All posts by hellabass

Bass Opener on Minnetonka

Well, the plan was to hang sheet rock all weekend, but my buddies inspection did not pass, so I quickly made plans to hit the water to do some bass fishing 

Couple of my fellow Gopher club members are fishing the Denny’s tournament today and had invited me to go prefishing with them, so on Saturday morning I hopped into the Ranger with the Brant Boys.  I started the morning tossing a 6″ Optimum suspending swimbait over the milfoil & cabbage while they fished docks.  I had a good fish on for a split second, but never got to see it, not sure if it was a muskie, bass or pike.

We fished everything from 1ft to 15ft, our best fish came relatively shallow on inside weedlines, throwing soft plastics and finesse jigs tipped with smallie beavers.  I caught most of my fish pitchin’ a regular Watermelon Green Pumpkin Sweet Beaver rigged with a color matched 1/8oz. Tru-Tungsten sinker, force bead & smart peg. Based on what I saw, I would say that the vast majority of bass are already done spawning.  I would guess the best 8 fish in the boat that day would have weighed between 20-22lbs, so hopefully they bag them today.

My dad & hit the St. Croix for some smallmouth action, should have a report up on that soon as well.

Rich
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Big & Little Trade Lakes – Club Tournament #2 – May 20,2007

As I sat in the boat rigging up the night before the tournament, I decided that I needed to fish deeper, so my partner (Sport) and I agreed we would search for fish on the adjacent drops to where we saw and caught the best fish the previous weekend.  I tied on a 3/8oz Green Pumpkin/Brown Tru-Tungsten jig the night before and told myself that I was going to put it to use tomorrow.
 We were boat #1, so we cruised over to the flat where we saw fish last weekend, the wind was blowing in so we spent a few minutes throwing cranks & chatterbaits.  After a few minutes, we worked our way to the edge of the spring curly cabbage and Sport dropped a jig down into 8ft and caught a keeper just like that.  I quickly grabbed my jig and hopped up front to hold the boat and a few pitches later caught a 3lb bass.  Things were definitely looking up.  We continued down the edge and I busted a 14.75″ keeper and thought about tossing him back, but I didn’t.  Sport then answered by catching a nice keeper out of a weed hole near the end of a boat lift, then I pitched in there and caught a nice 16″+ fish.   Shortly there after that, Sport boated a keeper on a Rapala Hot Mustard DT6.

We continued to work our jigs, mostly deep, few fish off docks.  I probably threw 10+ keepers back after I had 4 fish in the well, trying to get a big bite, some of them were 16″ fish that I threw back.  Finally around 12:30 I busted a 3lb fish of another weed point and I was done.  Sport worked to the very last cast, & caught his fifth fish.  After I was done, I gave him my rod & reel with my jig setup and he caught them pretty good and caught two good fish to fill out his limit.  So all in all the jig pictured above, accounted for 7 of the 10 keepers weighed, several more that I did not keep as well as a dozen short fish.
  This is a picture of my first & last fish of the day, both around 3 lbs.  My total weight was 12.0lb with a 3.2lb big fish, good enough for 2nd, but first place money   Could have been better if I had not kept that 2nd small keeper, but that is part of the game when you are in a no cull tournament.

I also stormed back to win the blizzard bet with Brushhog, that will be sweet tasting when I lay my lips on it!  I also moved from 15th to 8th in the overall standings.  I also intend to duck tape my jig rod (G-Loomis 844 IMX / Shimano Castaic SF, 20lb Seaguar Flourocarbon) in my hands for the next two club tournaments on Clearwater & Chisago to make up some more ground, as I will be in Italy and not able to practice those two lakes.

Rich
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Big Wood Lake – Club Tournament #1 – May 19, 2007

Let’s just start out by saying, I have had worse tournaments, but not many that I can recall. 

Neither Frank or myself spent much time practicing for this tournament, so we started in a place that I did well last time the club fished here and one of the few spots I checked the previous weekend.  We started in a shallow pad bay that a lot of lily pad roots which almost all of them were holding fish the previous weekend.  We each made a few casts with reaction baits and I quickly switched to a weightless ring fry. I started catching bass immediately, but none that exceeded the 14″ minimum.  About 15 minutes later I caught a 14 – 1/8″ keeper, I thought about it for a moment and tossed it back.  These first two club tournaments are both “no cull” tournaments, so once it goes into your livewell, there is stays, no upgrading.  My logic was, that I wanted to win the tournament and I was fairly confident that I would catch bigger fish, after all that was about my 6th fish of the day in the opening moments.

As you may have already guessed, things deteriorated from there on out.  I continued to catch short fish and my partner caught a keeper on a spook, he was smart enough to drop it in the well.  We continued to fish hard and about and hour later I caught another keeper, I smartly dropped that one in the box, although considered releasing it as well.  I caught that fish right before a little front passed through & before the skies turned high & blue.  I then decided that the majority of the fish were probably moving out of this bay, so we went out on the first drop of the mouth and I quickly started catching bass on a crawfish colored DT6, none keepers.   I then switch to a mojo rig and caught several more, again all short.  My partner makes on cast with a worm on a Ball Buster and gets his 2nd keeper.  We continue to check similar drops and I continue to catch a short fish here & there.

Pictured is the bait that I caught my 2 keepers on.  Weightless Lake Fork Ring Fry with 2 TT Force Beads held in place by a bobber stop.

We then head back shallow, I miss a good bite in a clump of pads, my partner then catches his 3rd keeper in that area on a 4″ senko.  We scramble around the rest of the day, each catch a few more shorts and I only weigh one fish, which left me mired in 15th place for the tournament.  Sounds like most of the better bags came on the drops, but they also caught their keepers early, so my move deep was a little late

Fortunately, I am wise enough to learn from my mistakes and I vowed to make Sunday a better tournament. Plus there was a blizzard bet on the line for the weekend, BrushHog & I had a blizzard bet for total weight for the weekend and I was in a 1.8 lb hole.

Rich
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Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

Mother’s Day Outing

Well, unfortunately I was not ready to head to WI and get any additional practice in, but on a positive note I was able to get my boat out for this spring’s maiden voyage.   I headed over to Marion which is just a few minutes from my house & the best part was she ran great, from the main motor to the electronics to the trolling motor.  It was good to test out my new Stay’n ChargeAll Charge systems as well.

I did do a little casting for notherns, casting both a crawdad XCalibur xr50 Lipless crank and DT6.
    Ended up catching two nice bass, the biggest being a solid 3lb bass in about 8ft of water on a weed edge, she totally tagged the DT6.  The water was in the mid to upper 60’s every where I went.  Only was out for about 2 hrs, most of that driving the big engine, then I headed home to grill steaks for my parents.

Rich
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Wood & Trade Practice Day

Unlike previous years, I only made it to WI to practice one day for my first two club tournaments, so Sport & I split are day between the lakes.  We spent about the first 5 hours on Trade & less then 2 hours on Wood.  We got out around 8am on to Trade.  We jumped around and fished a bunch of different areas in both Big & Little Trade lakes.  Sport struck quickly with his new hand poured stick bait (senko) that he poured at home this winter while the rest of us were at the office

I went on to catch several fish in a row before Sport responded with another fish.  The water temp was around 60 when we started the day and many smaller bays had much warmer water.  In total between the two lakes, I caught 16 bass, 5 keepers and Sport caught 3 keepers total.  He mentioned something about quality over quantity.  The majority of my fish came on a baby ring fry, pic below.
  I rigged it weightless with just a bead or two in front held in place with a bobber stop.  I fished this on a spinning rod with 10lb flourocarbon.  The beads add just a touch of weight for casting and a little extra flash and clicking noise.  The other two baits that produced best were a small single colorago Secret Weapon Spinnerbait & a XCalibur xr50 Lipless crank in a craw pattern.
 
Couple things to note here, I did not employ a trailer hook on my spinnerbait while prefishing, but I will surely have one on during tournaments this weekend, and the red sure-set hook on the lipless crank seemed to help the fish take the bait well.  Sport caught his two other fish on a jig & a regular size ring fry.

All our fish on both lakes came in water less then 6ft.  We saw, John Atkins, Ron Smith & the Brant boys all over at Wood in the afternoon.  Here is a picture of Atkins big practice fish at Wood Lake.
 I could be mistaken, but it looks like a swimbait hanging next to his windshield on the left side of the picture……   Also, I think Ron helped John pulled an embedded hook out of his thumb that morning

Rich
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MN Fishing Opener is Here

That means its time for me to head to WI and do some bass fishing.  I can honestly say, I do not think I have ever fished in MN on the MN opener…..

Tomorrow Sport (fellow Gopher club member) & I are heading to Grantsburg, WI to spend a couple hours on each of two lakes that I have tournaments on May 19-20.  I have fished both lakes before in club tournaments and have done well, but I feel the need to get over there and see what stage the lake is in so I can have a clue where to start come race day.

Should be fun, we are having great weather so I expect the fishing to be good.  The two lakes are Big Wood Lake and Big & Little Trade lakes.  I expect we will do a lot more driving around and looking rather then fishing.

Sunday, I plan to get my boat out on a local lake in Lakeville to make sure everything is firing on all cylinders   I am chomping at the bit, because I have not been on the water since my trip to Amistad.  I really intended to get our on the river this spring, but that has just not worked out.

Check back on Sunday or Monday for a report on my practice.

Rich
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Focus on the Winners

First an Apology for no entries of late, I could give you lots of good excuses but I will not bore you.

Clarks Hills a.k.a J. Strom Thurmond Lake
Winner – Mike McClelland
Here is how he did it:

McClelland said he fished “extremely shallow” water. “I never caught a good fish in water deeper than 4 feet. They were all very shallow places, but they did have deep water close to them. They were all clay points with scattered rock mixed in. That was the key.”

He added that “99% of them were post-spawn fish, but they weren’t in an area they should be in. The points they were on were very susceptible to wind and weather. They were waiting on the blueback to show up. “I think that’s the reason the jig worked so well. They weren’t schooling yet on the blueback. They were up there trying to find something to eat, and that 1/2-ounce football jig was the perfect morsel.”

Technique Notes
A football-head jig, by design, is meant to catch on rocks. About how he worked his jig, McClelland said: “I did it a number of different ways, but probably the most consistent bite was dragging the jig on bottom until it hit a rock. Then I’d almost try to shake it in place. I’d just raise my rod up high, shake it as much in one place as I could, then snap it off the rock.”  Most of his bites came on the shake, but plenty also came as he snapped it off the rock.

Photo: ESPN Outdoors

One part of McClelland’s success was he let his fish rest and reposition.

Winning Gear Notes
He used two different rods – a 7′ heavy-action Falcon Expert and a 7’3″ medium-heavy Falcon Mike McClelland signature series. “You had to have that long rod to make a pretty aggressive hookset,” he said. “Typically, when you’re fishing deeper and dragging the jig more, you can get away with a more sweeping hookset. But these fish weren’t eating the jig good. They’d suck it in quick, and if you didn’t hit them then, you’d miss them. When they’re shallow, they do that.”

 He used a Quantum Tour Edition casting reel with a 6.3:1 gear ratio. He noted that the 7:1 Quantum “Burner” would have probably been better, but he hadn’t fished with it yet and was more comfortable with the 6.3:1. The high gear speed was important, he added, because a lot of times the fish ate the jig and swam toward him, and he needed to take up line quickly before the hookset.  He spooled up with 15-pound Seaguar InvizX fluorocarbon.

> His primary jig was the same one he used to win at Grand – a 1/2-ounce Jewel Heavy Cover Finesse football jig in peanut butter and jelly, tipped with a green-pumpkin/purple Zoom Super Chunk.

 He also threw a 3/8 oz. Jewel finesse jig on occasion.

 He used the stock finesse-style skirt that comes with the 1/2-ounce football, but often removed it and went with a bulkier skirt. Notable is that Hite won last year with an oversized skirt on a Mop jig.

 About the bigger skirt, McClelland said: “The gentleman I fished with the first day was a local, and he got the first bite on a jig. He was using the Mop jig. And I actually caught my first 6-pounder on the finesse skirt, but he was getting a few more bites than I was, so I bulked up and it made a difference. I caught fish on the finesse-style skirt all week – probably five or six that I weighed – but the bigger, bulkier jig was the key to getting quality bites.”
For Video  CLICK HERE

Lake Norman – FLW Tour
Winner – Larry Nixon
Here is how he did it:

Everybody knew the Norman FLW Tour would be an event predicated on razor-thin margins & just about everybody fishes docks. They’re everywhere on Norman’s highly developed shoreline, and fish in all stages of the spawn utilize them at this time of year.

It took an angler with the savvy of Arkansas legend Larry Nixon to come up with something a little bit different. He primarily stayed away from the docks – and the crowds of anglers that gathered around them – and caught quality fish off isolated pieces of structure.

Nixon went to Norman with an idea to target spawning bass, but not the ones that could easily be seen by other competitors.

He looked for isolated stumps and made long casts to them with light line, a 1/16oz. jighead and a Berkley PowerBait Wacky Crawler. If he got closer than 20 feet, the spooky fish would usually swim away, and would in all cases refuse to bite.  Accuracy was paramount, and the pattern was much more effective if the sun was shining and he could clearly see his targets.

All 4 tournament days unfolded pretty much the same way for Nixon. He fished a swimbait in the mornings until the sun got on the stumps, and then he went about culling everything he’d caught to that point.

“I went to the same area and did the same thing every day,” he said. “I never really changed up anything.  He was in 32nd place after day 1, and then jumped 22 spots on day 2 despite catching just one more ounce. He got into the cut with 3 ounces to spare.

Photo: FLW Outdoors/Rob Newell

A 4 1/2-pounder he caught on the final day was Nixon’s biggest fish of the tournament.

He vaulted to the top of the leaderboard on day 3, and then formulated a specific strategy for the final day – he wouldn’t go near his best stuff until about 10:00, when the sun was high enough for him to see beneath the surface.

“I tried everything I knew to keep from going in there early. I knew I’d get discouraged if I didn’t get a bite for a couple hours, and I didn’t want to do that. I just stayed away and fished some other areas until the time was right.”

His stumps weren’t productive on that last day, so he caught his fish from adjacent logs and pieces of brush. A 4 1/2-pounder – his biggest fish of the tournament – was his fifth keeper, and he improved his bag with a couple of afternoon culls.

Pattern Notes 
 He prefers a straight-tailed worm for fishing beds due to its vertical fall.   He caught a few key fish on a Texas-rigged worm, but has more confidence in one rigged on a jighead when targeting spawners. “They’re notorious for missing baits, and you get a higher percentage of hookups on a jighead.”

Winning Gear Notes 
 Jighead worm gear: 6’6″ medium-fast Fenwick Techna AV Spinning rod, Abu Garcia Cardinal 804 spinning reel, 8-pound prototype Berkley Trilene fluorocarbon line, 1/16- or 1/32-ounce Japanese-made jighead, Berkley PowerBait Wacky Crawler (green-pumpkin).

 Texas-rigged worm gear: Same rod, Abu Garcia Revo casting reel, 14-pound prototype Berkley Trilene fluorocarbon, 1/8 oz Tru-Tungsten colored sinker (green-pumpkin), 2/0 Gamakatsu worm hook, 7-inch Berkley PowerBait Shaky Worm (green-pumpkin).

 He threw a 6″ Basstrix Fat Minnow swimbait (blueback herring) in the mornings.

Main factor in his success – “Spotting some things that maybe other people missed, and staying far enough away to where I could catch those fish.”

Performance edge – “My Solar Bat sunglasses. If I couldn’t see what I was throwing at, I wouldn’t have been able to catch them.”

Guntersville a.k.a “Big G”
Winner – KVD – Kevin VanDam
Here is how he did it:

VanDam started day 2 with a spinnerbait on the shad-spawn bite, but there were a number of boats on his starting area.   

He said: “It just wasn’t happening, so I just kept moving. After a little while, I hit a spot and was able to catch three or four decent ones on a spinnerbait, and ended up with a limit.”
After that, it was upgrade time. He visited a few of his crankbait spots (but not the one he was saving). One that he “sort of snuck into” produced seven fish in seven casts. He then exited quickly and quietly.  

VanDam started day 3 with a spinnerbait again, out on a ledge, and never got a bite. Then he moved to another piece of structure and didn’t get bit where he expected to.

“They’d moved a couple hundred yards,” he said. After he contacted them again, he and his partner caught a “handful, and lost a few, and moved around to a couple of other places and just kind of scrounged them out.”

He noted: “One of the things that I think really helped me was my Biosonix. I was running it with an active shad pattern up into the day, and it seemed I could keep them on my spinnerbait all day long. The other guys said their shad were done at 10:00 or whatever, so I think the Biosonix was a big plus here.”

That was pretty much his day 3. He caught 19-10 – which put him 4th again, but just 1-11 behind Butcher – and his co-angler, Bryan Talmadge, won the amateur division.

Day 4 delivered a drastic change in conditions. Gone were the clouds and wind, and most of the field struggled with the morning bite. The sun and dead-still conditions ended the shad-spawn party almost before it started.

VanDam started slow too. He didn’t get bit on his first stop, then lost a few on his second stop. “They weren’t biting the bait real good,” he noted.  That’s when he picked up and headed to his cranking spot that he’d been saving.

Pattern Notes
VanDam caught all his fish on two baits – a 1/2-ounce 1/2-ounce Strike King Kevin VanDam Tournament Series spinnerbait, and a Series 5 Pro Model crankbait.

About his areas, he said: “I was fishing main-river ledges, main-lake points, and humps near the main lake. A lot of the water I was in was on the main river channel. The fish had spawned and pulled out to there. The areas had a mix of hydrilla and milfoil – the two together.

“I also fished some at the mouths of creeks. One of my best places was at the mouth of a creek where the fish were coming out to after spawning. That’s where the shad are, and that’s where the bass want to be – closer to the current.”

Technique Notes
About how he worked the spinnerbait, VanDam said: “I’d pretty much throw it up top (on the hump, ledge or point) and slow-roll it off the edge. When it got caught in the grass, I’d kind of rip it free. And I’d kind of have to shake the spinnerbait a little to get them to eat it. The main thing was to get it (ticking) the tops of the grass.”

With the crank, he took more of a quartering approach to the grass, meaning, if his boat was parallel to the grass, he’d cast ahead of the boat (toward the grass) at a 45-degree angle.

Photo: Strike King/Bass Pro Shops

VanDam’s crankbait was the Strike King Series 5 Tour Grade, which is a regular Series 5 with a high-test paint job (color not shown).

“I’d try to get it just in the (deep) edge of the grass and rip it free,” he said. “The Series 5 really runs about 10 to 12 feet (deep), but I was throwing it on 17-pound fluorocarbon to help rip it out of the grass, and make it run a little shallower.”

He added that most of his crankbait bites came in the 5- to 12-foot zone, and that the bite got a lot better when it was flat-calm and bright. Still, he switched between the two baits all 3 days.

“You could get them to react to that better (in those conditions), but I alternated both baits. I’d come across a school with a spinnerbait and throw it until I got no more bites, then I’d throw the crank and catch a few more.”

Winning Gear Notes 
 Spinnerbait gear: 6’10” medium-heavy Quantum Kevin VanDam spinnerbait rod, Quantum PT Tour Edition 1160 casting reel (6.2:1), 20-pound Bass Pro Shops XPS monofilament, 1/2-ounce Strike King Kevin VanDam Tournament Series spinnerbait (blue shad, double willow-leafs in various combinations of gold and silver).

 The spinnerbait is made by Strike King, but is available exclusively through Basspro.com. It comes with a Perfect Skirt and pre-rigged Mustad trailer hook – upgrades not found on the traditional KVD Pro Model spinnerbait.

This is a picture of the actual 1/2 ounce spinnerbait that KVD used during the final day of his victory.

 On why he threw the spinnerbait on mono, he said: “With fluorocarbon, there’s too much sensitivity for me, and the rod is so sensitive, that I end up not letting the fish get the bait as well. Mono also has a little more give, and I like a little bit of stretch there.”

 Crankbait gear: 7′ medium-heavy Quantum Tour Edition fiberglass cranking rod, Quantum Energy PT 750 casting reel (5.1:1), 17-pound Bass Pro Shops XPS fluorocarbon, Strike King Series 5 crankbait (shad color).

 He swapped out the stock hooks on the crank for No. 2 Mustad Extra Strong Ultra Point trebles.

 Performance edge – “It would be between my Biosonix unit and having a GPS that’s accurate. The Biosonix unit was a big key in keeping the shad active to where I could catch them all day long. I just have a lot of confidence in it. And the places they were on were so precise – to be able to go back to an area after you fish it, without a doubt, that was (critical). I’m not sponsored by Lowrance, but those units are very good. Pair that with a Biosonix and a good spinnerbait, and it’s pretty hard to beat.” 

For Video CLICK HERE

Felt good to do a little blogging, thanks for the recent subscribers (up to 32), they had not got much for their subscription to this point, but that should end because I intend to get on the water this weekend

Rich
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I am a Winner!

Even though I picked KVD to win in Super 6 and had him on my BASS Fantasy Fishing roster, it was my FLW picks that gave me a 16th over all at Lake Norman, which entitles me to a Free FLW T-Shirt   The guy that is running our group has been giving out prizes for winners in our group and I won that as well.  Does it really get any better then this? 

Yes it does!  Because I scored 40 points in Super 6, I won $5 from Mr. Veech!!!! 

Overall I am still hanging in the overall standing for BASS Fantasy at 23rd overall.

 PCT  RANK  NAME, GROUP  POINTS
99.9 23  Lakeville HellaBass, Gopher BASS 2835

I need to start thinking about who I am going to plug in at the #5 spot for the next major tournament……

I plan on doing some summaries of patterns and lure for the last two Elite Series tourneys on Clarks Hills & Guntersville, so look for those soon.  Also, thanks to email subscriber #29, they are joining fast & furiously these days.
Rich
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What does this have to do with Bass Fishing?

That is what you are probably asking yourself….
Well, now that my house is on the market, I will have more time for fishing and keeping new content on this Blog

So here is what I have been working on to get ready for market since I got back from Amistad.  So check it out, maybe you have some friends looking for a great house in Lakeville.  It has an extra deep finished & insulated garage that fits my 19′ bass boat with no problem & you can get your tow vehicle inside right next to it.

And it is located to 3 great bass fishing lakes, Marion, Crystal & Orchard and a stones throw from Prior.

If you really interested, check out the actual listing as well as the Virtual Tour!!!

Last night I actually spent time, digging out my boat, sorting & organizing my fishing stuff, felt good!

Wish me Luck….
Rich
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Monday Bass Fishing Randomness April 23rd, 2007

I think Monday Bass Fishing Randomness could be a regular feature….

Let’s start by congratulating Mike McClelland on running down Chris Lane on the final day at Clarks Hills Reservoir.  Sounds like Mike’s Jewel jig strikes again, to give him his second win in as many years.  Also, of note Derek Remitz aka the Wolverine or Next Big Thing turns in another solid Top 5 and anchors my fantasy team when the likes of Steve Kennedy & KVD let me down a little this week.  On the flip side, consistency of Skeet Reese and the late addition of Casey Ashley helped me maintain a 13th best overall in the nation, as well as close the point margin to #1

I have decided to leave my roster as is for Guntersville, my top 4 guys are & have been studs and I do not see any better options then Mr. Ashley for his $ value, plus he is supposed to be a damn good singer.

Team   Totals   Value
ANGLER HOMETOWN   RANK POINTS   MARKET LOCKED
VanDam, Kevin Kalamazoo, MI   4 398   16.6 15.7
Remitz, Derek Hemphill, TX   2 493   5.3 4.4
Kennedy, Steve Auburn, AL   3 425   9.6 10.0
Reese, Skeet Auburn, CA   1 575   16.5 15.3
Ashley, Casey Donalds, SC   30 195   4.8 4.4
Total Rating   52.8 49.8

On the flip, side my Super 6 has not been stellar this year, so here is my guys for Guntersville….

1 Kevin VanDam (edit) 1
2 Gerald Swindle (edit) 2
3 Steve Kennedy (edit) 3
4 Michael Iaconelli (edit) 4
5 Timmy Horton (edit) 5
6 Alton Jones (edit) 6

Hopefully these guys will help me run down Mr. Veech!

Let’s talk about some cool bass websites that I have found of late:
ToyotaFishing.com – follows the Toyota Tundra team on the tour, they have web video episodes that are pretty cool.  Scroggins, Hack, Wolak, Ike, KVD & More
BassZone.com – This site is top notch, live chat, blog & video updates during competition days at Elite Series events, plus video wraps ups with the winners and more!

Also, thanks to those that made my seminar on Saturday, many of you were very interested in the flipping snell knot, see this post!  Also, two more subscribers hopped on board over the weekend, thank you #26 & #27!

Rich
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