BIG BASS FISHING APPS by joey monteleone | Sep 17, 2014 | Big Rig, Fishing, Freshwater, Instructional, JK Team Posts | 3 comments Common sense clues to fishing feel baits for BIG bass Too often people seek technology for a common sense problem. There’s an app for that, real world common sense solutions. I describe it as “separating yourself from your senses”. Shut off your I-Phone, I-Pad and other electronic devices. Used in conjunction with electronic aids, your natural cognitive abilities will have you hooking big bass before you can reboot. Rarely do you make a mistake and catch a big bass. Here are a few tips so you can thumb a few more bass. Do you feel me? – Keep three point contact with your feel type baits at all times. These include plastic worms, curly tail grubs, lizards, soft plastic craws, tubes and jigs. Use the rod tip, the handle and the line resting over the back of your thumb or between your fingers for a third reference point to sense a bite. Watch the line but trust your sense of feel. Braided line can help you sense more of what is happening at the other end of the line. Loosen up – When fishing feel type baits it’s always better to hold the rod loosely in your hands. A death grip on the rod makes it harder to feel the subtle strikes, relax your hands and fingers and you’ll feel more of what the bait and the bass are doing. Your tight grip reduces sensitivity and puts a gap in the time you sense a fish and set the hook. Go long or go home – The fishing rod; employ a longer rod for casting (or pitching) to get desired distance, the increased length loads the rod for longer casts. Tip speed loads the tip and sends the bait out with a higher velocity that translates into increased distance. Another major advantage of the taller rod is you also can pick up the line faster on the hook set because of the additional length. There is a limit to length. Match the rod to the angler. If you can handle a seven foot stick by all means use it. Go up or down in length by the room you have to cast and store the rod. A quality collapsible rod is a big advantage in both cases. Go swimming – Swim soft plastics. Regardless of what some folks espouse and communicate I believe when first starting just cast the bait and lift the rod to create a swimming motion. This is easy; it looks natural and provides an arc and a falling motion which triggers lots of strikes, other retrieves works but this, day in and day out produces hits. Swim the bait and take the rod to the ten o’clock position. Lower the tip and reel line for full contact fishing. Concentrate / Confidence – Paying attention to what the bait is doing, how it feels and any refusing to be distracted will position you to identify a “pick up” and prepare you for the BIG bass battle. I trust my rod, bait, line, knot, knowledge, hook set, drag and ability to hook and land any size fish. I’ve never made a cast that I didn’t believe I was going to catch a fish. An Optical Conclusion – Depth finders aside, you can see many objects with quality sunglasses. If you see a branch sticking up through the surface of the water a little detective work tells you it’s attached to a tree and maybe even the relative size of the tree below. Bass cover comes in the form of weeds beds submergent (below) and emergent (above) no electronics required, pull up to the next window please. Boat docks equal overhead cover and potential food sources, fish them from every direction and pitch or skip baits under these fish holding structures. Rock piles radiate the suns heat in the winter, early spring, fall and winter. A degree or two warmer of water temperature will draw and hold fish. Get the picture? Fish structure. Keep Your Feel Bait Wet – It’s easy to become disheartened when the bite is slow. It is you remember called fishing. Catching comes when you do everything correctly. Maintain a positive approach, try familiar techniques and areas first and then go ahead and experiment with new techniques and seek out fresh waters. If you cast and retrieve your lure twice per minute you’ll make a 120 casts per hour. If you fish for eight hours you will make almost 1000 casts. You can expect if you are the average fisherman to catch one fish about every 90 minutes. (Sorry that’s the average) Keep casting, stay focused and be ready. If you’re not casting you can’t be catching. Sometimes the biggest bass comes in the last hour of the trip. Be an Accu-caster – Learn to cast accurately. You don’t have to put the bait in a dime but try to keep it in the same zip code. The strike zone of a bass is greatly exaggerated. In hot water, cold water, muddy water and other scenarios their strike zone gets smaller. It’s a simple fact that the farther they have move to catch their prey and eat the more energy they expend. If they move too far to eat too small a meal it’s a losing proposition. They would actually get smaller. To gain weight or minimally maintain their size they feed opportunistically. Close, easy to catch and “upsized” is a good proposition for BIG bass. Put the bait close to the bass, make it look real and hang on. Simple stuff – just a common sense app for the kayaker looking for a trophy bass. 3 Comments Eric Jackson on September 17, 2014 at 1:40 pm Great Stuff Joey! Keep ’em coming! I learn something every time I read your blogs! Sincerely, Eric Jackson Reply Joey Monteleone on September 19, 2014 at 1:42 pm Thanks for your kind words, they inspire me to share the decades of knowledge gleaned from my frequent fishing miles! Look forward to meeting you and sincere thanks for your support! Reply Eric Jackson on September 17, 2014 at 1:41 pm Great Job Joey!! I learn something every time I read your blogs! Thanks and keep ’em coming! 🙂 Eric Jackson Reply Submit a Comment Cancel replyYour email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *Comment * Name * Email * Website Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ
Eric Jackson on September 17, 2014 at 1:40 pm Great Stuff Joey! Keep ’em coming! I learn something every time I read your blogs! Sincerely, Eric Jackson Reply
Joey Monteleone on September 19, 2014 at 1:42 pm Thanks for your kind words, they inspire me to share the decades of knowledge gleaned from my frequent fishing miles! Look forward to meeting you and sincere thanks for your support! Reply
Eric Jackson on September 17, 2014 at 1:41 pm Great Job Joey!! I learn something every time I read your blogs! Thanks and keep ’em coming! 🙂 Eric Jackson Reply