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Pre Fishing
I have a buddy tourney this Saturday and will be pre-fishing a few hours tomorrow a.m and Friday a.m. I did this tourney last year and we put up with the snickers and jeers of "Those Fancy Rigged Bass Boys" for riding in "My Wife's bathtub" as they called it. We finished 7th out of 22 teams. Question: I have not done too much prefishing for tourney's, On small lakes would it be better to just rig up without a hook to see what the bass are going after without hooking them? Any pre-fishing I've ever done I always hooked the fish, But with this lake being an electric only very small lake I am thinking otherwise. These may sound like stupid questions but I really do not know. I would love to place in this tourney on the same 9 foot 6 inch bathtub that we took out last year with the cooler for a livewell. Any suggestions? Idea's? Regards, |
Pre Fishing
If you already know the lake well, and considering how much you fish
currently, I wouldn't bother the fish with pre-fishing. You'll be on them when the time comes. No sense in spooking them with what you might be using in the tourney. My two cents... -- Andrew Kidd http://www.amiasoft.com/ - Software for the rest of us! http://www.rofb.net/ - ROFB Newsgroup Home "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... I have a buddy tourney this Saturday and will be pre-fishing a few hours tomorrow a.m and Friday a.m. I did this tourney last year and we put up with the snickers and jeers of "Those Fancy Rigged Bass Boys" for riding in "My Wife's bathtub" as they called it. We finished 7th out of 22 teams. Question: I have not done too much prefishing for tourney's, On small lakes would it be better to just rig up without a hook to see what the bass are going after without hooking them? Any pre-fishing I've ever done I always hooked the fish, But with this lake being an electric only very small lake I am thinking otherwise. These may sound like stupid questions but I really do not know. I would love to place in this tourney on the same 9 foot 6 inch bathtub that we took out last year with the cooler for a livewell. Any suggestions? Idea's? Regards, |
Pre Fishing
On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 22:01:53 GMT, "Andrew Kidd"
wrote: If you already know the lake well, and considering how much you fish currently, I wouldn't bother the fish with pre-fishing. You'll be on them when the time comes. No sense in spooking them with what you might be using in the tourney. My two cents... I know this is on a lake he rarely fishes. He likely would like to get out and see if his current techniques will work. The makeup of the lake the tournament is on is significantly different from where he fishes daily. Also, the lake the tournament is on recieves a TON of tournament pressure as opposed to his comparatively un-fished home lake. The fishking clique is pretty much the only pressure on his home lake. Harry J aka Thundercat Brooklyn Bill's Tackle Shop Fishing Team http://www.geocities.com/brooklynbill2003/products.html Share the knowledge, compete on execution. |
Pre Fishing
Harry said it in a mouthfull. My bass are stupid, these bass include
smallies, different lake that I'm not use to fishing and fish that are under heavy pressure daily "Thundercat" wrote in message ... On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 22:01:53 GMT, "Andrew Kidd" wrote: If you already know the lake well, and considering how much you fish currently, I wouldn't bother the fish with pre-fishing. You'll be on them when the time comes. No sense in spooking them with what you might be using in the tourney. My two cents... I know this is on a lake he rarely fishes. He likely would like to get out and see if his current techniques will work. The makeup of the lake the tournament is on is significantly different from where he fishes daily. Also, the lake the tournament is on recieves a TON of tournament pressure as opposed to his comparatively un-fished home lake. The fishking clique is pretty much the only pressure on his home lake. Harry J aka Thundercat Brooklyn Bill's Tackle Shop Fishing Team http://www.geocities.com/brooklynbill2003/products.html Share the knowledge, compete on execution. |
Pre Fishing
Well then... That's a horse of a different color! :-)
As I see it, pre-fishing can be done, but I wouldn't load the boat like you might in a normal day of fishing. If you decide to fish, just don't hammer a spot after you catch one. Move on. Maybe try the pattern on one additional similar spot, then move on to another bait and presentation and see if you catch more. I have pre-fished with Brad Coovert, from the group, before, and he is really good at not molesting his fish, once he's found them. It can be hard to resist that temptation!!! -- Andrew Kidd http://www.amiasoft.com/ - Software for the rest of us! http://www.rofb.net/ - ROFB Newsgroup Home "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... Harry said it in a mouthfull. My bass are stupid, these bass include smallies, different lake that I'm not use to fishing and fish that are under heavy pressure daily "Thundercat" wrote in message ... On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 22:01:53 GMT, "Andrew Kidd" wrote: If you already know the lake well, and considering how much you fish currently, I wouldn't bother the fish with pre-fishing. You'll be on them when the time comes. No sense in spooking them with what you might be using in the tourney. My two cents... I know this is on a lake he rarely fishes. He likely would like to get out and see if his current techniques will work. The makeup of the lake the tournament is on is significantly different from where he fishes daily. Also, the lake the tournament is on recieves a TON of tournament pressure as opposed to his comparatively un-fished home lake. The fishking clique is pretty much the only pressure on his home lake. Harry J aka Thundercat Brooklyn Bill's Tackle Shop Fishing Team http://www.geocities.com/brooklynbill2003/products.html Share the knowledge, compete on execution. |
Pre Fishing
personally, if the lake is as small as you make it sound, I would go out,
but I wouldn't fish at all. I would check the quality of weeds, life on different structure. You can really figure out a lot by observing without ever really even seeing a "bass". If you understand their habits, and you have experience catching fish there, then I wouldn't chance hooking a fish that could mean the difference between a check and a donation. Good luck! Chris alwaysfishking wrote: I have a buddy tourney this Saturday and will be pre-fishing a few hours tomorrow a.m and Friday a.m. I did this tourney last year and we put up with the snickers and jeers of "Those Fancy Rigged Bass Boys" for riding in "My Wife's bathtub" as they called it. We finished 7th out of 22 teams. Question: I have not done too much prefishing for tourney's, On small lakes would it be better to just rig up without a hook to see what the bass are going after without hooking them? Any pre-fishing I've ever done I always hooked the fish, But with this lake being an electric only very small lake I am thinking otherwise. These may sound like stupid questions but I really do not know. I would love to place in this tourney on the same 9 foot 6 inch bathtub that we took out last year with the cooler for a livewell. Any suggestions? Idea's? Regards, |
Pre Fishing
IMO, pre-fish your lake, regardless of size. You will learn a lot about the
lake, structure, cover, water and fish without ever setting the hook. I usually catch a fish or two, but will stop hooking fish and then will just fish for bites to find a pattern OR just motor around looking for similar spots. It really helps to learn about a lake. If you can sacrifice baits such as spinnerbaits and jigs, make some prefish tools. Cut the hook points off OR cover them with hard plastic tubing if you don't want to do that. You will feel the strikes, but will will not hook the fish. If you're fishing plastics, turn the hook point down with pliers or bury it deep into the bait to avoid hooking the fish. I've gotten fish all the way to the boat without ever hooking them...they just would not let go of the bait! If you're pressed for time and have little time to prefish, you may just want to motor around and look at what the lake has, but getting some bites will really help you narrow down your search for fish. Brad Coovert 2003 Angler of the Year, Greenfield Bassmasters http://www.greenfieldbassmasters.com |
Pre Fishing
Thanks for the advice guys. I'll let you know how we do in the tourney
"Brad Coovert" wrote in message ... IMO, pre-fish your lake, regardless of size. You will learn a lot about the lake, structure, cover, water and fish without ever setting the hook. I usually catch a fish or two, but will stop hooking fish and then will just fish for bites to find a pattern OR just motor around looking for similar spots. It really helps to learn about a lake. If you can sacrifice baits such as spinnerbaits and jigs, make some prefish tools. Cut the hook points off OR cover them with hard plastic tubing if you don't want to do that. You will feel the strikes, but will will not hook the fish. If you're fishing plastics, turn the hook point down with pliers or bury it deep into the bait to avoid hooking the fish. I've gotten fish all the way to the boat without ever hooking them...they just would not let go of the bait! If you're pressed for time and have little time to prefish, you may just want to motor around and look at what the lake has, but getting some bites will really help you narrow down your search for fish. Brad Coovert 2003 Angler of the Year, Greenfield Bassmasters http://www.greenfieldbassmasters.com |
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