Terry and I decided we would hit smaller lakes and ponds on this Labor Day Weekend trip to Green Bay.  The first lake on our list was little Wescott Lake.  It is less than 100 acres, and shaped a lot like a bowl.  There are a lot of areas of deep weeds and weed edges.  The weeds are pretty thick, but the edges, like at most lakes, will produce.

When we arrived, we figured the easiest thing to do would be to just work the entire shoreline, after all, this place was tiny.  I stuck with a Slurppie ringworm, while Terry worked her worm and bobber.  The plastic combo I was using was money as the fish could not leave it alone.  While the fish were not huge, it was some of the best times I have had while “pond hopping”.  I will let the pictures do the talking for this post.

Wescott Bass Plastic Worm Oconto Wisconsin

The 1st bass of the day at Wescott Lake.


Wescott Bass Plastic Worm Oconto Wisconsin

Terry's first Wescott bass is a tiny guy.


Wescott Bass Plastic Worm Oconto Wisconsin

Another Wescott Lake largemouth.



Wescott Bass Plastic Worm Oconto Wisconsin

Same size as the others, its quantity today, not quality.




Wescott Bass Plastic Worm Oconto Wisconsin

Terry's biggest bass of the day.


Fish Totals:
Matt – 14 Largemouth
Terry – 2 largemouth, couple sunnies

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