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hunterPRO1

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About hunterPRO1

  • Birthday 06/27/2002

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Georgia
  • My PB
    Between 12-13 lbs
  • Favorite Bass
    Largemouth
  • Favorite Lake or River
    its a secret.
  • Other Interests
    crappie fishing, pan fishing, cat fishing, hunting, ,baseball, gaming, Motorsports.

Profile Fields

  • About Me
    personal best is 12 lbs 4 oz
    also fish for bluegill, crappie, channel catfish, and bowfin often.
    My top 5 baits are ribbontail worm, spinnerbait, lipless crank, flipping jig, hollow frog.
    "you cant let one bad moment spoil abunch of good ones" -Dale Sr.

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Short Fish (4/9)

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  1. How many could come off the bench and finish in the top half of the field in AOY? Not many, too many things to learn for someone that has only fished local. But the argument that average anglers could only ever compete on their home waters is bull hocks. Of course that's the only place they can compete; it's the only place they know. Not necessarily for any innate inability. It would take years to learn how to fish in all the different regions, and that is a lot of money invested in extracurricular practice. All while the economy is gone to trash and payouts are worse than they were in the early 2000s, in addition to sponsorship deals being harder to come by and less lucrative. Why would any average joe with a stable life want to go pro? They probably won't make it and end up majorly set back financially, or if they do make it the rewards really aren't all that great compared to other sports. These guys aren't getting rich, they are either kids born into money, guys that made a bunch of money so they could afford to fish, or they are barely scraping by because they need to go fish like they need to drink water. Honestly, if someone wanted to fish for a living, they are better of trying YouTube. The odds of making it are no better, heck they may be even worse. But the investment lost if you don't make it is far less than in pro fishing.
  2. I have a Dobyns Fury 735c with 50lb braid, really anything from 7' to 7'6 heavy with braided line 50lb+ is good to go. Some people say 7' isnt quite enough length, some say 7'6 is too long to walk the frog. I've used both with good success but 7'3 does seem to be most comfortable. Braided line is truly the most important part. Your frog matters too, I love my booyah pad crashers because they're soft. I'll throw a spro bronzeye when i find them on sale.
  3. Technique specific rods, for most techniques, aren't that much better than the classic 7'MH. The exceptions to this in my experience are frogging, flipping, cranking, large swimbaits, and finesse. For those things your equipment can make or break you.
  4. Depends on bait. frog or jig? gotta hit em hard. Jerkbait, crankbait? be careful to only use enough pressure to penetrate without tearing a hole. Everything else is somewhere in between.
  5. Anything over 30 seconds is too long, especially in summer and winter. Catch, Weigh, put back in the water for 15-30sec, pictures for 30 seconds, then release. You hold your breath for 2-4 minutes heifer, go ahead I'll wait.
  6. I would call myself a 7 at times when I get to fish a lot and a 5 or 6 when I'm out of practice. This year I definitely feel like a 7, I fished 5 small local tournaments for the first time and averaged in the top 25% and came within half an inch of winning one. I've started to fish offshore more and catch fish on deep brush and structure that I never would have found before. I've started paying attention to thermocline which is something I never thought about until this summer. I've fished paradise PFA about 15 times this year and have not been skunked once, which is hard to do on such a pressured place.
  7. "You don't need another rod!" -Nagging Heifer, 2023.
  8. Because 80 is too stiff and I have broken 50 before.
  9. I've never heard much about Talquin, but a friend of mine caught a 7 and a 9 on the same day out of Miccosukee last year. It's a really thick grass lake 30-40 minutes east of Talquin.
  10. Dottie actually died multiple years after that picture. That picture is from March of 2006. Dottie was found in May of 2008. Dottie first weighed over 20 pounds when mike long caught (probably intentionally snagged) her in April of 2001 and she was 20.75. That fish weighed over 20 pounds for 7 years, anyone who says that fish died of anything other than old age is wrong.
  11. Time on the water is the most important thing. More specifically time on the right water, in the right areas, with the right lures. Choosing the right body of water is the most important part, you can't catch what isn't there. Clear Lake and the Cal Delta obviously have big fish, they both put out many double digit fish each year. So, you are in the right body of water, I don't believe there is a change that needs to be made there. However, research on which lakes in your area are putting out the most or biggest fish never hurts. Both the California Delta and Clear Lake are world-renowned fisheries that get a lot of pressure. Because of that smaller, lesser-known bodies of water may actually have a better chance of yielding a big fish. Then you need the right area, big fish tend to congregate, and a lot of time schooling fish will be divided by size and bigger fish will stay with bigger fish and small with small. This holds true even for fish that prefer to stay tight to cover and ambush their prey. Bass are somewhat territorial and many times a large bass will not tolerate a smaller one in its school, or on the same piece of structure. Take notes of which areas seem to have the best combination of forage, cover, and depth range. Also remember what fish you catch in each area and their sizes, even if you aren't catching giants this can still give you a hint as to which area has more sizeable fish. If you catch 50 1-3 Lb fish in an area but none larger than that, then that is likely an area full of smaller fish that size. Likewise, if you catch multiple fish over 3, 5, or 7lbs in an area, then that area likely holds more fish of that size range or larger, as fish in that size range are more able to compete with a larger bass. Catching numbers does not always mean you are in a good area, in any given place there is a specific amount of prey for the bass, smaller fish take up less forage and there can be more of them competing for the same food source. In a spot dominated by larger-sized fish, there will be fewer of them because it takes more food to support each individual fish. As for lure selection, you generally want to match the overall size, shape, and color of your lure to whatever the forage is. In some lakes, the primary forage will be different for different sizes of fish. One prime example is the trout-stocked lakes in your state. Once fish became large enough to eat those trout, that became the primary food source instead of shad, shiners, minnows, crawfish, or panfish. A similar thing happens in ponds near where I live, bass will get large enough that minnows are no longer worth the effort to catch, and they begin eating a diet mostly composed of golden shiners over 5 inches long. They choose the shiners over bluegill because of the lack of dorsal spines, and their fragility as opposed to bluegill. Those are the same traits that make trout so attractive to bass in Cali, they are a large meal that doesn't put up too much fight and is easy to swallow. Large gizzard shad are another species worth mimicking, especially in the dog days of summer and middle of winter when they commonly have major die-offs and big bass will gorge themselves on dying gizzard shad.
  12. Thats what scupper holes are for.
  13. 5'6 OG Ugly stick and a zebco 733 with 20lb Cajun. My PB Bass was caught on that setup.
  14. You're going to be using it for a while then I've used one on my main frog/flip setup with braid for the last 8 years and it's still going. I've broken 3 rods with that reel.
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