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Scroggins: Now is the time for punching bugs

Scroggins: Now is the time for punching bugs

(Editor's note: Here's a short feature from Alan McGuckin at Dynamic Sponsorships.)

Terry Scroggins has caught a 9-pounder out of a Toledo Bend brushpile on a dropshot rig, a 44-pound limit on Falcon Lake dragging a Carolina rig across a submerged roadbed, qualified for 11 Bassmaster Classics and won $2 million in prize money.

But when “Big Show” burst on to the pro bassing scene in 2001, much of his momentum came from his supreme knowledge of pulling big fish from tremendously thick and matted vegetation. And according to Scroggins, right now – late autumn through winter – is prime time for punching small soft plastics through the thick stuff.

“Everybody thinks of thick green summertime vegetation when you talk about punching shallow, but right now is the absolute best time to be punching the big weight through the mats,” says the former autobody technician.

Proof of this statement came two weeks ago when Scroggins’ Team Toyota buddy Mike Iaconelli recorded the best bass fishing day of his life, catching a five-bass limit from public water that totaled 41 pounds, by punching big weights through thick vegetation.

“Whether you’re talking about Okeechobee, the Kissimmee Chain or even along the shoreline at a place like Lay Lake, bass get in the matted vegetation because it holds heat during the coldest months of the year and then serves as a pre-spawn staging area,” he explains.

In fact, one of his more famous exploitations of this pattern came during the chilly 2007 Bassmaster Classic on Lay Lake when he caught 39 pounds from the shallow, matted vegetation around the shoreline in that late February event … even though water temps were in the 50s.

> Tackle needs: This is the ultimate in heavy-cover, big-equipment bassin’, so Scroggins uses a 7’9” heavy-action rod from Mud Hole, spools up with 65-pound braid and uses a 1 1/2-ounce weight in front of the 3 1/4-inch Big Show Soft Plastics Punch Bug. Asked to choose his all-time favorite color, he cited black/blue with silver fleck.

> Relate to the roots: “The water willow and other grass at Lay had a vine in it that thickened up the canopy to make it even better. Roots are key to this pattern. Roots beneath the canopy act the like corner posts on a shaded boat dock,” explains Scroggins.

> Weather makes a big difference: “This bite can change daily based on the weather,” says Scroggins. “Typically, they’ll eat the Punch Bug while it’s falling, but if a cold front comes through you may have to pick it up and kind of hold it still against the underside of the canopy until one grabs ahold of it,” he says.

> Don’t jerk too soon: Scroggins ends his tutorial on wintertime punchin’ by warning not to make the biggest mistake most anglers do with this pattern. “Most people jerk way too fast when they get a bite in the mats. Let the fish pull it down just a bit and you’ll catch 90 percent more fish than if you jerk like you’re trying to club ‘em with a big jig in a flooded bush,” he warns.

And should you make that common mistake, let the area rest and come back a couple hours later, and there’s a real good chance that same fish will bite again in the exact same patch of grass.

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