bassin_man Posted February 15, 2007 Posted February 15, 2007 Been watching/listening to the FLW weigh in from Lake Travis. Everytime they ask them what they caught them on they usually say dropshot, shakeyhead, or a varient of it. Whats your take on this? Is finesse fishing taking over as the go to technique? Quote
carySE406 Posted February 15, 2007 Posted February 15, 2007 I was thinkin the same thing, hundreds of fish just got picked out of Lake Travis on finesse techniques and it made me wonder how used the fish are to seeing a finesse worm or small jig. I mean, this technique cant work forever I guess but they were catchin a lot of small fish. It also seems that every fishing show I watch is about the shakey head, I talked to a guy on Kentucky Lake that said hes been catching fish like that for years and just now is everyone using it. So I think it is taking over as a catch a lot or smaller fish technique, but many will probably only use it in "tough" conditions. Quote
Super User Raul Posted February 15, 2007 Super User Posted February 15, 2007 We old farts have been finessin ' them basses for quite a while. "Shakey head", "drop shot", "flippin", "pitchin" .... fancy new names for rigging and casting techniques I learned over 3 decades ago. : Quote
bassin_man Posted February 15, 2007 Author Posted February 15, 2007 Definately tons of smaller fish that have been taken today out of Travis using finesse. With one nice bass thrown in so far on a C-rig. Quote
Ky_Lake_Dude Posted February 15, 2007 Posted February 15, 2007 I love to power finnese fish. When I do that I'll swim a small jig or fish a shakey worm fast. Quote
Pond-Pro Posted February 15, 2007 Posted February 15, 2007 I think that finnesse fishing is becoming more popular because of the higher fishing pressure. Also remember that lake travis is 30ft. lower, and is really cold right now. Also, there were 400 anglers on it today. Those conditions favor finness methods. Quote
adamcjones Posted February 16, 2007 Posted February 16, 2007 Finesse fishing is all in the news right now cause its the middle of the freakin winter. It starts heating up and you'll hear all you want about spinnerbaits and jigs...dont u fellers worry Quote
Super User Catt Posted February 16, 2007 Super User Posted February 16, 2007 We old farts have been finessin ' them basses for quite a while. "Shakey head", "drop shot", "flippin", "pitchin" .... fancy new names for rigging and casting techniques I learned over 3 decades ago. : Where y'all been; Aint nothing new Quote
CJ Posted February 16, 2007 Posted February 16, 2007 I think one certain presentation is going to dominate a tournament be it finesse or power.Seasonal conditions and body of water the tournament is held on,helps dictate what type of pattern that dominates.Finesse has always been there.It is versatility that may be taking over. Quote
Super User MALTESE FALCON Posted February 16, 2007 Super User Posted February 16, 2007 My dad and I were drop shotting fifty years ago..........it just didn't have a fancy name. Falcon Quote
gatrboy53 Posted February 16, 2007 Posted February 16, 2007 i heard travis is known for numbers of small bass no matter what they use.finess fishin in the dead of winter is not new.fish are deep and want smaller offerings.kvd caught a 12# on a shakey head last yr.,a friend of mine just caught a 12# out of 40'+ water on a d.s..finess techniques catch fish when all other tactics fail. Quote
FIN-S-R Posted February 16, 2007 Posted February 16, 2007 Clear water, cold water, high pressure, negative bite conditions, all favor finnesse techs. On lake travis you have all 4 going on right now, so it just stands to reason that finnesse is the way to go. Quote
Blue Streak Posted February 16, 2007 Posted February 16, 2007 I am another one of the old guys who has been using these techniques for many years we just never had a name for them. Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted February 16, 2007 Super User Posted February 16, 2007 Blue Streak, Welcome aboard! Quote
Siebert Outdoors Posted February 16, 2007 Posted February 16, 2007 We old farts have been finessin ' them basses for quite a while. "Shakey head", "drop shot", "flippin", "pitchin" .... fancy new names for rigging and casting techniques I learned over 3 decades ago. : Where y'all been; Aint nothing new Some of us arent even 3 decades old yet. So all we know are these fancy names. Quote
Super User fourbizz Posted February 17, 2007 Super User Posted February 17, 2007 Some of us (me) just don't give a crap. Quote
Super User Maxximus Redneckus Posted February 17, 2007 Super User Posted February 17, 2007 I think they do it for all the reaosns posted BUT also its a lot eaiser to catch 5 2lb bass then it is to catch 5 5 lb bass Quote
bass_101 Posted February 17, 2007 Posted February 17, 2007 I think finess fishing is a great way to get a quick limit. If I fished tournaments, I'd start out with some type of finess fishing and get a quick limit of fish. Then I'd slow down and fish "regular" baits such as jigs, cranks, spinnerbaits ect. ect. I agree that finess is taking over, but I think the pro's or tournament anglers that fish finess style's will be more consistent throught a season. Just my opinion. Quote
Guest avid Posted February 17, 2007 Posted February 17, 2007 tournament fishing is basically getting a limit and then culling. Dinkathons is what many of them end of being. Quote
cabela10 Posted February 17, 2007 Posted February 17, 2007 I think the finesse bite is working on Lake Travis because of the drastic changes they had in weather the night before the tournament. It made the fish negative and not wanting to chase baitfish. Majority had to slow down and fish for 5 bites. Quote
slinging southpaw Posted February 18, 2007 Posted February 18, 2007 Gary Klein once said at a seminar "The reason the fisherman are catching all these fish on finesse baits is because that's what they were using when they caught the bass". Basically saying that "You can't catch bass on a spinnerbait if your not throwing spinnerbait. :-? Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted February 18, 2007 Super User Posted February 18, 2007 slinging southpaw, Welcome aboard! I agree with avid, five fish is the key, everything else is icing on the cake. Quote
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