Super User Catt Posted March 8, 2010 Super User Posted March 8, 2010 Over the last 12 months a tremendous amount of articles have appeared concerning punching vegetation. Now I will agree hooking into a Hawg (8lbs + in Texas) in matted vegetation is challenging but this year on Toledo Bend I was re-acquainted with Buck Brush. I recently came to the conclusion that no other type of cover is more difficult to pull a Hawg from than flippin' buck brush. First off no other type of vegetation is stronger than a buck brush limb of say 1/16" in diameter, really some one needs to make fishing line from this stuff. Flippin' buck brush is Redneck Bubba Bass Fishing at it's max Quote
brushhoggin Posted March 8, 2010 Posted March 8, 2010 googled a few pictures, not sure i was looking at the right pics. white fowers? strong smell when in bloom, extremely drought/freeze tolerant? if s,o these things are like trees!i can't imagine fishing in that. i cant fathom fishing anything worse than hyacinth in its peak lushness here in mississippi. is this what you're talikng about? Quote
IwillChooseFreeWill Posted March 8, 2010 Posted March 8, 2010 Not sure he has seen this Florida vegetation that roots from the bottom fairly thin but then the top 2-3 feet of the water column is so thick it stops a moving boat and tangles any motor that gets into it. Even had some stop my canoe at a local lake the other weekend, had to use the paddle to lean forward and pull myself forward as if I was on grassy dry land... it was rough. I do plan to get to those same areas in the heat of the summer, use my paddle to make a hole in it and use a jig or drop shot setup in the middle of it. Quote
Super User .ghoti. Posted March 8, 2010 Super User Posted March 8, 2010 Aw, you southern guys ain't seen nothin. Just try punchin a jig through 12-14" of ice. Takes a 22lb jig, tossed straight up in the air, at least 200 feet, to get any penentration. Quote
Super User Catt Posted March 9, 2010 Author Super User Posted March 9, 2010 Aw, you southern guys ain't seen nothin. Just try punchin a jig through 12-14" of ice. Takes a 22lb jig, tossed straight up in the air, at least 200 feet, to get any penentration. That's funny right there See the brush behind the lilies? That's buck brush! Quote
Taylor Fishin 4 life Posted March 9, 2010 Posted March 9, 2010 u can sometimes slingshot with a spinning rod under them just use about 20 lb braid Quote
The Bassinator Posted March 9, 2010 Posted March 9, 2010 Maybe you should ask the saltwater guys what they use for fishing mangroves ;D Quote
bmadd Posted March 9, 2010 Posted March 9, 2010 I agree with that Catt. That's some of the better spring/early summer flipping cover on Kentucky Lake. You can wrap a fish around brush on the hook set if you're not careful! Quote
Triton21 Posted March 9, 2010 Posted March 9, 2010 I also agree. This is some the best and most challenging cover to flip. If I am lucky I can land 3 out of 5 fish I hook. Kelley Quote
Super User Catt Posted March 9, 2010 Author Super User Posted March 9, 2010 Please understand we aint fishing just the outer edge! The distance from the outer edge to the actual bank is 15-20 yds & some areas the buck brush is isolated patches ranging in size from that of your living room to the size of your entire house. I use the trolling motor to pull me as far into the brush as I can. Then with my partner and I standing on the bow we grab the branches and pull the boat forward. Owning a smaller boat is an advantage but so is not worrying about scratching Gel-Coat Quote
Super User fishfordollars Posted March 9, 2010 Super User Posted March 9, 2010 Great example of why i like to target prespawn fish... The roots will lay waste to a TM prop to. Quote
Super User .ghoti. Posted March 9, 2010 Super User Posted March 9, 2010 Catt, after seeing that picture all I can say is, I don't have any gear that would pull a bass out of there with any kind of consistency. Except my muskie rods. Looks like a real challenge. Quote
Super User RoLo Posted March 10, 2010 Super User Posted March 10, 2010 If I'm not mistaken, buck brush is another name for "buttonbush" (Cephalanthus occidentalis). It gets its name from the button-like flowers that it sports on-and-off throughout the summer: http://www.birdmom.net/WildflowersWhite/Buttonbush.jpg The first time I ever encountered buttonbush was at Lake Marion in Santee Cooper Reservoir, SC. I've fished lots of it since that time however, in fact, Lake Walk-In-Water, FL (my ex-home lake) supports lots of buttonbush in the shallow zone (alongside water primrose & pickerelweed). It's a good bass-holding plant, but rather than fish "in" the buttonbushes, we fish "around" each bush, chipping the edges and occasionally hanging up > Roger Quote
Super User Catt Posted March 10, 2010 Author Super User Posted March 10, 2010 It's one in the same Roger except some here in Texas will argue it aint It is without a doubt the nastiest cover to pull a bass out of, I use a 7' rod with only 10' of 65# braid hanging off the end since most of my flips are within 1-3' from the boat. I drop the jig through any openings larger than the jig and then figure how to land the bass after I set hook. I have been known to get out of the boat to land a Hawg! Quote
Super User RoLo Posted March 10, 2010 Super User Posted March 10, 2010 It's one in the same Roger except some here in Texas will argue it aint It is without a doubt the nastiest cover to pull a bass out of, I use a 7' rod with only 10' of 65# braid hanging off the end since most of my flips are within 1-3' from the boat. I drop the jig through any openings larger than the jig and then figure how to land the bass after I set hook. I have been known to get out of the boat to land a Hawg! Wow! If I were intentionally pitching INTO that nasty stuff, I'd probably don a pair of hip waders ;D In any case, as soon as there's a pickup, it's Yank-and-Crank! Roger Quote
bmadd Posted March 10, 2010 Posted March 10, 2010 The buckbrush I encounter here on Kentucky Lake is the exact same stuff Catt showed. Quote
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