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merc1997

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  • Gender
    Male
  • My PB
    Between 12-13 lbs
  • Favorite Bass
    All three
  • Favorite Lake or River
    the one that i am currently fishing!!
  • Other Interests
    inventing

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  1. tom enjoyed the read. tells a lot about just how old we both are! i had bill haddock make me some of those barrel jigs long ago, and still have a few somewhere. bill also had some soft plastic baits that i used. i still have a bottle or two of pedigo trailers stashed somewhere also. bo
  2. at least from my experiences, bass at different times of the year, seem to have a distinct preference for big baits. here in the ozarks, this seems to occur in the hot part of the summer. big bass especially do not want to expend more energy than needed, and with the summer water temps a bass's metabolism is faster and requires more food. it certainly never hurts to experiment any time of the year though. bo
  3. i most definitely use all my senses fishing. in fact, i do not like even a hood over my ears when it is cold. i know that i do not fish nearly as well when i do have to cover my ears up. bo
  4. wrb gave you some very good advice. however, sometimes a fish coming off because of a poor hook up has more to do with bad hooking mechanics of what you are using. example, almost every spinner bait on the market uses the same type of minnow looking head. this head has a very slim profile, and is always going to turn your hook over flat when the head comes out through the lips on the hook set. this means that most of the bass you do manage to hook on that spinner bait are hooked in the side of the mouth or edge of the lip. this will result in several lost fish after hook up. bo
  5. each have a time and place. bo
  6. often times a muck bottom is not really conducive to dragging a jig. do you have vegetation growing?? if so, perhaps swimming a jig through the vegetation might be a better option. i fish table rock and surrounding lakes, and we do not have muck botoms to deal with. in my youth fishing ponds, i learned quickly that fishing a lure right on a muck or mud bottom did not produce. bo
  7. i read all the comments about getting all these taps, but what about when there is not a tap, but the bass has it. in all my years of fishing for bass, most of the time, there is not that traditional tap that everyone talks about. i love those times when the bite is that good tap, but that just is not the norm. most of the time, there is just something different happened that should not have, and i set the hook without thinking or feeling. i know it is a bite than many struggle with. flukes are the same way. most of the time, bass that i catch on a fluke are nothing more than a change in the pressure on the line underneath my thumb. hooksets are free. anytime something feels different or happened different, set the hook. you will be amazed at how many bass you hook. bo
  8. i might add that i have used catch and release for years, and it definitely helps keep your bass in good shape while in the livewell, providing you handle your water temps and o2 levels properly. bo
  9. someone had good thoughts about weighing the bass on the water and immediately release instead of hauling them around in the livewell. one of the drawbacks to that would be during spawning season, and most are caught sight fishing. a lot of times, the same bass can be caught over and over. not really quite right, and it is hard on the bass. perhaps there could be a way around that point. weighing and immediate release would be good, but the public weigh-ins are another source of revenue and exposure for the tournament and contestants. got to push the sponsors names somehow. bo
  10. how is it that they know where the bass came from??? bo
  11. fishing something such as a fluke sometimes the bass will just nip at it. my best advice is to set the hook immediately when you feel a bite. if you are missing, then wait until you feel them towing. as for jigs, set the hook immediately any time something different happens. however, when dealing with bass that are picking the jig up off the bottom, many times the first feel you get is the bass pinning the jig to the bottom, and the next feel you get is them taking the jig in. so, again, if you miss a few on the first feel, then make yourself wait to the second feel before setting. when fishing cover, the longer you wait to set the hook the worse your hook penetration will be because of all the things the bass has pulled your line through, and then you have to get the bass all the way back through whatever it has swam through while you are waiting. bo
  12. a worm hook with a piece of shredded nylon line. we were fishing for gar, and i caught an 8lb. bass on it. go figure. bo
  13. Spoons are a great fishing tool. one that can be fished any depth. very simple, but very effective. we have on a few occasions had the opportunity on table rock to utilize spoons such as the johnson silver minnow in flooded brush and vegetation. i can not think of anytime of the year that i do not have some type of spoon tied on a rod. bo
  14. i did a search and tom is dead on. there is a #3 hawaiian wiggler that is just a weedless spoon with a rubber skirt. the 300 series is a spoon type body with a sputter blade in front. tom, it amazes me how you remember the actual model numbers of all those old lures. i did go dig through my old stuff and found my old one with the spoon body and sputter blade. bo
  15. i am pretty old school, and usually fish a trailer of some sort on a spinner bait. i have seen way too many times that when using a trailer it eliminated bass slashing at the blades. i just feel that the trailer concentrates their attention to the business end with the hook. i have seen many bass caught without a trailer, but for me personally have had a lot more success with a trailer. bo
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