This time of year (post-spawn summertime). Water temp should be mid 70's.
Current pool level should be similar to the second picture which corresponds to the navionics contour lines
Found an area on a lake where a big creek empties into the main river/lake and I believe it's where I'd like to focus my fishing. The lake is very low in the winter and you can see on google earth where the creek runs. I have the pic at low pool, normal pool, and the navionics chart of it. My main question is where would you try first to look for fish? Thanks guys
Making a trip to Kentucky Lake in early-mid June and was wondering about boat ramps and lodging towards the northern part of the lake. Any help/input welcome! Thanks guys
It's all about the bite. If the fish slams it, set the hook right away. If he just barely picked it up and it feels like there's dead weight at the end, but realize it's a fish, then give it a second before setting the hook.
Remember: Even the pros lose fish
I've never had trouble with this before and pride myself on not losing fish with a jig....
Back to the original topic: Don't you think a hook with 2 barbs instead of one; or a longer barb would land more fish with a heavy hook set?
The weed guard would not be thick/long enough to stop the hook from getting through the fish's mouth. I make sure of that with my overkill hook sets. It would always be when the fish jump (and yes I tried different retrieves after hooking a fish to keep them down).
Today I was fishing with a jig and had about 4 keepers in a row jump and spit my jig (including a 4-5 lber). Usually I have no problem with landing fish on jigs, but it made me wonder: why don't they make hooks with either multiple barbs or longer barbs? Obviously heavier hooksets would be necessary, but I feel like I do that anyways. Is it ethical/legal reasons or what?
Thanks for the input
Haven't fished there yet this year. Usually start going a lot when school is out during post-spawn and summer time. Usually catch 3-5 fish in the 3-5 pound range on any given weekend. You just gotta find the piles in 10-20 feet of water and find out what they're biting!
Well I am very acquainted with both baitcasting and spinning rod/reels. I have a BassPro 6'6 ML Carbonlie rod/reel combo that I abslolutely love for the smaller ponds and lakes that I fish. But I am planning on getting a bass boat soon and fishing bigger waters. With that I will need to get heavier setups to throw heavier lures.
Hey guys I have some general bass fishing questions. I do not need very detailed answers!
What rods(length/action/etc) should you use for different lures and different situations?
And what would a bass do through the different times of the year. For example-in the spring they key around shallower places to spawn.
Any advice would help!
Thanks guys,
Kellen
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