Gamefish

Smallmouth Bass

Micropterus dolomieu

Pound for pound the hardest-fighting freshwater fish in New England. Bronzebacks live in clean, rocky water, eat crayfish and baitfish with abandon, and jump like nothing else in the pond.

Ask serious freshwater anglers what pulls hardest for its size and a lot of them will say smallmouth. Bronzebacks live in the cleaner, rockier lakes and rivers of New England, from the Connecticut River to Quabbin, and they fight with a jumping, head-shaking fury that punches way above their weight. They are also a joy on light tackle and fly.

How to identify them

Smallmouth are bronze to brownish-gold with vertical bars along the sides and red-tinged eyes. The key to separating them from a largemouth: the smallmouth's jaw does not extend past the eye, and its dorsal fins are joined with a shallow notch (the largemouth's has a deep, near-separate notch and a jaw that reaches well past the eye).

Where they live

Smallmouth want clean, cool, rocky water, the opposite of a largemouth's warm weedy pond. Look for them on rocky points, ledges, boulder fields, gravel bars and current seams in clear lakes and moving rivers. Where you find crayfish and rock, you find smallmouth.

Tip Smallmouth are crayfish specialists. Fish baits that hop, crawl and tick along rocky bottom, a fleeing crayfish profile pulled over gravel and boulders is dinner-bell material.

How to catch them

Finesse plastics

Smallmouth eat finesse presentations all day: the drop shot, Ned rig, tubes and small soft-plastic craws are money, especially in clear water and on pressured fish. Fish them slow along rock.

Hard baits and topwater

Crankbaits that dig into gravel, jerkbaits, and, in low light, topwater walkers and poppers all get crushed. A smallmouth blowing up on a surface lure is a highlight of the freshwater year.

Fly

Smallmouth are superb on the fly. A 5- to 7-weight, a freshwater setup scaled up a notch, and crayfish patterns, Clousers and poppers will get you into fish all season.

Regulations Black bass (largemouth and smallmouth) are managed with size and creel limits and, on some waters, seasonal rules protecting the spawn. Confirm current freshwater regulations with MassWildlife before keeping fish.

Handling

Most smallmouth fishing is catch-and-release; they are worth far more as a sport fish than a meal. Wet your hands, support the fish, and get them back quickly, especially in warm water.

From the page to the water

Learn it here, land it out there

Reading is a great start. The fastest way to get good is a day on the water with someone who does it every day.

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Note: fishing regulations (size limits, bag limits, seasons, permits) change often. Always confirm current rules with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries (saltwater), MassWildlife (freshwater), or NOAA Fisheries (offshore/HMS) before you keep a fish.