Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Making your bass dance a jig! - Columbia Fishing | Examiner.com

Making your bass dance a jig! - Columbia Fishing | Examiner.com: "No, you do not need to be Irish to get big bass to dance jigs on your line. On a hot, summer day fishing slow is the way to go! When it begins to heat up and ponds lose water, then the big largemouth bass will head for deeper water. It is cooler there and they spend the majority of the year close to those depths anyway, so why not fish there?"

Small Ponds For Big Bass | The Ultimate Bass Fishing Resource Guide® LLC

Small Ponds For Big Bass | The Ultimate Bass Fishing Resource Guide® LLC: "I grew up in a time and place where the option for fishing for bass was limited primarily to smaller private ponds or lakes. The larger lakes in East Texas usually consisted of some oxbows off of the Red River or one of its tributaries. Other options were the water supply bodies built to serve local communities which were at best a couple of hundred acres, smaller farm ponds, or a trek to Caddo lake. The latter was always a special treat just for the scenery."

Walleye - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Walleye - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "Walleye (Sander vitreus, formerly Stizostedion vitreum) is a freshwater perciform fish native to most of Canada and to the northern United States. It is a North American close relative of the European pikeperch. The walleye is sometimes also called the yellow walleye to distinguish it from the blue walleye, which is an extinct subspecies formerly found in the southern Great Lakes."

Crappie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Crappie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "Crappie is a genus of freshwater fish in the sunfish family (family Centrarchidae) of order Perciformes. The type species is P. annularis, the white crappie. The common name crappie ( /ˈkræpiː/ or /ˈkrɒpiː/)[1][2] refers to either of the Pomoxis species, both of which are popular game fish."

ArgentinaTrout: the rainbow trout

ArgentinaTrout: the rainbow trout: "Rainbow Trout is an excellent species of fish to pursue. They exist in all sorts of lakes and man-made reservoirs. Rainbow trout will bite more on fresh bait then old stagnant bait. There are many different types of bait used to catch trout, however the best I have used is definitely Berkely Power Bait and fresh nightcrawlers."