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zeth

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Everything posted by zeth

  1. I use a Phenix M1 Swimbait rod MH for a good portion of my flippin or pitchin. Works great. Have never ripped a lure out fo the fishes mouth if it was hooked.
  2. zeth replied to papajoe222's topic in Fishing Tackle
    Go get yourself some 1-2 oz. tungsten weights. It wil help greatly. Flip vs pitch depends on how far way from cover water clarity etc. Sometimes you have to flip your bait up into the air to give it enough speed to puch through the mats. FYI Blackdog Baits Fake fish work excellent for punching.
  3. I almost never nose hook anymore. I thread the bait onto the hook. I wacky only when they are not taking the bait as I feel it gets the hook closer to their mouth. I also now more and more use a texas rig. Owner twistlock finesse hook. I have great success with these especially when there are snaggs around.
  4. the above for your standard jig. Freaking amazing. Although there is another brand out now that has same design but with fiber guards. My go to however are Keitech. I love Keitech jigs. All of them.
  5. It's pretty useless. I mean you might learn something but nothign you can not learn here for free.
  6. bummer man sorry to hear that. I feel your pain when I was 16 my stepfather threw about 6 grad in gear in the trash and broke all my rods and then i bought everything again only to have my house broken into when i was 19 (renting with no renters insurance) so um needless to say i didn't fish for nearly 14 years after that. check ebay and craigslist like every day and let us know how your insurance company handles it. Hopefully you get it back or you insurance company pays you.
  7. First things first. Get yourself some Roboworms. Start with the 4" Fat. in whatever colors you want. Then get some 6" Fat and start experimenting because a lot of the time many different baits will work and sometimes they will hit only one particular bait. I have had luck drop shotting various Keitech baits as well.
  8. Please make it easy for yourself and call whoever sent it and ask them to send another. They should send you another no problem and then deal with this on their end. The consumer shouldn't have to deal with this.
  9. zeth replied to Wurming67's topic in Fishing Tackle
    There is a HUGE difference between sub 100 glasses and the more expensive glasses. My 2 cents on glasses: Never buy online! This is because you need to find a brand/pair of glasses that fit your face just right to not allow excess light in, to not put too much pressure on your face, to not rest on your cheek bone, to look good etc... For me it is Maui Jim. $280 for a price reference. Optical clarity especially when you get into glass lenses. Cheaper lenses have a lot of imperfections in the surface of the lens that your naked eye will not pick up necessarily unless you know what to look for. Durability again especially when you get into glass lenses. Warranty Lens colors optimized for specific conditions is a bonus with higher end glasses ....... When wearing cheapo polarized glasses I get headaches. When I wear my Maui Jim's I do not. For the record I also used to own Smiths until I left them on top of the car. They also had a glass lens the polarchromic lenses that adjust based on the light. I switched because I found the Maui Jims to fit my face better and they seemed to be slightly better to me. Costa, Maui Jim, Smith... all good brands with glass lenses which are much much much harder to scratch. If you can not afford nearly $300 glasses the Smiths are closer to $200 and if that's still to much I suggest you go spend under $50 on whatever (copper or darker amber lens for all around) and then start saving for a high quality pair. I believe there will not be much difference between a sub $50 pair and a sub $100 par except for price. When you get them you will then have a backup pair which is always good. My backups always stay in the sunglass holder in my car in case I forget the more expensive ones which will go into my tackle bag for the day or my head. Good luck, there are many options.
  10. Two hard swimbaits I like are the Savage Gear Liplure and the Biwaa S'Trout.
  11. Phenix M1 Swimbait rod. I have a few and have never had any problems
  12. Like he said. I wouldn't worry about sponsors much. Best thing to do is to get experience in sales and marketing and to build a strong resume. Get out fish and meet people. You can go around to local businesses and find out who to contact and try to schedule a meeting or send them emails. Be persistent and patient. It can take years to develop enough trust with some companies while others will just help you out without thinking twice. Good luck
  13. for under 100 you might try kmart. best to save up for a higher quality inflatable. check craigslist as well.
  14. I bought like 20 of them. Sold them a week later. I'm sure they work but I don't like them.
  15. zeth replied to fisherrw's topic in Fishing Tackle
    add a stinger hook and get rid of that 12lb. I'd use 20-25 but that's just me. As far as I know the M1 swimbait rode is 8' or at least mine are.
  16. Well first off I am not sure wether this violates any rules here so who knows how long this will be up. Rules Don't link to your own articles, pod casts, videos, etc, if they are promotional in nature. It is not so much intended as promotional yet kind of is and it is my own article. But it is something everyone here would enjoy to read I am sure. That being said, moderators feel free to remove but until then... I have an awesome interview with Gator Trax boats. My goal was to get more information about tin bass boats and I achieved that. So not sure where the line is drawn between educational and promotional. I wont post the link to the hosting site since I wrote it myself I will copy and paste. Insight into Gator Trax Strike Series Bass Boats First things first. We must all thank Kent Saxon for taking some time out of his very busy schedule to allow us this rare insight into Gator Trax boats. So, from myself and hopefully all of our readers at BHQ... Kent, we thank you for bringing a little South to the West. Kent: No problem....ya’ll. LOL! I'm sure none of us are strangers to aluminum bass boats. There are plenty on the market. However, when it comes to finding a very capable aluminum rig that can compete with the glass manufacturers out there, well that's another story. Let's get into a little history. Aluminum bass boats have been in production for many years. Since before I was born. Gator Trax has been producing boats for over 15 years so you know they're experts at what they do best. That being said, lets get into things a little deeper by asking a few questions so we all can become more familiar with Gator Trax high performance aluminum bass boats. Zeth: Let's start with the most obvious question because I know there are some unique, key build features about your bass boats. What are they and why do you incorporate them? Kent: First things first we strive for quality. We cut our teeth in the shallow water boating industry with mud motors, tunnel hulls, jets, and the like. With this style of boating, it a matter of when, not if, you are going to hit something. We expect it. So we’ve been building boats for 15 years that stand up to jumping logs, rocks, sand bars, etc...open water is a breeze! That being said, our first priority of focus is on making you a boat that will never need repair. We back that up with a lifetime warranty by the way. Our hulls are made of .190 aluminum, 5806 marine grade alloy, and a web of proprietary bracing under our floors to prevent stress cracks due to unnecessary flexing. Most of the production aluminum bass boats out there rely on spray in foam to strengthen their hulls. This is a cheap and ineffective way of bracing a boat. We make many of our hulls with no foam at all, it’s optional. So we MUST brace the boat properly, or suffer the consequences. Next in line of prioritization would be performance. Our performance features include an exclusive pad that allows the boat to get amazing top end speeds for a tin boat that is indestructible, as well as a reverse chine system that allows the boat to turn on a dime and eliminates chine walk at high speeds. These boats are amazingly easy to drive. Lastly, but probably the most fun to talk about, is our ability to customize these boats however you want them. You choose the size you want, then we ask you, “Ok, how do you want it laid out?”. The rest is up to you. As much deck or as little, as many boxes or as few as you want. When you’ve seen the other boats out there and you say, “ I wish this was like that,” or “why cant my rod box hold an 8.5’ rod”....this is where you come. That’s what we do. Along those custom lines as well, each boat is hand laid. There are no patterns to your decks and boxes so, your deck was made when a fabricator called out “48 and 3/16”, then the deck was cut and SEAM welded in place! No tabs that get beat with a rubber mallet till they “fit”. Your parts were cut for YOUR boat the way YOU wanted them made...perfect. Zeth: Comparing apples to oranges. Especially since there are many dare I say myths about aluminum vs fiberglass. What is it about Gator Trax high performance bass boats which allows them to compete with the glass boats on the market? Kent: Usability. How many guys do I know that are basically afraid to use their boat? Lots. Don’t bump that dock! Don’t let us touch that cypress tree! Oh Lord, we scraped an oyster reef! Why they feel that way is understandable. Have you priced boats lately? Better yet, have you had fiberglass repair done lately? How’s the gel coat holding up to the brutal sun after 7 years? What are those spider web looking cracks in my transom? All problems with glass boats. While our boats are not as light as say an Allison or Gambler...(hulls made for speed, not fishing), they are lighter than most production glass bass boats. The BEST thing about aluminum is nothing has to be permanent. Don’t like your deck layout 3 years down the road? Bring it back and we can rip it out, add to it, or eliminate it altogether. Paint it back and you’d never know it wasn’t built that way originally. Wreck the boat and put a dent in it? We can fix it for less than a new rod n reel in most cases. Overall, aluminum offers the end user much more flexibility with their changing lives and conditions as well as a hull that can get a new paint job and hydroturf flooring every 10 years and still look and function like the day they bought it. You WILL NOT do that with glass. Zeth: Now, I understand that your Strike Series bass boats are custom made to the tune of 3-4 boats per year. This means any buyer will get attention to detail, quality and pride in craftsmanship from you. Could you tell us a little something about this custom experience? Kent: It’s the Gator Trax Experience. No different than any of our other boats, the experience you get when buying one of our Strike Series Hulls is unique. You will not be told that there are 3 models, 2 colors, and one motor choice...not here. We will wind up asking you more questions than you ask us. These hulls are not cheap and it’s too much money to get it wrong. We want you thrilled when you leave here. And because you play such a large role in the design of your own personal boat, it gives you, our customer, a great feeling of being part of the Gator Trax Team. We build about 350 custom boats per year. 98% of those are shallow water flat bottom boats. They are our “bread and butter” boats. We started building these Strike Series boats (they weren't called that then) for our own personal use. Well, after being hounded at boat ramps and when people would see them here at our factory, we relented and built one for a customer. I’m not joking...we literally used to hide them in our boat sheds at the factory so no one would ask us to make them one. They are very time consuming and we can make 10 of our flat bottom boats to one of these. So after much demand, we decided to make a FEW each year to those on a waiting list. Yes, there is a list. Sorry. Zeth: A major factor in whether to choose aluminum over fiberglass for many people is the price factor. How does a custom Gator Trax bass boat compare in this dept? Kent: Right on track...with QUALITY glass hulls. See, there really isn’t anyone making a high performance, quality, aluminum bass boat. I know many of your readers just hit the roof! Sorry guys. What you think is high quality and high performance is just what you are used to. There is something better out there. Our hulls will out turn, out run, and DEFINITELY out LIVE any other production aluminum bass boat on the market...insert name here...doesn’t matter. But our prices are going to be higher than theirs. You get what you pay for. But as it compares to a glass boat, we are right in line. Our Strike series hulls have gone out as cheap as $32K and one left last week for $58K. Since they are all custom, the price tag is really up to you. We sell everything...Electronics, Trolling motors, Power-Poles, Talons, Humminbird, Garmin, Lowrance, Mercury, Suzuki, Honda, jack plates, double axle aluminum trailers with brakes, you name it, we sell it. So the end price varies greatly from one custom boat to the next. Zeth: Just out of curiosity... Kent, who are your typical Custom Bass boat customers? Why have your past customers come to you? Kent: Previous tin boat owners....always. I rarely get a first time boat buyer. Why? They just don’t know. “A boat is a boat”...right? Wrong. But a new boat buyer sees a pretty bass boat with a nice plastic dash board, really cute plastic cup holders, the boat’s name printed on the trailer....its shiny....looks like it’s made well...got a great price and hey, they finance! That’s it...no research, SOLD! He gets if financed for 10 years and before the note is finished being paid its riddled with stress cracks from one end to the next and most every option it had was riveted on and everything is loose and falling off and the boat is ready for the burn pile on the back 40. My customers are guys that played that game already. They have already experienced a poorly designed hull that looked much better on the showroom floor than it performed in the water. They’ve torn them up, worn them out, or got tired of interior layouts that didn’t suit what THEY wanted. They begin to research...they find us online, and then they get in line to have one built. One of the MOST common statements I hear constantly is, “...man, I've been looking at your boats for 2 years now. I'm ready to buy the last boat I’ll ever have to buy, and I want it the way I want it.” No problem. Zeth: Are there noticeable handling benefits to your custom bass boats over glass? I mean, I would think there would be with the ability to have a custom built hull which would suit the bodies of water you fish most. Kent: Our bass boats are made to traverse choppy seas and still draft very little water. Unfortunately with boats, you cant have it all in one boat. If anyone ever figures out how to do that, there will be only one boat made. If your V is too deep, your ride is great but you draft way too much to get in the backwaters. If it’s too shallow, you can get most anywhere you want but it will beat you to death in a 2ft chop. We have tried to incorporate the best of both worlds into our hulls. As much as you can anyway. Our bass boats are made to traverse shallow water easily, yet still offer a comfortable ride in a chop. As far as drivability, our hulls don’t get into that death wobble of chine walking seen in many glass boats. Our hulls wont slide in a turn either. It’s like riding on a rail in a curvy river. Zeth: Durability is an important factor when buying a boat. I know this is something Gator Trax prides itself in. Just how durable are Gator Trax bass boats? Kent: Well, we’ve never had to repair any of them...none. Some of our customers will bring us a boat that’s 10 years old. We repaint it, put new flooring (hydroturf) down, and the boat looks like it did 10 years ago. Cosmetics is about the only thing that needs a refresher each decade. So...pretty durable. Zeth: Lets finish off with just two more questions. Seeing as how your boats are custom made, what are some of the more unique and cool modifications you have built into a new bass boat? Kent: I wouldn’t know where to start. I used to be amazed at some of the things guys come up with. Now, its just second nature, it’s what we do. Removable sight-fishing platforms, intricate deck hatch layouts, and tricked out lighting are amongst the coolest. Its not the big things usually. Not necessarily something you can see a mile off that impress. It’s the list of 27 items this customer gave me incorporating everything from where he wants his switches, to how he wants the wires run, to the custom center console for two with a race car style shifter on the floor, that makes these boats truly custom. It’s the little things. Zeth: Lastly I'd like to ask you if there is anything else you would like to touch on before we part ways here? Kent: If guys would like to get a quote, its easy. Just shoot us an email to kent@gatortraxboats.com and give me a wish list. Tell me the size, the motor, the trailer, the paint, electronics, trolling motor, the layout...everything you can think of that will help me get you an accurate quote. We will take that wish list and make you a line itemized work order so you can see exactly where your money is going on each item. We will also make a diagram of the boat and then email that back to you. Now you have something tangible to look at and an accurate price. We can tweak that work order back and forth until it’s just right for you. Lead times are generally 12 weeks or so depending on the time of year and we have plenty of shipping options to get your boat to you in an affordable manner. Well that about sums it up for our interview. Kent I would like to thank you again for taking the time to share Gator Trax boats and for spreading the word about high performance aluminum bass boats. Fish On & Keep Dreaming! -Zeth Kinnett
  17. mend-it, super glue etc.
  18. Yeah Just having the ability to call them up is worth it. There is a small super clear water reservoir right near where I live. I was throwing a Hud 68 Special the other day and had a BEAST i.e. way over 10lbs. maybe 15 come up and grab it but it only got the tail. Made me think I should try other types of swimbaits as well.
  19. I actually have not fished any. Never found a reason to until now. People catch em good on them and they can be an excellent tool to find bass. What are your favorites? keep it sub $200 lures i.e. no Roman Made etc. I'm thinking Deps or ABT.
  20. I use Teckel frogs and River2Sea frogs. I find the Teckel frogs to be easy to walk.
  21. Second that but I especially like the Keitech Shad Impact. You'll want screw lock or light wire hooks however if you get them. They are great with Owner J light hooks.
  22. zeth replied to livemusic's topic in Fishing Tackle
    Baffin!!!
  23. zeth replied to 3li's topic in Fishing Tackle
    favorite bait is a soft jerkbait.

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