Here are some bass fishing guides to become a better under Fisher.
The technique:
The bait must fall to the preferred depth, then you have to shake the rod tip. For this, you'll be getting the fishes attention. Do this for at least 30 seconds, then shaking again for about 2 or 3 intervals of seconds, and pull slowly about six inches. Then down again, slowly back and down and repeating the process. The first thing to remember, if not biting is to slow down.
Tips:
• During the spring, fish up (the boat's position in shallow water and cast to deep water) and using a weight of 1 ounce / 8.
• Fish decline in the fall.
• Try using a Texas rig worm to avoid crashing.
• Fish out the worm and keep 90% of suspended time.
• Always try to sharpen the hooks to make sure you have maximized the percentage of connection.
• When doodling, it is critical to maintain its natural presentation by the reduction of hooks 1 / 0 or less, and by making a delicate, straight to your bait is to maintain a natural presentation.
• The clear water can be difficult. The secret is to keep fishing worms whistle slack in your line and "shake" the bait instead of dragging. The shaking of the rod and light line gives the worm, worms, or reaper an amazing action.
When to go:
When you go to hit a low during the day and when it gets too hot in the lake are good signs that it is time to start fishing at night. Night fishing is usually practiced when the water is in the middle of the 60 years or more.
Places to fish:
When the fish at night is a question frequently by fishermen under. Bass do not move great distances in most situations. smallmouth bass, especially, have shown that they stay home. As the summer progresses, the bass tend to move more and not come up shallow, even at night in many lakes. Night fishing is productive when the bass are located within the zone of 20 feet
Tips and Guides
• Put only as far as water clarity dictates; stay close enough for consistent accuracy.
• Try to make the lure land on the water with as little noise as possible. Cast beyond the goal whenever possible.
• In windy weather, put tension on the line just before the lure touches down. This will straighten the line and prevent blow through obstacles.
• Learn casting techniques that permit a low trajectory, such as flipping, pitching, casting and casting gun under the table.
• Use a quality rod and reel under the weight of the lure. Bars with a white brush, but relatively fast (flexible) tip are easier to launch than rigid or flexible rods evenly.
• Distribution of the wrist, not the arm and shoulder.
• Lower the lure a few inches below the rod tip before casting, which gives an extra boost for the cast.
• Make sure "load" the rod tip, causing it to bend backward, on the back cast, then whip the rod forward smoothly.
• Fill the reel to reel any 1 / 8 inch from the edge of the reel. DO NOT OVERFILL!
The Flip-Cast, the use of your wrist, not his arm.
• Focus on the place you want to hit, not what you want to lose.
• Use plenty of scent when trying to penetrate thick cover - it acts as a lubricant.
• Respect the basic template colors (black / blue, brown / brown, black / chartreuse).
• Use a plastic worm with a glass of accounts between the worm and the weight for inactive fish.
• If you think it is a strike, reel down until the bar is in a position before checking hookset.
• The strike is something different (something not felt in a bathtub!).
• Tighten the drag to the bottom for better hook sets.
• Use 17 to 25 pound test bait casting gear, 10 to 14 pounds in the turning test (for flipping finesse baits).
In order to establish a pattern that is essential to understand how to live a low in their environment. Knowing where the bass can be found at any time or place is something that should be developed. Always go fishing with a plan in mind.
Remember that all the fish you catch can reveal clues about how to take next. After establishing a pattern, they realize that when the action slowed down in the area to fishing, then you can find more areas that meet the same criteria.