Whatever the reason you had for picking up these pages, to
learn more about fishing, and game fishing, specifically with an all-time angling
favorite embedded in the aptly titled: Bass
Fishing: How To Catch The Next Big One, you are sure to find a quenching reprieve.
Still your thirst for knowledge and any bass fishing pursuit, challenge or
battle, you will or might face in your lifetime, right here. There is something
for everyone in this blog!
If your main interest, is improving your ability to catch
Bass, increasing, (and maybe) even stacking the odds in your favor of succeeding
time and again, every time, in this angling equation and any future expeditions
you plan to undertake, then this book has something of value to offer you.
When you are on the hunt for Bass, knowing the basics is
like the lifeblood of your strategy, bringing your chances alive with every cast!
ALSO, discover and develop YOUR OWN sportsman-like, angling
style and character, while gradually building your appreciation and
understanding of the great outdoors, as part of your fishing experience.
Our focus, approach, aims and goals are simple – the basis
and premise even simpler: learn the basics, get them right, consistently, with
skill and mastery, and they will eventually lead you to catching all the Bass
you can possibly want or handle!
Most anglers depict Bass fishing as the ultimate angling experience
and ‘The Bass’ (predator-hunter itself), as toughminded, unpredictable, with a
strong survival instinct, great awareness, sensing/sensors, that make them the
keen and effective hunters they are.
These fish benefit from natures’ gifts of powerful sight,
hearing, vast speed, maneuverability and even jumping action moves, that will
have you catch (pardon the pun), your breath… with awe, excitement and
expectation that is! All of this makes it possible for the Bass to live up to
its name and reputation, as one of the “extremes” of the gaming fish
populations and every angler’s dream catch!
Part of the Percichthyidae family (also sub-classified into
the genus Morone – considered a separate unit or branch (white, yellow,
striped), they are widely distributed in temperate and tropical waters,
sub-species to be found in fresh and saltwater. There are also the Australian
bass (Acquaria novemaculeate), European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax).
Their food of choice/feed and natural diet includes small
fish, crustaceans, worms and insects – some anglers have also had great success
with live-bait, like eels and even frogs.
Then there are the black bass, collectively referred to and
including our prized target – called by some to be the most sporting species in
North America – the Centrarchidae family. (Largemouth and smallmouth bass,
redeye, spotted, striped, black bass, Suwannee, Quadalupee).
Artificial baits have proven useful to most anglers. Live
baits are best, but these fish can be tempted, teased and lured to strike with
artificial ones such as spinners, spoons, crank-baits, surface plugs and
plastic worms – more on this a little later. Knowing which to choose (and WHY),
use, switch to in certain conditions, and how to optimize this art of allure,
is a key basic element for every aspiring or great angler alike.
These fishes are all active predators, warming to natural
baits and artificial lures. Most anglers would suggest spinning or trolling for
freshwater fishing for Bass (larger species) and spinning or fly-fishing for
the smaller species. Saltwater enthusiasts might also consider surfcasting,
trolling or up-tide fishing.
Fishing for and catching Bass, in various waters across the
globe, has a proud history and tradition. Most of us are too glad to get dabbling
in and form part of it, whether from boat, shore, rocks or rocks, rivers,
streams, lakes or oceans. We like to tell our mighty tales and contemplate how
to change and modify, adapt and or create new techniques, approaches to hook
smallmouth, large-mouth, speckled, spotted, striped and black bass. To each his
own. You pick your favorite.
Knowing how to tell a smallmouth from a large-mouth bass,
striped from spotted and so on, is a very basic skill most anglers master
quickly. Looking specifically at size and physical features are good places to
start. Train your eye to ‘spot the differences’, so to speak.
They differ in size, markings and dorsal fins for example.
Their upper jaws are different in length and their dorsal fins are not the same.
The large-mouth has a spiny dorsal fin, highest in the middle portion, with
almost a distinct ‘break’, right before the second set of dorsal fins start.
For our friends the small mouth bass, these fins are flatter, first and second
are connected, with distinct scales at the base of the second set of dorsal
fins.
Apart from knowing and telling your fish species apart, by
sights and or physical characteristics, there are some general advice we can
propose right upfront. Experiencing, treading lightly and honoring nature, the
great outdoors, abiding by the anglers’ code (catch and release, licensing),
environmental protection for generations of anglers (and women) to come, and
the like are all vastly important in your angling endeavors.
Second, maintaining an overall alertness, what some call
“reading the waters” (understanding the body of water, habitat to the fish, contour,
depth, temperature, stratified levels etc.), being generally, as well as
specifically ‘observant’, arming yourself with knowledge, skill and
understanding of the fish, the species, the environment, and all other relevant
factors to your fishing activity and undertakings – paramount for successful
process and outcome.
Third, (and almost most importantly), remain adaptable, for
change is a BIG part of this enjoyable outdoor activity. It is definitely not
for the faint of heart or the impatient among us!
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