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Category Archives: Bass

The Chatterbait

The chatterbait is simply a jig with a blade attached to the jig eye that makes the sound of a“chatter” as it wobbles vigorously back and forth as water is displaced. The blade strikes against the head of the jig and this is the simple reason for the unique sound and action. Sometimes paired up with a soft plastic trailer, and other times without, this hybrid between and jig, buzzbait and a spinner bait provides enough sound, vibration and flash to gain the attention of bass in the murkiest of water. This makes the chatterbait a good choice for fall bass fishing as the bass return to the shallow water. The chatterbait is not entirely snag proof but will avoid hanging up better than some lures do. It is best fished where there is no heavy cover of grass or wood.


In the fall when seasonal rains cloud the water nothing can get the attention of a bass like the erratic movement and the unique sound of these unique lures. Using a steady retrieve on the beginning and then burning the lure to cause it to change direction. This will result in reaction strikes from the transitioning bass of fall. When fishing in deeper water, fish it like a jig allowing it to fall down along structure, quickly raise your rod tip when it reaches the bottom then let it fall once again to the bottom and repeat this presentation. Vary the cadence and the speed of this presentation until the bass show you where they are and what they want in a chatterbait offering.

 
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Posted by on October 4, 2012 in Bait, Bass

 
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Fall Bass Baits

 
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Posted by on October 4, 2012 in Bass

 

Seeking Summertime Bass


When it comes to fishing deep offshore structure, the new swivel jigs are entering into a whole new region of deep water fishing. Jigs like the Biffle Hardhead, the stringease Fastach Football Weight, the Punisher Hail Mary and the Zorro Buzza Whiplash, to name a few, are definitely innovations designed with the angler in mind. Some baits have attached hooks, others have snaps, and some have snap rings all giving a new action to deep structure fishing.  I am sure even newer variations of these baits will show up at ICAST this year, and all of them will be put to use in weekend and professional tournaments from now on due to their innovation of allowing the angler to create his own baits.


When summer bass are too deep for most crankbaits, these jigs allow anglers to get down deep, and crawl a bait off structure such as ledges and drop offs to even greater depths as deep as 25 feet where bass have been taken. Several offshore structures that will hold bass deep such as a wide ridge or a point will produce fish if anglers get a presentation down to them. Cover in relation to the structure of a stump, rock, or a piece of brush is the places designed for these jig innovations.

Anglers fishing the 1/2- and 3/4-ounce sizes when fishing more than 12 feet deep on points, ledges and humps are finding the jig produces well in the summer.  These jigs can be customized by the angler on the fly by choosing the soft plastic and the color that suits the conditions. In stained water jigging a black and blue soft plastic can be a good choice and brown can be used in stained as well as clear water, and a green-pumpkin jig in very clear water. Whatever color or style of bait the angler chooses can be quickly added giving the pride and confidence of catching bass with their very own custom bait.


A 7 1/2-foot flipping rod is ideal for these style jigs when matched with 12-pound fluorocarbon and a high-speed baitcasting reel. The long stiff rod and fast high gear ration reel will quickly takes up slack during a hook set, as the low-stretch fluorocarbon line guarantees that the hook sets with power. The sinking fluorocarbon allows the jig sink faster which often initiates reaction strikes.


Successful anglers retrieve these jigs with quick, short hops and the moving head adds action the jig like nothing bass are used to seeing. By beginning with the rod tip at 10 o’clock position and hoping the jig three or four times as they work the rod up to the 12 o’clock position and quickly drops the rod tip to 10 o’clock position while taking up the slack to repeat the process has been producing bass in the extreme conditions of summer. The slight hops with the swiveling head jig keep it close to the bottom allowing the anglers to feel the often subtle bites even better than when fishing solid jigs.

Summer is a good time to try one of these newer baits if you haven’t already.  In a short time anglers have found these jigs to be fish catching machines. I look forward to new innovations that will be unveiled this week at ICAST.  Anglers that face the heat of summer and those that take on the harsh winter in pursuit of bass rely on innovation to help them make time spent on the water productive.

Happy Fishing!

Featured Baits in this post:


Stan Sloan’s Zorro Bait Company’s Buzza Whiplash – http://stansloanzorrobaitco.com/whiplash.php


The Punisher Hail Mary – http://www.punisherlures.com/jigs/hillbilly-football.html


Attack Pak Fishing’s soft plastics –  http://attackpakfishing.com/

 
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Posted by on July 17, 2012 in Bait, Bass

 

Lost a lure

Got up to do a lil bass fishing this morning. Well it started off slow at 7am, round 7:30 the biting started to pick up, I was using my favorite little shallow diving top water minnow when all of a sudden as I began to retrieve towards the bank this huge largemouth went straight at it, I attempted to set my hook, but he was so big he snatched my minnow and swam away,

To be continued

 
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Posted by on July 10, 2012 in Bait, Bass

 

5 Tips for Catching Bass

http://www.worldfishingnetwork.com/videos/channels/getting-school-d-with-jp-derose/tips-for-using-light-gear-234428.aspx#.T_YhWqh4oao.email

 
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Posted by on July 6, 2012 in Bass

 

The Bass

Bass are one of the most popular gamefishes in the world with many species inhabiting both fresh and saltwater environments. They belong to the Perciformes order, which contains 40 per cent of all bony fish in the world. They tend to prefer warmer water temperatures, ranging from tropical to temperate habitats. Some of the more popular bass groups are black bass (largemouth, rock, smallmouth), temperate bass (striped, white), and sea bass (black sea bass, European sea bass, giant sea bass). The term “bass” is sometimes used to describe fish that are not technically part of the bass family, like South America’s peacock bass, which is actually a cichlid.

 
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Posted by on July 5, 2012 in Bass

 

5 Must know Bass Rigs, By Wired2fish

Learn five ways to rig bass fishing plastics to catch bass in any situation

We’ve had a bunch of requests to do a piece on how to tie several rigs for bass fishing with soft plastics and when and where to fish them. We’ll start with this overview piece with diagrams on how to rig the plastics. We’ll follow up with underwater videos to show how the rigs look in the water and we’ll expand on these rigs with more advanced rigs in future pieces. But for now here are the five basic plastics rigs we think every bass angler should know.

1.    The Texas Rig

How to tie a Texas Rig plastic for bass fishing
The Basics – This is one of the first rigs most of learned for soft plastics when we started bass fishing. The rig is pretty simple and becomes second nature after you rig about 1,000 worms this way.

You start by piercing the hook point into the nose of the worm. Push it in ¼ of an inch and then poke it out of the side of the worm at a 90 degree angle. Run the whole hook  out the side until you get to the eyelet. As you approach the eyelet rotate the hook so the hook point is pointed back towards the body of the worm.  Now lay the hook to the side of the worm keeping the worm straight. Make a mental note of where the bend of the hook intersects the bottom of the worm. That’s where you want to insert the hook point and then thread it into the body of the worm.

The rig is weedless and snagless if the plastic is covering the hookpoint. It presents the worm both horizontally along the bottom if a bullet sinker is added or horizontally towards the top if rigged weightless. It can also be fished vertically with a heavy bullet sinker in applications like flipping, pitching and punching. It’s the best way to present a soft plastic bait in heavy cover. Keeps the hook covered. It works in grass, rocks, brush, timber and manmade structures.

Advanced modifications – You can actually run the hook point back into the side of the bait and out the other side and then lay the hook point on the side of the body just pricking the point back into the plastic. This makes it a lot easier to stick fish on a hookset but it’s not as snagless around dense cover. This method is actually called Tex-posing.

Some folks will stick a tooth pick or other keeper like the Eco Pro Tungsten Diamond Pegs into the eyelet of the hook to lock the plastics in place on the hook. The more your plastics tear from fighting fish, the less weedless the rig will become. So if you feel like you’re starting to snag more, it’s time for a new plastic.

2. The Carolina Rig

How to tie a carolina rig for bass fishing plastics
The Basics – The Carolina rig is made to separate the worm from the weight so that the worm is a more natural horizontal freedom of movement. As you pull the weight along the bottom the worm will dance and dart and suspend momentarily behind the weight.

To tie the rig, you slide a bullet or egg sinker onto your line, then slide a bead or brass clacker on to the line behind the weight and hold them in place while you tie a barrel swivel to the end of the line. Now take a leader from 2 feet to 5 feet and tie that to the other end of the barrel swivel. At the end of your leader, you’ll attach a hook and then thread your plastic onto that hook either Texas rigged or Tex-posed.

This rig is weedless but it allows you to fish a worm faster through a larger horizontal area like a ledge, a flat, a weedline, shallow weed beds. It’s not particulary good around rocks like rip rap as it tends to hang a lot if you use a 1/2- to 1-ounce weight.  It’s a great way to feel the bottom with a heavier weight and find things like isolated stumps or clumps of weed. You can fish it fast, but as a general rule, you want to keep the weight in constant contact with the bottom. Think of it more like a slow crankbait. Just pull it a foot at a time with a side sweep of your rod; then take up the slack and do it again.

Advanced modifications – We’ve seen a lot of success with a very small weight like a 1/8-ounce bullet sinker and small plastics. It’s a finesse Carolina rig that can be fished on top of grass and through snag-prone cover more effectively.  Smaller finesse worms, French fries and even soft jerkbaits are extremely effective on this rig. And using a split shot with a small plastic and no swivel can be great tool in ultra clear water.

3. The Drop Shot Rig

How to tie a drop shot rig for bass fishing
The Basics – The drop shot rig presents the bait in a horizontal fashion up off the bottom but is a tremendously effective way to fish vertically. In contrast to the Carolina rig, the weight is at the bottom, and the hook is up the line anywhere from a few inches to several feet. With this rig, you can use the weight to hold your bait in one place and fish it up and down, shaking it and enticing fish to come in and take a bite.

To rig it you start by tying a standard knot to the hook but making sure to leave a long tag end from 6 inches to several feet in length depending on how high off the bottom you want to fish the bait. After you tie your knot, take that tag end and run it through the eyelet from the side the hook point is on. This will cause the hook to kick out with the hook point upward. Then Texas rig your worm onto the hook or if you prefer a small drop shot hook, just nose hook the worm just over the point.

At the bottom of your tag end, attach a drop-shot weight or a bell sinker. We like an Eco Pro Tungsten Pro dropshot weight and a VMC Spin Shot drop shot hook for our rigs.

You can fish it vertically in cover or make casts to deep structure and work it back slowly like a texas rig until you contact a piece of cover. Then stop and work it up and down trying to just move the slack and not move your sinker at all. As you put slack in the line the worm will fall. As you pull the line tight the worm will rise in the water column.

Advanced modifications – Using a small No.1 or 1/0 worm hook and texas rigging the worm can be very effective for fishing around standing timber and brush piles. Nose hooking on small finesse and drop shot hooks can be effective for open water. And we’ve found that wacky rigging the worm on the drop shoot hook is also effective for catching finicky bass.

We’ve also heard of anglers attaching a jig as the bottom weight to give the fish two different baits to look at.

4. The Wacky Rig

How to tie a Wacky Rig for bass fishing
The Basics – The wacky rig offers anglers a very natural looking profile to a bait that sits horizontal in the water but falls slowly vertically and can be fished in one spot very well. It can be a weightless rig or have a ring weights  or belly weights like the Eco Pro Tungsten Wacky Rig weight added to it to get it down in deeper water faster.

This is probably the easiest of the rigs to tie. Tie a hook to your line with your favorite knot and then fold the worm in half and pierce the worm through the middle.  Then after you cast, let it fall and give it a few slight twitches, then let it fall and twitch it some more. It looks like a real earthworm writhing through the water column.

This is a great technique in clear water. The fish need to be able to see the worm but it looks very lifelike. You can fish it around floating cover like docks or around bedding bass or bass relating to vertical structures. It’s hard to fish it over large horizontal areas because it works so slowly.

Advanced modifications – Lots of anglers like to use O-rings to keep the bait on the hook. We actually prefer split rings sized to the size of the worm we’re using. A No. 6 or No 4 works for a lot of the baits we fish like a Zoom Trick Worm and a Yamamoto Senko. It’s as effective on a drop shot as it is rigged weightless.

5. The Neko Rig

How to tie the Neko Rig for bass fishing plastics
The Basics – Really we consider this rig probably 4b as it starts as a wacky rig. But truth be told it’s the exact opposite of a wacky rig because of how the worm is displayed to the fish. Where a drop shot is a horizontal presentation mostly fished vertically, the Neko rig is a vertical presentation fished horizontally.

To tie the rig, tie your hook to the end of your line. Then pierce the worm through the middle just like a wacky rig. Now insert a lead nail weight or nail into the tail of the worm.  As you fish the worm, it will stand on end but as you twitch it, the worm will pull horizontally twitching forward while standing up vertically off the bottom.  A very unique presentation for a soft plastic.

Advanced modifications – Several great insert waits exist now for rigging this way. There are ball weights that insert into the tail, giving the appearance of a shaky head that you can move from the middle of the worm instead of the head of the worm. Split rings can keep the worm attached to the hook while fighting fish. Just slide the split ring over the worm to the middle and then run the hook point into the worm under the split ring to hold it in place.

These presentations give you five great ways to tempt fish with soft plastics. With weights, without weights and combined together, you can make a lot presentations to the fish until you find the one that most appeals to the bass on that particular day the next time you’re out bass fishing on your favorite fishery.

 
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Posted by on July 4, 2012 in Bass

 

Protect our Bass

Great info

DON GASAWAY'S BLOG

To some, watching a bass tournament weigh-in is about as exciting as watching paint dry.  To the contestants and their families it is very important.  To other bass anglers, it should be too. 

Bass tournaments are an excellent source of information about the health of the fish population within the lake.  In recent years, that information about Crab Orchard Lake in Williamson County, Illinois was rather foreboding.  Fish had declined in size and number for several years. 

A combination of efforts on behalf of local bass clubs and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources attempted to change the situation of this lake that was once known as southernIllinois’ “bass factory.” 

About 10 years ago, catch figures began to decline. 

Surveys by the IDNR resulted in recommendations to decrease minimum fish size and creel limits.  They also recommended the supplemental stocking of Gizzard Shad and the Crab Orchard Lake Bass Club…

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Posted by on June 18, 2012 in Bass