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Non-Cattle Specific Topics
Sports, Hunting, Fishing & Wildlife
Warmer days = bass biting
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<blockquote data-quote="Warren Allison" data-source="post: 1842729" data-attributes="member: 40587"><p>Crappie is easy, once you find them. Just use minnows, or small curly tail jigs, or small spinners like a Rooster Tail. Once you find a school, usually in the tops of trees and brush, you can just sit there on them and get one every cast. Bass? A whole different story. They don't school. I fished tournaments from 1992 til 2001. I had 7 huge tackle boxes of every kind of lure there is. I carried 14 rod and reel combos, for every kind of lure and set up there was. In a given day, you might use Carolina rigged worms, spinner baits, buzz baits, jerk baits, or pitch a pig n jig, And for each kind of lure, you had to have every size and color combo they make. It got to be work more so than fun, sometimes. But, it is almost an addiction. Now days, when I go, I take a Carolina-rigged rod for the plastics, a rod for spinner baits and top-water, and one to pitch jigs. And only three tackle boxes! My favorite thing to do, if and when I ever get a chance, is to hit the Ga coast and fish the coastal creeks and flats for redfish, speckled trout, and flounder. I can do it with my bass boat and tackle, and these, to me, are the best tasting salt-water fish there is.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Warren Allison, post: 1842729, member: 40587"] Crappie is easy, once you find them. Just use minnows, or small curly tail jigs, or small spinners like a Rooster Tail. Once you find a school, usually in the tops of trees and brush, you can just sit there on them and get one every cast. Bass? A whole different story. They don't school. I fished tournaments from 1992 til 2001. I had 7 huge tackle boxes of every kind of lure there is. I carried 14 rod and reel combos, for every kind of lure and set up there was. In a given day, you might use Carolina rigged worms, spinner baits, buzz baits, jerk baits, or pitch a pig n jig, And for each kind of lure, you had to have every size and color combo they make. It got to be work more so than fun, sometimes. But, it is almost an addiction. Now days, when I go, I take a Carolina-rigged rod for the plastics, a rod for spinner baits and top-water, and one to pitch jigs. And only three tackle boxes! My favorite thing to do, if and when I ever get a chance, is to hit the Ga coast and fish the coastal creeks and flats for redfish, speckled trout, and flounder. I can do it with my bass boat and tackle, and these, to me, are the best tasting salt-water fish there is. [/QUOTE]
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Warmer days = bass biting
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