Getting Started Bass Fishing

Getting Started Bass Fishing

Bass fishing offers a wide range of ability and challenge for the beginner and the professional.  There are several fish in the species line including bluegills, spotted bass, largemouth and rock bass.  These are warm water bass.  Others such as striped bass, white bass and white perch are a temperate bass.  If you are heading out to catch some bass, your first and most important goal is to know where to find them.

Where You Have To Look For Bass

There are several locations that they like to call home.  For one, look in your lakes.  You can find a wide range of them in shallow lakes in the south.  This is where you are likely to find your largemouth bass.  Here, look in the weeds and in the reeds.  But, you are likely not to find too many here.  They enjoy eating algae and plankton which is not readily available in many lakes.  Instead, look to the rivers.  The water temperatures and the oxygen levels are just right in many rivers for the bass.  You'll need to look just outside the current's direct flow.  Look on the downstream side of rocks and fallen trees as this is where they enjoy hiding.  To catch them, do some bottom and surface fishing.

A great place to find your bass is to look in streams.  Here, you will find smallmouth bass in the cooler water of the streams especially just below the rapids.  Look in the hiding places such as where erosion has made holes.  Look where there are rocks or fallen limbs as well.  Look below a dam especially on a hot day.  You'll find that they are never in direct current flow.  Also, take a look at ponds.  These are a source for smaller bass especially near the shore near fallen logs.  Of course, look in the reeds.  You can fish any of these locations at night for good results too.

Remember that bass are looking for prime conditions and will search them out.  They are looking for just the right water temperature and water level.  They will seek out locations with good food supply and the right sunlight.

As for bait, you'll want to use a wide range of choices.  In still fishing, go with night crawlers, insects and minnows.  For bait casting and spinning, use artificial products, trolling with live bait or you can even fly fish for them.  For lures, make sure to get at least a five and a half to seven foot rod and your line should be about six to ten pound test.  For fly fishing, go with seven to nine feet in rod with a fast taper.  You will also need a single action reel that has floating #7 to #9 line with a six to eight pound leader.  

If you can, take someone skilled at bass fishing with you your first time out.  You are likely to learn a lot.  Talk to your local bait shop dealer to learn what bait will work well for your bass.  Pick a variety of locations to fish and you'll find success.

To read about bowhunting turkey and bowhunting whitetails, visit the Bowhunting Tips site.


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Light tackle Striped bass fishing in Boston harbor with Masss Bay Guides. beautiful scenery and awsome fishing with Captain Greg Sears

Bass Fishing Basics, Best Baits for Bass Fishing

Bass Fishing Basics, Best Baits for Bass Fishing

Bass fishing is a really popular sport that can be enjoyed by anyone with the knowledge of a few Bass fishing basics. All species of Bass are some of the most sought after fish, as they are great fun to catch, and offer some of the best sport, both from the shore and from a boat.

One of the first Bass fishing basics to learn will obviously be the bait. This can be live bait such as peeler or soft back crabs, these are really fine baits for Bass. A crab is a peeler when it is in the process of losing its old shell, (to test if a crab is a peeler, try lifting the rear end of its shell; it should come away easily). A crab is a soft back when it has already discarded its old shell but before its new shell has hardened.

Other good Bass fishing baits include sand-eels, lugworm, and rag worm. Sand-eels can be collected from wet sand where they lie buried on a receding tide. They can be used as a dead bait but are more effective as live bait. Both lugworm and rag worm can be dug at low tide and will keep for a couple of days wrapped in damp newspaper. You could also try what is called a bait cocktail, which consists of both crab and worm on the same hook.

Other popular baits are artificial lures, and these should be part of any Bass fishing basics kit. There are so many of these artificial baits available that you could spend a fortune on them. My best advice would be to take a trip to your local tackle store, and ask for the most popular types for your local area. Start off simple with just a handful, which should include a couple of (top water baits) a couple of (spinner baits) and a couple of (plastic or rubber lures). As with the live baits these should all be retrieved slowly when fishing for Bass.

The next of the Bass fishing basics is the cast. If fishing from the shore you should try to cover as big an area as possible. To do this you should cast in a fan shape, start with a cast to the left of where you are standing and retrieve your bait, slowly pausing every ten to fifteen feet. On your next cast aim slightly to the right of the last cast and repeat this process until you have covered a fan shaped area. Try this a couple of times and if you have no luck simply walk twenty or thirty yards down the shore and start again.

Night fishing for Bass can be very productive, some of my best Bass fishing has been at night. For this you will need a lure that makes a lot of noise in the water when being retrieved. There are some excellent lures available for this (again ask at your local tackle store) and the Bass will find them irresistible. These are just a few of the Bass fishing basics, you will pick up more as you go along, but the best advice I can give is to get out there and have a go, I guarantee you will soon be hooked.

For more fishing tips or for complete fishing guides visit our site at: http://www.BuyTryReview.com/category/fishing

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Top Water Bass Fishing Tips

300px Rapala lures 1 Top Water Bass Fishing Tips

Top Water Bass Fishing Tips

It's 5:30am and you're already on the water. The water is like glass and all is quiet around you. Next to you in the boat is a cooler filled with your favorite beverage (whether it's beer or Pepsi is up to you!). As you approach your favorite hole, you pick up your rod and tie on a surface lure. You cast your line toward the shore and present your topwater offering.

All of a sudden, the water explodes and you are in the battle of your life with a lunker largemouth! He feels like he goes maybe 3 or 4 pounds. As you get him boat side, you reach down and lift him out of the water. Larger than you expected, around 5 pounds! You turn and drop your prize into the live well and prepare for the next cast...

The thrill of topwater bass fishing is addictive. There is a BIG difference between catching that elusive largemouth off the bottom, from the middle or from the surface. Topwater bass fishing is a more visual experience than other types of fishing. There are specific types of rods and lures for topwater bass fishing.

Bass Fishing Rods

Most anglers will tell you that a 6 to 6 ½ foot rod with a medium action will suffice. If the action of the rod is too stiff, you will yank your bait right out of the fish's mouth when you set the hook. A medium action rod is the best fit for topwater bass fishing.

These rods are available in a price range of about to over 0. Do you need to spend a bunch of money on a rod? Regardless of the price tag, medium action is medium action. On the other hand, if you go with a rod, you can expect worth of performance. Chose a rod somewhere in the middle price range and you won't go wrong.

Bass Fishing Lures

When it comes to lures, there are a great many to choose from. Here is a list of the top ten that I have had success with:

  1. Heddon's Zara Spook.
  2. Custom Bait's Senko.
  3. Yum's Floating Worm (with a Texas style rig).
  4. Zoom's Superfluke.
  5. Heddon's Torpedo.
  6. Lazer Eye's Buzzbait
  7. Smithwick's Stick Bait aka Hard Jerk Bait.
  8. Rebel's Pop-R bait.
  9. Snag Proof's Tournament Frog.
  10. Any spinner bait. These are manufactured by numerous companies.

All these lures have their own unique presentations. When presented properly, these baits are historically known to produce quality bass. This is true across regional boundaries, weather conditions and water tempuratures.

A Big Bass Fishing Tip

Now you have the rod and the lures you need for topwater bass fishing, there is one more thing you should know. Here it is: Since topwater fishing is a visual type of fishing, most anglers will set the hook too soon and jerk the lure right out of the fish's mouth. To prevent this, do NOT set the hook immediately when you see the strike! Wait a second, reel in some slack and when you feel the pressure of the bass on the line, THEN set the hook. You will boat more lunkers that way and be a much happier fisherman to boot.

Stephen Long is an author for Sportsmans Article Resource, providing you the latest fishing and hunting tips and techniques for the outdoorsman. Sportsmans article resource is an article resource directory for free online articles.

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