All posts by hellabass

Bass Meetings Help to get through the Winter….

I attended one of our winter MN State Federation meetings on Saturday and I manage to get out of the board meeting early enough to catch the tail end of the 2nd free bass seminar.   After the meeting I felt energized and exctied for next fishing season even though our lakes have just started to freeze and it will be quite some time before they open up again.  Something about talkin about Bass with your buddies help to keep my spirits up in the winter and keep mu focus forward to spring.  Same thing happens at the local club meetings.

Seems line another nice intangible benefit of joining a bas club.  So it makes me wonder why more of you are not part of bass clubs?
I would like to hear comments from some of you that are bass fisher people and why you are not part of a bass club, what are your reasons?

If you never thought about it, then check out these sites and look into it:
GopherBass.com – My Club
MN Bass Federation Nattion

And if that does not do anything for you, check out this sweet video clip, it will be sure to get you fired up about fishing.

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
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Free Bass Fishing Seminars!

Hey All:

The MN Bass Federation Nation is hosting Free Bass Seminars this winter prior to the start of their state meetings.  First one is this Saturday.

Here is the schedule:
December 2, 2006 at the Medina Entertainment Center
9am seminar: Scott Johnson – OutKast Tackle

January 20, 2007 at the Medina Entertainment Center
9am seminar: Mickey Goetting – Dropshot 101; Gregg Fouty – Mind of a champion

March 3, 2007 at the Medina Entertainment Center
9am seminar: Tom Borkowski – Mind of a champion; Steve Hauge – All Terrain Tackle

April 21, 2007 at the Medina Entertainment Center
9am seminar: Rich Lindgren – Boating more Bass with Tungsten; Dale Richardson – Boat Performance

Great way to fight the cold MN weather and meet some fellow bass anglers. Cya There! ;D
Rich
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Attention Frog & Rat Fisher People

Hey All,

Here is some cool bass feeding video I came across on someone’s MySpace.  This bass destroys a couple goldfish along with some other minnows or shad.  Also there is some good footage of a bass destroying a mouse!!  If this does not get you pumped up to throw frog or plastic rat across the pads, I do not know what will.

Hope this brightens your day a bit

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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It’s Official – Bass Pro Shops at Mall of America

It has been rumored about for sometime and now its official, Bass Pro Shops is going to be a cornerstore retailer in the next expansion at MOA.

See Star Tribune Article

When do we start digging?

It will not be here soon enough…

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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Winning Wilcard Pattern on the Harris Chain

Florida’s Harris Chain of Lakes is a popular BASS stop, but tournaments there had almost always taken place in the spring. This time around, though, anglers fishing the Bassmaster Elite Series Wildcard Qualifier faced a full-on late-fall/winter fishery.

Needless to say, conditions were tough. It took Ben Matsubu 13 1/2 pounds a day to win, but nobody else was even close. In fact, Matsubu made it a total blowout, and won by a 7 1/2-pound margin.

It was his first BASS win, and the biggest moment of his career so far. With it, he pocketed a boat package valued at over $50,000, plus paid entry fees for the 2007 Elite Series season ($55,000).   Here’s how the Texas pro did it.

Practice
As practice began, Ben Matsubu noticed that the fish weren’t in the shallow canals – the water was too low. Instead, they were concentrated to the outside in main-lake areas. But rather than run helter-skelter through the chain of lakes, he decided to focus first on Lake Eustis.

He found three banks worth the time and effort, but it was really boring. On the second day of practice, he thought about going into Harris to practice, but the wind was blowing hard. So he decided to focus more on Eustis, and worked a 3-mile stretch he hadn’t hit yet. Within that, he found a half-mile stretch with fish.

The third day of practice was basically a bust. With his Eustis work pretty much done, he ran to Dora. It was a mudbowl with no bass. So he entered competition with two or three possible stretches to fish on Eustis.

Notable was that much of the field was flipping and worming, but he was cranking. Also notable was that his main spot, where he planned to start, was near a well-known community hole on the north end of Eustis.

Day 1
Matsubu started day 1 of the tournament near the community hole. Conditions were windy and rainy, and it took him about an hour and a half to catch a limit. At that point, he made the key decision of the tournament.

“I told myself, ‘You know what, I need to keep going another quarter-mile.’ I hit one stretch where I didn’t catch them in practice, and there were big ones in there. I caught a couple of big fish right away, but never got another bite there.”

If he hadn’t gone that extra quarter-mile, he wouldn’t have caught those two fish. And as he’d learn the next day, that quarter-mile stretch – about a half-mile from the community hole – turned out to be the winning area.  But as noted, he initially caught two big fish there, then the bite ended. He finished up his day in Harris, caught his limit, and that was it for day 1.

Day 2
Day 2 delivered post-frontal conditions, but Matsubu’s fish bit early. He started on his big-fish spot from day 1 and quickly caught a 3- and 4-pounder. But he also lost a 5 1/2- to 6-pounder. He decided then to lay off the area.

Ben continued to run and gun in Eustis and finished off his limit.

Day 3
Things happened pretty quickly for Matsubu on day 3. He ran right to his big-fish spot again, and immediately connected.   “I missed the first fish, and caught the second – a 4-pounder right where I’d caught my good fish the day before. Then 10 yards later I caught a 2 1/2. Then 30 yards later I caught a 3 1/2. Then I struggled for a long time.”

He eventually pulled the plug on his big-fish spot and commenced to running. He hit all his spots from the previous 2 days, but hit the lode later in the day.

“On my way to Harris, there was an area I’d found in practice, but I never caught a fish there on day 1 or 2, probably because the wind wasn’t blowing,” he noted. “But on the last day, the wind was blowing along the banks. We went in and they were everywhere.

He lost two really good ones, and culled out a little 12-incher. And his partner caught two 2 1/2s real quick.  At that point it was game over.

Winning Pattern Notes
About his big-fish spot, Matsubu said: “It was a sort of flat little point with four different types of vegetation on it – hydrilla, eelgrass, reeds and Kissimmee grass.”

Also important were depressions to the outside of the weeds. “In the Harris Chain, people build up their backyards by taking dirt out of the lake,” he said. “That leaves a lot of 8- to 10-foot holes in front of the Kissimmee grass.

“And right by the (big-fish) area, there was a park, and when they built up a certain part of the park, they left an 8-foot hole within 10 yards of where I fished. That probably contributed to it a little bit. It’s a nice deep little hole that the fish can turn to if it got cold.”

He didn’t fish that hole though – he fished pockets of grass. During practice, he marked the end of every eelgrass and hydrilla bed in the productive areas. He noted that allowed him to maneuver the boat to utilize the whole area of grass. But the key areas were those rare spots where the grass extended out about 20 yards beyond where it normally ended.

And he’d tick the grass with the crankbait, much like fishing a Rat-L-Trap in the grass. He started with his rodtip high, at about 11:00, then slowly lowered it as his crank moved into deeper water, all the while ticking the top of the grass.  He did catch one fish, a 4-pounder, on a worm. Otherwise, all his fish bit the Lucky Craft RC 2.5.

Winning Gear Notes
> Crankbait gear: 7′ medium-action Powell fiberglass rod, Bass Pro Shops Johnny Morris casting reel, 16-pound Yamamoto Sugoi fluorocarbon line, Lucky Craft Rick Clunn Crankbaits 2.5 (chartreuse/black-back).

> He changed out the stock hooks for No. 2 Mustad Triple Grip trebles (red on front, black-chrome on back), because he felt the stock hooks were too light for big bass.

> Worm gear: 7’3″ heavy-action Powell frog rod, Shimano Curado Super-Free casting reel, 16-pound Sugoi, 4/0 Roboworm ReBarb hook, 1/8oz Kanji Senkin X-Metal tungsten weight, 6 1/2″ Gary Yamamoto Kut Tail worm (watermelon/gold).

> He pegged the weight about 1/4-inch above the worm with rubber from a spinnerbait skirt. Her prefers the rubber over a toothpick because it won’t nick the fluorocarbon.

> He also used a  BSX Biosonix Fish Attractor Unit. “I’ve had Biosonix for almost 2 years now, and I believe that in shallow water, it excites the fish,” he said. “I’ve heard both pros and cons about it, but I’m convinced that it works in shallow water. I’ve seen post-spawn fish guarding fry swim 5 to 10 feet toward the boat when the unit’s on. They just leave the fry back there.”

The Bottom Line
> Main factor in his success – “Getting on those big fish. Going that extra quarter-mile on day 1, and also using the crankbait when others weren’t.”

> Performance edge – “The (RC 2.5) crankbait. In practice, I started catching them on a spinnerbait. But I started to experiment with different sizes of RCs – the 1.5, 2.5 and 3.5. After I caught one on a 1.5, I saw a bluegill that was a little bigger than the 1.5, so I switched to a 2.5., then to a 3. After the bass regurgitated a bunch of bluegill in my livewell, I saw the 2.5 was the perfect size, and that was a key factor.” 

His three-day total of 40-15 easily outdistanced Georgia’s Jim Murray (33-8) and Florida’s Bryan Hudgins (32-13). Rounding out the top five were Marty Robinson of South Carolina (32-7) and Matt Amedeo of Ohio (31-9).

Rich
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Top Patterns for FLW Series Finale on Lewis Smith Lake

Alabama’s Lewis Smith Lake is bass fishing’s equivalent of a U.S. Open golf course. Overgrown rough, narrowed fairways and rock-hard greens make it all but impossible for any golfer to break par for 4 straight days at an Open venue, and a dearth of 15-inchers make four consecutive limits at Smith just as unlikely.

Days 1 & 2
When Hoernke realized the forecast for rain on day 1 would prove correct, he hearkened back to the Bassmaster Tour event at Smith in 2004. Most of the top finishers focused on run-ins at the back of coves where new water was entering the lake.

He went as far as he could into the pockets and quickly learned that the largemouths were by then amenable to the power-fishing tactics that he prefers. He used a Lucky Craft Fat CB BDS Series 1 and his own Hoern Toad Tackle Brokeback Buzzer buzzbait to catch a four-fish, 9-06 bag that landed him in 9th place.

He thought he’d catch his best sack of the tournament on day 2, and he was right. Instead of a deluge, the precipitation was more of a drizzle, but the big key was that the sun remained absent.

He employed the same tactics as on day 1. The only differences were the pockets held more fish, and he switched to a fire/tiger-colored Lucky Craft BDS to accommodate the dirtier water.  He caught 10 or 11 keepers en route to the 13-10 limit that put him in the lead to stay. His advantage would have been huge had he not lost a pair of 5-pounders.

Day 3
The return of the sun had Hoernke concerned about whether he could maintain his advantage, which was 2 1/2 pounds when day 3 dawned.

“The rain had stopped and the front had passed, and we had typical bluebird, post-frontal conditions,” he said. “I knew the run-in thing was over, and in order to win I’d have to do something different over the next 2 days.”

He tried to catch his largemouths with shakey-head worms, to no avail.  “I moved around and pretty much cost myself the whole morning doing that. At about noon I said something’s got to give, and I started flipping a jig to laydowns or any form of shade.

“It was weird, but when it got colder, they wanted the jig. I couldn’t get bit on the worm. I went back through the same stretch and got four bites and caught two, and that salvaged the day.”  His 4-12 bag kept him in the lead, but the margin was reduced to less than a pound and a half.

Photo: FLW Outdoors/Rob Newell

Sean Hoernke used his own Hoern Toad Tackle Porky’s Revenge jighead and a Zoom Finesse Worm to catch a limit on day 4.

Day 4
Hoernke figured he needed to catch 10 pounds on day 4 to nail down the win, and doubted he could get it done with largemouths.

He pulled out the shakey-head gear he’d abandoned in practice and headed for the lower end of the lake.

Hoernke fished every piece of wood he could find in 5 to 20 feet of water.

He caught a keeper on his third cast of the day, then went about 4 hours without a bite. But things picked up when noon rolled around – he caught five or six keepers in a 45-minute span.

“I fished super-slow because I could just barely feel the bites. I actually lost several because I pulled it out of their mouth, the bite was so soft.”

The action shut down again before 1:00, but his work was done. He culled once in the final hour, but all that did was slightly boost his victory margin.

Winning Gear Notes
> Crankbait gear – 6’6″ medium-heavy Setyr CKN176MH rod, Shimano Chronarch casting reel (5:1 gear ratio), 15-pound P-Line copolymer, Lucky Craft Fat CB BDS Series 1 (root beer or fire/tiger).

> Buzzbait gear – 7′ medium-heavy Setyr CLS184MH rod, Shimano Chronarch reel (6:1 ratio), 20-pound P-Line copolymer, 1/4-ounce Hoern Toad Tackle Brokeback Buzzer (white with gold blade).

> Shakey-head gear – 7’2″ medium-heavy Setyr DSF184MH rod, Daiwa Carpricorn spinning reel, 8-pound P-Line Fluoroclear, 1/8oz Hoern Toad Tackle Porky’s Revenge jighead, 4-inch Zoom Finesse Worm (green-pumpkin).

> Flipping gear – 7’10” medium-heavy Setyr FNS194MH flipping stick, Shimano Castaic  casting reel (6:1 ratio), 20-pound P-Line copolymer, 3/8oz Hoern Toad Tackle jig (black/blue), Zoom Super Chunk trailer (blue sapphire).

The Bottom Line
> Main factor in his success – “The key word was adaptation. I basically caught them three different ways over 4 days, and that seems to be the way Smith wants to be fished. There’s not a wad of them sitting anywhere to camp out on.”

> Performance edge – “On the last day it was my Porky’s Revenge jighead. It saved the day when things got tough.”

Deep or shallow. Spotted bass or largemouths. No matter an angler’s preference, crankbaits and jigs were the way to go for keeper bass at the Lewis Smith FLW Series in Alabama.

2nd: Jeff Shelton
Local firefighter Jeff Shelton, who fished the first four Series events as a co-angler, created a real-life, local-boy-makes-good story with his runner-up finish. There was also a rags-to-riches aspect to it, considering he was in 101st place after storm-plagued day 1.

He had home-field advantage, and he used it. “What I basically did before the tournament started was write down a list of 115 holes where I’d caught 3-pound or bigger fish,” he said. “Some of them I’d already fished (in recent team tournaments), and I put a mark by those if I knew fish were there.

“That left 65 other holes I wanted to check, and I checked them all. Some had fish, but most didn’t. That narrowed it down to about 25 places.”

He caught weigh-in fish on several different jigs, and also on shakey-head worms. The vast majority came from depths of 10 to 20 feet.

His best locales all had one thing in common.  They all had red clay.

> Jig gear: 7′ medium-heavy Bass Pro Shops Extreme rod, Quantum Energy casting reel (6.3:1 gear ratio), 15-pound P-Line CXX (moss green), 5/16 or 3/8oz homemade jig (pumpkin/green glitter), Zoom Fat Albert Twin-Tail (brown/green-pumpkin), Zoom Super Chunk (green-pumpkin) or Arkie Salty Crawlin’ Grub (watermelon red) trailer.

> Shakey-head gear: 6’6″ medium heavy BPS  Extreme rod, same reel, 12-pound P-Line CXX, 1/4-ounce homemade jighead, 4″ Zoom Finesse Worm (green-pumpkin).

> Main factor in his success – “Sticking with my game plan. I was determined to fish a jig every day, and the majority of my fish came on the jig.”

> Performance edge — “My Lowrance X125. I caught some fish that were pivotal that I never would have caught if I hadn’t seen them on the graph.”

Photo: FLW Outdoors/Rob Newell

Gerald Swindle

3rd: Gerald Swindle
Gerald Swindle, the Bassmaster Elite Series pro from nearby Warrior, was another local who stormed back with a vengeance after struggling on day 1.

“I started out trying to catch deep fish (in practice),” he said. “Then we had all that rain and I stayed deep the first day. I only caught one, and I had to go up on the bank to get that one.

“I threw that deep stuff out the window the second day and went to shallow power-fishing (with a crankbait, a spinnerbait and a jig). I found a couple of creeks that had shad in the back of them and I started to get dialed in.”

As the lake level continued to rise, he caught fish from shallower and shallower depths.  “My last fish on the last day, I was sitting in 2 feet of water and caught it out of 10 inches on a Lucky Craft Gunfish 115. That place was bone-dry in practice. You could’ve walked up and kicked a soccer ball across it.”

> Crankbait gear: 7′ medium-heavy Quantum Cabo rod, Quantum PT Series casting reel (6.3:1 gear ratio), 15-pound Spiderwire G-String line, Lucky Craft BDS 3 (fire/tiger).

> The Cabo rod, designed for saltwater applications, features a light tip.

> Spinnerbait gear: 6’6″ medium-heavy Quantum PT Series rod, same reel and line, 1/2-ounce War Eagle spinnerbait (white/yellow with No. 3 Colorado and No. 4 Indiana blades).

> Jig gear: 7’4″ Quantum PT Series flipping stick, same reel, 20-pound G-String, 3/8oz Arkie jig (black/brown), Zoom Super Chunk trailer (green-pumpkin).

> The shallow topwater fish he caught on day 4 was enticed by a Lucky Craft Gunfish 115 (American Shad).

> Main factor in his success – “Throwing away what I did in practice and starting over. Also, I was able to keep moving with the fish – the more the water rose, the farther they moved in.”

> Performance edge – “The Lowrance 111. I would’ve never been able to find the shad without it.”

Photo: FLW Outdoors/Rob Newell

David Fritts

4th: David Fritts
Crankbait guru David Fritts of North Carolina didn’t have a great practice, so he stuck with areas that were at least somewhat productive in the days leading up to the tournament.

He caught six keepers in 4 days of practice, but one was about 6 pounds, so that’s where heended up fishing. He alsovgot one good bite in another particular area, and out of those two places, Iis where he concentrated.  He caught good bags on the odd-numbered tournament days (1 and 3), but struggled on days 2 and 4.

His fish were relating to points. Some were tight to brush and others were suspended over creek channels or small ditches.

> Crankbait gear: 7′ medium-heavy American Rodsmiths David Fritts Signature Series cranking rod, Bass Pro Shops casting reel (4.7:1 gear ratio), 10-pound Rapala cranking line, Rapala DT 6 crankbait.

> Main factor in his success – “I just relied on my knowledge of crankbaits – the right colors and right actions. When most of the fish are related to the bottom, everything has to be just right.”

> Performance edge – “Probably my 7-foot rod. I needed the extra length to make a really long cast and keep the bait down about a foot deeper than it normally runs.”

5th: Rusty Salewske
California’s Rusty Salewske also had a feast-or-famine tournament, but his trend ran opposite to Fritts’ – he caught his best bags on days 2 and 4. His day-2 stringer was the best of the tournament.

He targeted deep spotted bass the first 3 days, but switched up and caught a limit comprised entirely of largemouths on day 4.  Whether he was shallow or deep, he had a jig tied to the end of his line. Run-ins at the backs of coves were the key to his final-day bag.

“The best ones had little mats that had formed out of pine needles and garbage and stuff,” he said. “(The fish) were right up tight against them.  “I think I could’ve caught them with a frog, but I stayed with the jig because you can catch nine out of 10 bites. Those frogs are risky business.”

> Jig gear: 7′ medium-heavy G.Loomis 843 rod, Shimano Chronarch 100 casting reel (6.3:1 gear ratio), 14-pound Sunline fluorocarbon line, 3/8oz homemade football-head jig (green-pumpkin), Reaction Innovations Smallie Beaver trailer (green-pumpkin).

> Main factor in his success – “Being able to adjust on the last day. My downfall on the third day was not adjusting after I’d caught the 16-pound bag. I kept trying to make it happen again.”

> Performance edge – “My Lowrance26C HD. For finding brushpiles and stuff, it was crucial.”

Lewis Smith proved to be a tough nut to crack for most of the field, but these Pros were the best at catching 16″+ fish this past week.

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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Optimum Baits

I am very excited to introduce my newest sponsor…..  Optimum Bait Co.

If you are not familiar with their offerings, they have a complete line of swimbait offerings and also the new ICAST Award Winning Furbit Series of FrogsOptimum Baits has been in the forefront of plastic Swimbaits and has always held the belief that “Bigger Baits get Bigger fish!” 

Optimum’s swim baits were developed on the shores of famed California Lakes Castaic & Casitas.  You probably recognize the mainstays like the Buy this ProductTitan Series Swimbaits and Buy this ProductAC Minnow Series.  Along with their swimbaits, quality hand pours, and Rabbit Fur series they also have extensive selection of Japanese lures and products that are out of this world. 

So check out OptimumBaits.com when you get a chance!!

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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Fun Little Fishing Game

It is not PlayStation 3 (PS3) or Xbox 360, but still a fun little free game to kill time at home or in the office.
http://www.sportsline.com/games/play/bassmasters 

No downloads, which makes it nice for playing even on work computers   Anyone no of any other fun game?
I have made it to Level 7 on this one so far.

By the way Ben Matsubu wins BASS Wildcard & Sean Hoernke wins final FLW Series.

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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Couple of Important Late Season Tournaments

You may not have realized, but there are two very important pro level tournaments in-progress this week. 

#1 – BASS Wildcard Tournament – Harris Chain – This tournament will fill out the remaining 10 anglers to fish the 2007 Elite Series.  There are quite a few pros who did not automatically requalify from last year, fishing this tournament.  Day 1 leader is Bryan Hudgins from Orange Park, FL.  Should be exciting to see how this unfolds in the next two days.

#2 – Final 2006 FLW Series tournament on Smith Lake in AL.  Anglers here are trying to stay or move into the Top 30 in the points race, as this is the final stop to qualify for 2007 Forrest Wood Cup.

I will try to do a summary of these events that wrap up this weekend!

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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Get to Know’em – Derek Remitz

In case you had not heard, North Branch, MN native Derek Remitz has qualified for the upcoming Bassmasters Classic on Lay Lake in February.  He did this by finishing first in the points for BASS Northern Tour, he also fished the Southern Tour and finished a respectable 12th.  His top honors in the points also grants him a tour card to fish the Bassmasters Elite Series for the 2007 season, which he intends to do.  He lives in Hemphill, TX during spring and winter so that he can fish more, but does reside in MN when he is not fishing.

Also, it is very noteworthy that he finished 8th in points in the Stren Series Central Division this year.  In previous years he has fished a non-boater in BASS tour events and as a boater in BASS Weekend Series, BFL’s and TTT tournaments.  His accomplishments this year are most noteworthy of any MN born angler since Jim Moynagh.

BASS Tournament BIO
FLW Tournament BIO

Here are a couple good articles about Derek’s career path:
http://www.ecmpostreview.com/2006/November/15nobrnalihid.html

http://www.futurebass.com/intremitz.htm

So good luck to Derek at the Classic and on the Elite Series!

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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