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| General Discussion (Everything Else) Discuss anything that doesn't belong in any other forums here. |
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#1
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I take back everything I said. This^^^
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#2
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Shiners and small bream work for me.
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#3
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Catching red fish with frogs is fricking awesome!!! so if bass are anything like that. I'm going to love it!!
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#4
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Cept bass don't fight nearly as hard. Still are fun to catch though. One of the biggest things with bass fishing is being very accurate with your casting. More important than the lure you use IMO. But to me the best lure to learn with is a weightles senko or a texas rigged craw with a 1/4 oz weight. Berkley havoc pit boss is money.
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#5
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Ok I see everyone is tight lipped. I'll give you the secret to bass fishing. Flying lure, helicopter lure, and a devils horse. Go get em!!!!
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#6
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For top water I can't seem to beat a Tennessee shad or Alwie Yellow magic plug... I get them at the country station in Broussard
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#7
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Quote:
That's killer too. |
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#8
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5" senkos (maybe a pack of 1/0 weedless wacky style hooks), trick worms, swim jig (with pack of trailers), flukes, brush hogs, bullet weights, and 3/0 EWG gamakatsu hooks. Buy a pack of barrel swivels and you can have a Carolina rig or TX rig, a pack of crimp on split shot weights so you can still throw your flukes and weightless stuff when the wind picks up. I'd say that'll put you back about 50 bucks. You'll get a lot of bites with just these for a guy that's just getting into it. You really don't need a huge variety of colors. I'd be 100% confident in telling you to get everything in watermelon red or any other watermelon color and you'll have just as much luck as you would if you bought 30 colors in every bait mentioned.
My best advice is to go with a few people first. Whatever you catch your first few fish on you'll develop a ton of confidence in. That's half the battle. It's not rocket science by any means, but you will never stop getting better at it. At the end of the day it's all about increasing your chances of getting bit, then increasing your chances of landing fish. There are a lot of small things you can do to help or hurt your chances, but just starting out don't worry about anything. Just fish, focus on making good casts, and build some confidence in a few different baits and areas. It can be overwhelming no doubt with the millions of baits, colors, and lines etc. Hats off to you though for wanting to learn something new though. It's all too easy to stay in your comfort zone and chalk up something you don't know how to do as lame or whatever. As seen on the glorious Salty Cajun quite often... lol |
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#9
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To start with just get a white spinnerbait and start trying to lose it by throwing it into the middle of every brush pile you see. You going to need to learn to fish a worm too but it can be frustrating if the bite is slow and you not sure if it is a fish or a log. Find someone with a pond full of fish when they are biting and go throw a worm until you think you have the hang of it. Sometimes the line does not even move or twitch they just suck it up and sit there. Takes awhile to get really good at it.
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#10
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Don't worry about backlashing when u throw a whacky work, they love to bite when your pulling backlash out. (Meaning they like to bite it when it's SLOWLY falling) |
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#11
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Another good place to start is to tie on a spinnerbait and just chunk it into a tree in your yard, keep doing this until getting it out of the tree doesn't piss you off anymore then go hit the basin...
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#12
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Quote:
:*****: |
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