Texas Hawg Hunter Posted October 26, 2014 Posted October 26, 2014 How do you tend to cycle through your lures on a fishing trip? I almost always start with a spinnerbait, then move to a jig or plastics, then maybe a different spinner or go to a crankbait, then back to a plastic...sorta alternating reaction vs. finesse lures. Quote
Super User Catch and Grease Posted October 27, 2014 Super User Posted October 27, 2014 Depends on a lot of things... Lately I've been starting with ethier a swim jig or squarebill depending on how active I feel the fish are. Quote
Ozark_Basser Posted October 27, 2014 Posted October 27, 2014 Depends on the cover or structure present, but I'll start off power fishing then go to something slower afterwards. Quote
Super User bigbill Posted October 27, 2014 Super User Posted October 27, 2014 Early in the am before twilight it's topwater. Then shallow cranks, the diving to 10' cranks. Then back to to pop water repeat till it's twilight. Little by little ill add rapala minnow, inline spinners and spinnerbaits as the sun rises. As it gets lighter and the bass start to move to there deeper haunts its a c rig with senkos and brushogs plus deep cranks. Throw in some inline spinners and spinnerbaits. I work over the Rocky point with a jig, shallow crank. On my first cast my topnocker 5/8oz and dripping wet with a scent. I throw it as far as I can in the channel away from me. This way the water is scented with the smell of the soup is on. Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted October 27, 2014 Global Moderator Posted October 27, 2014 If the first bait I pick up is working well there may be no cycling through other baits. 2 Quote
PersicoTrotaVA Posted October 27, 2014 Posted October 27, 2014 "The head plays games, but the belly never lies" I always fish what my gut tells me to fish. Quote
papajoe222 Posted October 27, 2014 Posted October 27, 2014 It depends on which search mode I'm in. If I start shallow and work my way deep looking for active fish, it's topwaters, spinnerbaits, cranks. Deep to shallow, it's cranks or a C-Rig, spinnerbaits and jigs. About the only time I'll change up is if conditions haven't changed since my last outing, or I'm marking fish or baitfish schools. Cold front conditions are a whole different scenario. Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted October 27, 2014 Super User Posted October 27, 2014 Timely question as I am rigging up for a charity tournament this weekend. This is my plan, but of course, always subject to change! Starting line-up: Cavitron Chatterbait/ Rage Tail Structure Bug trailer Megabass Ito Vision110 Later: Rage Bug (Jika rig) Norman Fat Boy LC RC 2.5 Rage Toad GYCB Kreature Sworming Hornet/ LFT Live Majic Shad Double Fluke Rig ( YUM Houdini Shad)) Panic Box: Baby Rage Craw GYCB Senko & Fat Ika 2 Quote
Texas Hawg Hunter Posted October 27, 2014 Author Posted October 27, 2014 Timely question as I am rigging up for a charity tournament this weekend. This is my plan, but of course, always subject to change! Starting line-up: Cavitron Chatterbait/ Rage Tail Structure Bug trailer Megabass Ito Vision110 Later: Rage Bug (Jika rig) Norman Fat Boy LC RC 2.5 Rage Toad GYCB Kreature Sworming Hornet/ LFT Live Majic Shad Double Fluke Rig ( YUM Houdini Shad)) Panic Box: Baby Rage Craw GYCB Senko & Fat Ika Haha, "panic box" I like that. Quote
Super User Catt Posted October 27, 2014 Super User Posted October 27, 2014 A lot of anglers start their morning off shallow near shore, I start off deep & offshore FYI: there is a deep bite going on at the same time as the shallow bite early in the morning & I find the bass bigger Quote
Super User WRB Posted October 27, 2014 Super User Posted October 27, 2014 I tend to fish where I believe the big bass are active at and use lures that are effective at those locations. Tom 1 Quote
Heron Posted October 27, 2014 Posted October 27, 2014 Really though, Fishing from shore, I tend to approach it from 3 different levels. Usually in this order, but not always. Topwater - Buzzbaits - Dog Walkers - Hollow Frogs Middle Water - Spinnerbaits - Chatterbaits - Swim Jigs Bottom - Jig/trailer - Worms or LIzards Thats pretty much my routine, in a nutshell. Quote
Heron Posted October 27, 2014 Posted October 27, 2014 I tend to fish where I believe the big bass are active at and use lures that are effective at those locations. Tom This is far too complicated, Tom. Quote
Super User J Francho Posted October 27, 2014 Super User Posted October 27, 2014 Top to bottom, shallow to deep. Cover and structure dictate what lures to use. Quote
primetime Posted October 29, 2014 Posted October 29, 2014 I like to pick apart visable structure first with weedless plastics and then start fancasting a bait I have confidence in and I can adjust weight and speed of retrieve with a soft swimbait/worm to figure out what they want. Same with a jig, you can swim it near surface, slow roll or crawl or hop it to figure out what else may work Quote
Super User Bankbeater Posted October 29, 2014 Super User Posted October 29, 2014 I usually start off with a weightless fluke, jig and trailer, some kind of t-rig, and some kind of crankbait. I will change the crankbait and t-rigged plastic if I don't get bites, but the fluke and jig stay on all day. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.