Rattlinrogue Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 What are your top three bass catchin' techniques.It may be your most successful or just your most fun or a combination of the two!My three are: 1)Floating jerkbait used as a topwater in lowlight conditions 2) the Carolina rig with a lizard or a finese worm 3) Pitchin'/Flippin' a tube or jig into cover Quote
Capt. George Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1. Gill Net 2. Cast Net 3. Dynomite A fourth method is a small dragger, if the lake has a big enough ramp... : by the way, Good Morning, you're worse then me...up before the sun! Have a great day! ;D George 8-) Quote
Capt. George Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 Did the Poll Best place to find bass in the winter? had to us "other" In a hard core bass fishermans live well! <):>>>< Quote
basspro48 Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1.pitching sweet beavers and jigs to shallow wood cover and matted vegetation. 2.skipping ZOOM trick worms under docks and overhanging trees 3.throwing small homemade spinnerbaits and burning them by deeper laydowns and seawalls. Quote
billybass Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1. Wacky worming a Zoom U-tail worm in just about any type of cover. 2. T-rigged worm. 3. Crankbaits. Quote
Guest whittler Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1. Crankbaits 2. Grubs 3. Did I mention crankbaits Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted December 16, 2005 Super User Posted December 16, 2005 1. Live bait, split shot rig 2. Soft plastics, weightless 3. Soft plastics, weighted But my favorite technique is fishing jerkbaits. Quote
Guest DavidGreen Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1)Pitching T-rigged worms. 2)Low light buzz baits. 3)Slow rolling spinner baits on windy rocky points Tight Lines! Quote
FutureClassicChamp Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1. Shallow Crankbaits 2. Deep Crankbaits 3. Walk the dog topwater Quote
kbj3579 Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1. Plastics - Weightless and t-rigged 2. Crankbait along rip rap 3. Spinner bait in spring. My favorite is Jig, still need work on that though. I think it's more of a confidence thing than anything else. Quote
Guest the_muddy_man Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1. weightlessTrigged worms Zoom tricks/orswamp crawlers and Manns Jelly 2. Original Floating Rapalas #7to#11 at sundown the jointed version 3. Whenm the fish arent bitting M-80's OVER THE BOW a fgure s pattern about 25 yards from shore paralell to the shore seems to work best ;D ;D Quote
GobbleDog Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 C-rigged Chompers (Senko type bait) for open water. T-rigged Trick Worms when casting at specific targets in shallows (lilly pads and docks). My third most productive technique is everything else...crankbaits, minnows, topwaters, etc... (obviously never as consistent as worms). Quote
DDbasser Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 (1) Jig and Pig (2) Spinnerbaits (3) plastics weighted and weightless Quote
basser89 Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 (1) Spinnerbaits (2) Flippin and Pitchin tubes (3) Wacky rig (4) Buzzbaits, sorry just couldn't leave that one out! Quote
Cephkiller Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1) Buzzbait 2) Frog 3) Crankbait These are the most fun/effective for me. Quote
Lightninrod Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 No. 1: Matt's Baby Bass swimbait--just started it this year and it's brought me my new PB, a 9 lber plus many others from 1.5 lbs and up. No. 2: Wacky-rigged, 5", color #222 Senko. No. 3: Pitched 1/2 to 3/4 oz rattlin' jigs with several different trailers. Dan Quote
skeeter944 Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 top three 1)texas rigged zoom trick worm 2) drop shot 4'' worm 3)7'' berkely power worm texas rigged with a weight Quote
WCCT Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1. Dropshot small handpoured worms 2. C-rig or split shot 4-5" lizards 3. Burning a spinnerbait Quote
Peter E. Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 Captain George's loading depth charges , fool proof! I on the other hand tend to go with: 1. Waked spinnerbaits 2. Soft plastics t-rigged 3. crank baits digging up the bottom Fish on! Peter Quote
Super User Matt Fly Posted December 16, 2005 Super User Posted December 16, 2005 Anyone of these can produce a trophy any time. Any top waters. Slow rolling spinners my own 18 inch plastics swim baits Quote
Super User KU_Bassmaster. Posted December 16, 2005 Super User Posted December 16, 2005 1) Pitchn'- any plastic 2) Flippn' - any plastic 3) Crankn' Quote
Rattlinrogue Posted December 16, 2005 Author Posted December 16, 2005 Since it's my thread,I get 3 more choices...LOL...1)spinnerbaits in the shallow cover 2)buzzbaits in the shallow cover 3)Horny Toads in shallow cover. Quote
Peter E. Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 For fishing shallow heavy vegitation like lilly paps and slop, I use: 1. In-Line buzz bait (hildebrant) 2. Large soft plastic frogs, lizard, or worms fished on top of the water 3. Trick worm With a stout action rod and heavy test, when you use these you can catch fish out of places most wouldn't even put a boat near!!!! Fish on, Peter Quote
Hookhead Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 Cranks at any depth Weightless T-rigged Senkos Pegged double tailed skirted grubs Hello, my name is Jeff and I am a crank bait addict. [move] ------------------------------------------------------<>~ <*)))><[/move] Quote
EZ_Spin Posted December 16, 2005 Posted December 16, 2005 1) 1/2 ounce White and Silver Roostertail 2) Finesse worm on a Spot Sticker Jig Head 3) Black Crankbait digging up the bottom at night The Rooster Tail is my go to bait for numbers and even big spotted bass on Lake Lanier but works everywhere. Quote
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