starts to die, shallow bass will move to the liveliest grass beds or shift to hard cover like stumps and docks. Look for creek arms with deep water access all the way back, which allows the bass to corral baitfish throughout the area.
Deep Bass: These fish are focused on structures like bluff walls, creek channel bends, long tapering points, and offshore humps. Deep bass will gather around the best structures with quick access to deep water. This movement is entirely baitfish-driven, so finding bait is crucial for targeting deep bass. Primary points near deep water are especially productive, as they offer verticality—bass can move up to feed and retreat to deeper water for security.
These bass were caught on a buzzbait in the fall 2023 on Cumberland
These images of Cumberland are courtesy of the Tactical Bassin YouTube channel, which we love and recommend. Here they highlight where to go for "deep bass". The first image shows channel swings on bluff walls.
For this pattern, you want to target the back of long creeks, especially those holding large schools of baitfish. When we say the back, we mean the back. We joke about not being afraid to fish the mud. We’ve had fantastic days fishing extremely shallow water.
Some of our favorite baits for shallow bass are topwater baits (frogs, poppers, pencil poppers, buzz baits) and moving baits: squarebills, crankbaits, swimbaits, jerkbaits, and chatterbaits.
Color, size, and profile will be influenced by conditions. Red is a great color to throw in the fall, but the better the visibility (clear water, sunny day, etc.) the more we prefer natural colors. The depth will dictate just how shallow a bait you want (deep diving crank vs. square bill).
Focus on shallow wood cover such as laydowns, bushes, and docks early in the fall. As the season progresses, target rock structures and riprap as bass transition from wood to rock cover. On Cumberland, we love where you can visibly see the rock type transition on a channel swing or creek arm.
Bridges are rarer on Cumberland, but fishing the gravel rock and other brush around them can be effective. The scattered rock holds heat and provides an ideal feeding environment for both baitfish and bass.
For these fish you want to target structures like bluff walls, creek channel swings, offshore humps, and long tapering points. Channel swing banks provide verticality, making them ideal for bass that need easy access to deep water. Fish laydowns, boat docks, rocky banks, and sunken brush piles along these swings. As always, look for distinct “transition points” on channel swings. The most obvious are changes in rock type.
Some of our favorite baits for deepwater bass are standard topwater like poppers, pencil poppers, buzz baits (especially in the morning, but we have success on shaded banks, too). Moving baits we like are deeper diving crankbaits (think DT-10 and deeper), swimsuits, jerkbaits, and chatterbaits. We also recommend baits that can be fished more “vertically” or in a “yo-yo” pattern like spoons, tailspins, and blade baits.
Color, size, and profile will again be influenced by conditions. Red is a great color to throw in the fall, but the better the visibility (clear water, sunny day, etc.) the more we prefer natural colors.
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