Find 10 FOW, preferably near the edge of the weed beds on either side of the lake, far away from the crowds which means you'll have to hike a bit. Just stay out of the tall weeds that go almost to he surface. Once you find that spot, rat finkees, ratsos and shrimpos work for small jigs. I like paddlebugs, crappie critters and small berkely tube jigs. I tip all of these with the Gulp products, that way I don't have to worry about using or losing live bait. The earthworms, mealies and waxies all work well. I tip the crappie critter and paddlebugs with two mealies or waxies so that they beat against each other when I jig. If I use a worm, I use a whole one and leave the narrow end dangling - drives 'em nuts. Use some kind of scent to mask your odor. I like smelly jelly but it's oily and blocks your vision in the hole. Nitro grease is good but I really like the Berkely Power Dips, in either garlic or roe scent, as long as the color somewhat matches my jig color.
Antero is also a jigging lake, not much of a deadstick lake. If the action is slow I'll jig my plastic every 30 seconds to give it some motion while I'm slowly bouncing a kasty off the bottom. Don't overdo the kasty, try it for a few minutes and then rest it. Throw in a second plastic jig.
This should get you sarted on the right track. There are a lot of fish in that lake. You'll get your share of them before you know it.