Introduction: Big Bass Catch (The Fish)
This instructable teaches you where to look for 'um what lores/fly's to use, and the general do's and don'ts of bass fishing.
Step 1: Where to Look?
1.Aviod sandy or muddy bottoms, leafy or rocky is good
2.On the edge of the bank check for about a foot drop off, if you see it, it's good
3.If you see smaller fish in the pond, thats good too
4.The two number one places to cast off into are by a tree that fell into the water or a lilly pad
Step 2: The Lore/Fly
Lores
Any thing but bobbers!
(I recomend the fish shaped ones)
Fly's
All good
But no
crayfish
Step 3: The Technique
With lores keep a continuos speed of about 5 miles per hour and about every 10 seconds slow down to about 1 mile per hour for about 5 seconds.
With flys it's similar, cast out and make a short powerful tug on the line continuosly with about 3 second breaks between tugs
10 Comments
8 years ago
Crayfish is actually good for bass
13 years ago on Step 2
try rappalla x-raps and silver-black-sparkely jerkshad or flukes
13 years ago on Step 1
muddy bottoms is where all the large mouth live in florida
15 years ago on Introduction
Well where I live crayfish don't work
Reply 14 years ago on Introduction
if so your not fishing it right
14 years ago on Step 3
the idea is to get the fish interested if you slow down the fish will leave because it thinks its already dead. but if you reel then stop reeling but jerk the bait the fish will instinctively strike
14 years ago on Step 1
a leafy bottom is not good and sandy bottom is trust me I'm more than positive i have more experience than you
14 years ago on Introduction
3 versions of the crankbait you show happen to be crawfish imitations
15 years ago on Introduction
I beg to differ about not using crayfish flies. Where i am from in Louisiana the "crawfish" flies and crank baits are some of the most productive lures
15 years ago on Step 2
cool and"lores" is spelled "lures"