When To Move?
#1
Posted March 23 2012 - 01:36 PM
- Joe
#2
Posted March 23 2012 - 03:08 PM
To sum it up, don't give up on a spot too quickly, but don't miss anything either. An excellent resource to learn this from is Bassmaster's Day on the Lake series. These pros fish entire banks in 10 minutes or less when they're trying to dial in on a pattern. As soon as they get a bite, however, they typically slow it down and develop a pattern for the rest of the day.
Hope this helps,
Capt. Dalton
#3
Posted March 23 2012 - 03:21 PM
I would give any body of water more than an hour before completely switching locations, but unless I'm fishing in an area that I know is holding fish, I'm usually throwing a reaction bait. I don't spend very long on one particular spot until I get some activity: either a strike on the reaction bait (I usually use topwater, but spinners and cranks are deadly as well) or bass busting on baitfish or dragonflies. Once I get that, I'll fish the area as I see fit, using whatever lure I'm confident will catch fish there.
To sum it up, don't give up on a spot too quickly, but don't miss anything either. An excellent resource to learn this from is Bassmaster's Day on the Lake series. These pros fish entire banks in 10 minutes or less when they're trying to dial in on a pattern. As soon as they get a bite, however, they typically slow it down and develop a pattern for the rest of the day.
Hope this helps,
Capt. Dalton
Thanks Capt! I will plan on giving an area about 1-2 hours to give it some time. As for the lure, how often should I be "trying something different" within those couple hours if no hits? Obviously if something hits on a certain crank or spinner I will stay with it or very close to it's design. What do you suggest?
- Joe
#4
Posted March 23 2012 - 04:13 PM
Capt. Dalton
#5
Posted March 23 2012 - 05:03 PM
#6
Posted March 23 2012 - 09:33 PM
#7
Posted March 24 2012 - 08:19 AM
Same with lures, change up as soon as it enters your mind.
It is all about confidence. You will be more successful in a different place or a different bait than if you try to force yourself to do something you have lost confidence in.
Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional.
#8
Posted March 24 2012 - 10:45 AM
Mike
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