Solo Swimbait Fishing

After my previous post I feel its important to remind everyone that swimbaiting is not always difficult. Through the ups and downs remember that another “up” is on its way. This video was from my very next trip to the water. I pulled up to my first spot and made the very first cast of the morning. One spot, one cast, one fish. Sometimes its that easy.

The rest of the day was slower but I was able to get a second swimbait fish later in the day. Spring is approaching and the bite is improving. Get out to a lake near you and give it all you’ve got. Here is a link to the bait that this bass fell for: Mattlures Channel Cat Swimbait

Swimbaits Part 5: Endurance

When watching this site or reading forum discussion its easy to fall into the trap that big fish are always easy to catch. Don’t get me wrong, there are periods where it is a cinch and anyone can do it, but there are also those “other” days.
The other days are the ones we don’t talk about, the ones where the camera never gets turned on, and the big-fish-logs don’t get updated. The reality is, they happen.
In the spirit of keeping this site real I thought I would share one of those days with you. By the time I filmed this I was worn out, beat down, and mentally exhausted but I refused to give up.

After filming this video I finally got a bite. It HAMMERED my swimbait but when it came close to the boat it wasn’t my target species. These days happen, that’s reality. If you let them get you down, you’ll never be successful. I picked myself back up, went to another lake two days later and had a great time catching fish.
The moral of the story is, don’t give up. If you want a BIG bite its going to take some dedication, but you can do it. Get out there and keep slinging those baits. Endure the tough days and you’ll be rewarded with giant bites.

Winter Swimbait Retrieves

So you’ve decided its finally time to throw a swimbait. You head to your local lake and begin casting the bait around your favorite haunts. You visit a point or two, that break you caught those jig fish on last week, but its been 2 hours, 14 minutes, and 3… make that 4 seconds and you STILL haven’t had a bite!
In the back of your mind you start wondering if you’re doing it right. Maybe you have the wrong bait, Maybe the fish moved, maybe the fish in this lake don’t eat swimbaits, WRONG!
Odds are you simply aren’t fishing the bait slow enough. Welcome to December! If you want to throw a swimbait in December (and you should) there are two kinds of retrieves. The first retrieve is slow, the second is so slow it hurts.

Big bass are inherently lazy. (Thus the belly that helps them get above the 10 lb mark) In most cases they aren’t out roaming around hunting food, least of all in the Winter months. If you want to play the odds go back through the places you just fished and start slowing down. You may be surprised by what happens next!

Take a kid fishing

I spent the last week scoping out water, talking to friends, watching the weather, and anything else I could think of so that my nephew would have a great time when we went fishing. Game day came and the weather was perfect, we practically had the lake to ourselves and there were fish all over the graph. As luck would have it, the bite had shut down. One nice smallmouth to the side of the boat was all we had to show for a full day on the water.

As you can imagine I was a little bummed out. That is, until I started listening to what he was saying. He didn’t care that we didn’t catch fish. He got to see an eagle, run around on shore (track mud all over the boat), and throw his brand new crankbait. Sure, catching fish would have been nice but it wasn’t what made or broke his day.
The point of this story is that you need to take a kid fishing. Don’t have kids? Me either! Ask a family member or friend if their kids would like to spend a day on the water. They don’t care if you’re on fish or not and a day away from the tv, computer, and classroom will do them some good!
There will always be good reasons not to go but before you know it those kids will be grown up and won’t share our love for the outdoors. Stop your busy schedule for a day and head to a lake, stream, or river near you so that the little ones can fall in love with this sport we all love so much.