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Why You Need More Finesse with Flipping and Pitching by: TJ Maglio

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Flipping means different things to different bass anglers.

Some think of 8-foot “broom-stick” rods and 65-pound braid with an ounce of tungsten at the other end. Others imagine the thrill of a boiling 5-pounder rocketing out of a deadfall. For me it will always be the anticipation of that small line tick, or the mushy feeling you get when something just isn’t right, causing you to “put the wood” to that unsuspecting nibbler.

Whatever images come to mind, it is probably unlikely that the word “finesse” had anything to do with them.

Despite the inherent “power” nature of the flipping presentation, many anglers are already implementing aspects of finesse into their flipping approach without even knowing it. Turning off a fish finder or using a push pole to move around a grass bed are forms of finessing your way to flipping bass.

Elite Series Pros Chris Lane, Randy Howell, and Kurt Dove recently shared the integration of finesse elements into flipping. Each has integrated additional ways to “finesse” while flipping  and pitching that allow them to catch more and bigger bass.

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10 Tips for Bass Anglers on a Budget by: Luke Stoner

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Fishing for the University of Illinois, I have had the opportunity to travel around and fish some of the best bass lakes in the country. As any avid bass fisherman knows, this sport can get expensive quickly. As a collegiate angler, this sometimes means choosing between groceries for the week or lures for the weekend. This has forced me to become creative in getting every cent out of my equipment and to penny pinch while on a fishing trip.

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Classic qualification made easy … sort of – Bassmaster.com

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Classic qualification made easy … sort of

You need a scorecard, calculator and some scratch paper to figure out the 2015 Bassmaster Classic field … or you could read this

Darren Jacobson
As defending Classic champ, Randy Howell was one of the first to qualify for the 2015 championship

With the completion of the 2014 Toyota Bassmaster Angler of the Year Championship, 48 of the 56 Bassmaster Classic berths for Lake Hartwell, Feb. 20-22, 2015, are in the books. Remaining are one spot from the final Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Southern Open presented by Allstate (to be decided on Oct. 4), six spots from the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship (Nov. 8) and one spot from the Bassmaster Team Series (Dec. 13).

Classic qualifiers come from seven sources.

Defending Champion(s)

Randy Howell
Cliff Pace

Ordinarily, only one defending Classic champ has a berth in the Classic, and it would be Randy Howell, who won earlier this year. The 2013 champ, Cliff Pace, however, was unable to defend his title after suffering a hunting injury that forced him to sit out the Elite Series season. As a result, he’ll be back in the Classic in 2015. What’s more, Pace finished second to Alton Jones at the 2008 Classic on Hartwell, so he’ll certainly be one of the pre-tournament favorites.

Elite Winners

Brett Hite
Chris Lane
Mike McClelland
Jacob Powroznik
Jason Christie
Jacob Wheeler
Michael Iaconelli
Greg Hackney

Wheeler isn’t fishing the Elite Series, but he won BASSfest on Chickamauga Lake and fished the full season of Northern Opens to earn his spot.

Top-Ranking Anglers in the AOY Standings

The top 29 anglers in the AOY race all earn a berth in the Classic. You’ve seen some of these names already above.

Greg Hackney
Todd Faircloth
Jacob Powroznik
Aaron Martens
Mark Davis
Keith Combs
Skeet Reese
Jared Lintner
Dean Rojas
Casey Ashley
Justin Lucas
Chris Lane
Randall Tharp
Gerald Swindle
Jason Christie
Matt Herren
Brandon Palaniuk
Chad Morgenthaler
John Crews
David Walker
Scott Rook
Edwin Evers
Paul Elias
Cliff Crochet
Michael Iaconelli
Mike McClelland
James Niggemeyer
Brandon Lester
Randy Howell

Six of the anglers who won Elite events (Hackney, Powroznik, Chris Lane, Christie, Iaconelli and McClelland) were also in the top 29 of the AOY race. Thus they “double qualify,” earning a spot via their wins and on points. Howell also double qualifies on points and as defending Classic champion. That opens up seven more spots for Elite anglers, as follows.

Morizo Shimizu
Brett Hite
Bill Lowen
Bobby Lane
Brian Snowden
Andy Montgomery
Clifford Pirch

But wait! Hite was also an Elite winner, so that’s another double qualifier, and we can move down the list one more place to pick up …

Ott DeFoe

But don’t stop there! DeFoe won a Northern Open so he’s also double qualified (see below). Let’s move down the list another spot to add …

Takahiro Omori

And don’t forget that one of the Opens winners (former Elite pro Mark Tyler) didn’t fish the full Open season and so did not earn a Classic berth with his win. Instead of that spot going unused, though, it shifts to the next angler on the AOY points list, which is …

Kevin Short

And that completes the field of Elite qualifiers … for now.

Opens Winners

Stephen Browning
Ott DeFoe
Shinichi Fukae
David Kilgore
Chad Pipkens
Van Soles
Andy Young

Mark Tyler also won an Open, but didn’t fish them all in that division, so he didn’t get a Classic berth with the win. The final Open of 2014 is on North Carolina’s Lake Norman, Oct. 2-4. The winner will earn a Classic berth if he fished all the Southern Opens this year. If he didn’t, that spot will go to the next ranking angler in Elite AOY points — Cliff Prince. Interestingly, Prince will be fishing the event even though he didn’t fish the other Southern Opens this year. If he wins, the victory itself will not earn him a Classic berth. Instead, the win opens the door for the next Elite pro —Cliff Prince! As a practical matter, it’s inconsequential. But it is interesting. Prince can play both Classic spoiler and benefactor with a win. That’s never happened before.

College B.A.S.S.

Brett Preuett

B.A.S.S. Nation

Six spots are up for grabs and will be decided at the Old Milwaukee B.A.S.S. Nation Championship, Nov. 6-8, on the Ouachita River in Louisiana.

Bassmaster Team Series

One Classic spot to be determined at the Toyota Bonus Bucks Bassmaster Team Championship on DeGray Lake, Ark., Dec. 9-13.

Now you’re up to speed.

Finding Fish In Transition How experts use Humminbird technologies to put the bead on fall and winter fish

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Finding Fish In Transition

How experts use Humminbird technologies to put the bead on fall and winter fish

 

 

Eufaula, AL (September 24, 2014) – Typically, as fall arrives, many of us head for the tree stand or blind, turning our attention to birds and bucks. Yet, what’s happening on the water this time of the year can be equally as awesome as what’s happening in the field.

 

Here’s how a handful of fishing’s top experts find and pattern bass, walleyes and panfish during the fall and winter – and how you can do the same.

 

 


Vahrenberg verifies the presence of a kicker fish on the tree identified with 360 Imaging.

 

 

Open-Water Bass: Fall & Winter

Missouri-based tournament pro Doug Vahrenberg says his fall and winter bass game has never been better thanks to the trifecta of Humminbird’s LakeMaster mapping, Side Imaging and 360 Imaging.

“As the water cools and bass school up in the fall, they’ll begin to move from the main lake into creek arms. And you’ve got main lake fish on the flats adjacent to those creek arms. Both have one thing in common: they’re looking for lunch.”

 

Vahrenberg says it all comes down to surveying a lake quickly because fall bass can be here today, gone tomorrow. With two ONIX units at the dash – one set to full-screen Side Imaging, the other to Humminbird LakeMaster mapping – Vahrenberg is similarly on the prowl for baitfish and bass.

“I typically have my Side Imaging set to look 100 feet right and left. On a new lake I’ll increase that range to 130-150 feet until I find bait and ambush targets like trees, stumps, and submerged cover most anglers can’t see, especially in shallower stained water. Then I mark anything that looks like a good ambush site with a waypoint.”

 

He adds: “Seems like fall bass like flats close to a channel swing. They’ll move up from deeper water and push the bait into two-, three- or four feet of water and feed. With LakeMaster mapping you can find those spots where the channel swings in close to the bank. A lot of times your screen will be absolutely full of bait so I like to concentrate on those areas right before or after the giant wads of bait. Helps make the presence of your bait known.”

 

 

Humminbird 360 Imaging reveals the submerged tree in shallow, stained water that produced Vahrenberg’s bass (shown), only 25 feet from the boat.

 

 

Once he’s located a channel swing, good cover, baitfish – even the bass themselves  –  Vahrenberg will jump from the console to the bow.

 

“As soon as I start pinging Bow 360 every waypoint will show up on my bow ONIX unit and I can motor right to ‘em. Seems like if there’s a lot of cover, the fish tend to be isolated. Where there’s no cover, fish tend to group up in ‘wolf packs’. That’s where 360 Imaging really helps locating the stuff that you can’t see. The beauty is that it does all the work for you. You’re not controlling anything with your foot – all you have to do is look at the screen and think about where to cast next.”

 

From fall through winter, Vahrenberg breaks down his presentations into two preferred categories.

“I always have one stick rigged up with a creature or jig and craw combo to flip the isolated fish on cover. Those fish will position right behind the timber, waiting for lunch to swim by. On lakes with less cover I’m fishing fast search baits to connect with the wolf packs – square bills, spinnerbaits, buzzbaits, lipless cranks – and searching out aggression bites. A shad pattern is always good but if there’s an overabundance of forage, I’ll switch over to a bluegill pattern, which is often just different enough to get bit. Look at it this way, if you’re eating a chicken breast every day and somebody offers you pizza …”

 

 

This ONIX split-screen reveals the presence of baitfish in Side Imaging, 2D Sonar and Down Imaging.

 

 

During winter, Vahrenberg reverses his fall routine and starts at the back of creek arms, moving outward to the first or second channel swing – or from the edge of the ice back to the main lake. “Even more so in the winter, bass will associate to the channel swings – and deeper water – but look along the edges. Again, LakeMaster mapping and the imaging technologies can really help you find the right stuff.”

 

Pre-Fishing For Early Ice: Walleyes & Perch

In northern Minnesota, the open water season is typically over by Thanksgiving. Yet, by the time the turkey and cranberry are being passed around the table, ice fishing guide/tournament Brian “Bro” Brosdahl has much of his winter ice fishing strategy already mapped. Many years, he’s already fishing on hardwater by turkey day.

 

“Sure, I’ll drop waypoints on structures in the fall but what I really do is fast-forward my thinking to winter, knowing that walleyes and jumbo perch will associate to shoreline points, saddles, humps, and weed bed edges on flats during early ice,” says Brosdahl.

 

Like Vahrenberg’s Missouri bass, Brosdahl says the biggest reason early-ice fish associate to these areas – especially on larger bodies of water like Minnesota’s Mille Lacs, Winnibigoshish and Leech – is the presence of baitfish. “Walleyes and perch both gorge on shiners, although the bigger walleyes seem to prefer whitefish.”

 

Brosdahl says Humminbird Lakemaster mapping greatly reduces the time it takes him to “pre-fish” a lake in the fall for ice fishing in winter.

 

“But you can’t just motor around in the fall, mark bait and fish and drop waypoints. Most of the fall fish will have moved by first-ice. So, what I do is highlight depths with Lakemaster’s Depth Highlight feature – typically somewhere between 12 and 14 feet on bigger lakes – and then start dropping waypoints on those areas that will be their next move after fall.”

 

 

Brosdahl and the big jumbo perch pay-off of scouting with Humminbird LakeMaster and Side Imaging technologies. Photo by Bill Lindner.
 

“You still have to look for inside turns, saddles and especially those steep breaks for walleyes. But remember: If there are walleyes in the area, they’ll push the perch up onto adjacent flats and the gradual breaks.”

 

Brosdahl was one walleye fishing’s earliest adopters of Side Imaging. “Same time as I’m watching my LakeMaster map, I’m watching Side Imaging for hard- and soft bottom edges. Both walleyes and perch will ride those edges all winter long. With Side Imaging these spots are unmistakable. Plus, as more of your ‘A list’ spots like rock piles and sunken islands get winter fishing traffic, I find myself fishing hard-to-soft bottom transitions in places easily overlooked.”

 

Once a surveyor for LakeMaster himself, Brosdahl says mapping waters with Humminbird’s new AutoChart Pro software has been a lot of fun. “Of course, this time around I don’t have to share my findings with anyone!”

 

“Kind of cool that I can go to a lake that doesn’t have HD one-foot contours and really dial in on spots for winter. Plus, AutoChart Pro gives me bottom hardness mapping so I those hard-to-soft spots really jump out. And there are some tiny lakes that have never been mapped. That’s where AutoChart really shines.”

 

He adds: “Another thing: Internet connectivity – even phone reception – can be pretty spotty in the areas I fish. Pretty cool that you can create the map on a PC without having to connect to the web. Plus, I know my data’s kept private.”

 

 

One pass of Humminbird 360 reveals more than 10 manmade crappie cribs in a single pass. Range set to 120 feet in every direction.

 

 

Tournament Talk: Winter Panfish

Currently, Wisconsin-based Kevin Fassbind and Nick Smyers are in second place as they prepare to fish the NAIFC 2014 Series Ice Fishing Championship on Minnesota’s Mille Lacs Lake, December 20, 2014.

 

A big part of their ongoing strategy is open-water scouting tournament grounds, like Mille Lacs’ Isle and Waukon bays.

 

“We’ve found Humminbird Side Imaging helps us identify the best weeds and hard-bottom areas. We’ll idle back and forth through a bay, looking 120 feet off each side of the boat. When we see holes in weed beds, inside turns and good bottom, we simply drop waypoints for winter. The way the system works is pretty easy – just pop the SD card out of the Humminbird 999 on the boat and drop it into the Humminbird 688 ice combo. Then it’s all right there,” says Fassbind.

 

Beyond marking waypoints on open-water, the duo has also experimented with Side Imaging on the ice. Using a pole-mounted Side Imaging transducer spun manually around in a hole in the ice, Fassbind and Smyers have had some success using the technology in a way it wasn’t intended.

 

“When we were fishing the NAIFC event on Lake Maxinkuckee, Indiana, we found a 20’ x 20’ patch of weeds with some logs, and Kevin pointed me in the direction and told me to start drilling. Boom, drilled one hole and I was on it,” says Smyers. “But it was difficult to get the image we wanted. Yet, we could see how this kind of technology could give us a huge on-ice advantage for locating manmade structures like cribs, Christmas tree piles, even fish.”

 

Along those lines, the duo is planning on implementing Humminbird Bow 360 into their tournament arsenal this year.

 

“What we were trying to do with Side Imaging is something that 360 Imaging already does better. With a little bit of rigging for ice, I really think it’s going to help us locate structure and fish even faster, which could be huge for main-basin crappies and deep-water perch. Punch a waypoint on fish and then go drill it. Instead of drilling hundreds of holes, we’ll be drilling a precise few. Not sure how much grid scouting we’ll be doing any more,” says Smyers.

 

No matter where in the country you fish, the take-home message is clear: put in some time scouting with today’s technologies and you too can increase your odds for stellar fall and winter fishing.

 

 

Competitive ice angler Kevin Fassbind and teammate Nick Smyers use a combination of open-water and on-ice scouting with Humminbird technologies to stay on top of the leaderboard.

 

 

 

For more information visit humminbird.com, contact Humminbird, 678 Humminbird Lane, Eufaula, AL 36027, or call 800-633-1468.

 

About Johnson Outdoors Marine Electronics, Inc.

Johnson Outdoors Marine Electronics, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Johnson Outdoors  and consists of the Humminbird®, Minn Kota® and Cannon® brands. Humminbird® is a leading global innovator and manufacturer of marine electronics products including fishfinders, multifunction displays, autopilots, ice flashers, and premium cartography products. Minn Kota® is the world’s leading manufacturer of electric trolling motors, as well as offers a complete line of shallow water anchors, battery chargers and marine accessories. Cannon® is the leader in controlled-depth fishing and includes a full line of downrigger products and accessories.

 

 

 

 

 

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Jim Edlund

Traditions Media, LLC

[email protected]

612.481.7396

 

Cory Schmidt

Traditions Media, LLC

[email protected]

218.821.4148

A.R.E. PARTNERS WITH RIGID INDUSTRIES TO OFFER LIGHT BARS AS OPTION FOR MX SERIES TRUCK CAP

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A.R.E. MX Series Lightbar

A.R.E. PARTNERS WITH RIGID INDUSTRIES TO OFFER
LIGHT BARS AS OPTION FOR MX SERIES TRUCK CAP

MASSILLON, Ohio – A.R.E. Accessories now offers Rigid Industries’ E-Series LED Light Bars as optional equipment on their fiberglass MX Series truck caps, which are available for most current model year pickup trucks in all cab and bed configurations. The MX Series cap sports an aerodynamic raised roof design, providing extra headroom and storage capacity, and has a full walk-in door option for easy rear access.

A.R.E. designed a black powder coated aluminum bracket to fit inside the recessed area located in front of the MX Series fiberglass cap for optimum light bar placement. The light bracket features the A.R.E. logo on both ends with the A.R.E. insignia across the face plate. The light bar will be factory installed with no exposed wiring, and the on/off light switch can be mounted by the truck’s dash or on a roof console. Rigid E-Series LED Light Bars can be easily retrofitted to any existing A.R.E. MX Series truck cap.

This is the first offering in a new joint marketing partnership that has been developed between A.R.E. and Rigid Industries that came as a result of both companies working together on industry project truck builds. “Partnering with companies that take quality and details to new levels is what it’s all about,” said Dave Davis, vice president of sales, Rigid Industries. “All of us at Rigid Industries are excited to elevate the innovation with a company like A.R.E. Accessories.” A leader in LED lighting technology, Rigid Lighting products provide very high light output and require very little power to run, reducing battery drain as opposed to traditional lighting.

Visit www.4are.com for additional details.

About A.R.E.
      A.R.E. began manufacturing aluminum frame truck caps in 1969 and has become a leading manufacturer of fiberglass truck caps and hard tonneau covers.  At its ISO-9001:2008-certified manufacturing facilities, A.R.E.’s more than 700 employees create the products that are sold through a network of more than 650 independent authorized dealers.  For more information, contact A.R.E. at 400 Nave Rd. S.E., P.O. Box 1100, Massillon, OH 44648, email [email protected], call 330-830-7800 or visit www.4are.com.
     

Chris Richey and George Bost Win the 2014 Carolinas Bass Challenge NC Classic

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Carolinas Bass Challenge NC Championship – Kerr LakeChris Richey and George Bost bested the field of 132 boats w/ 17.86 lbs and took home a 2014 Skeeter TZX190 w/ a Yamaha 150 HPDI!!Don Poteat and Johnny Allen finished 4th overall and were our Top Finishing Skeeter/Yamaha Team pushing their total pay-day from $2,500 to $7,500!!

Netbait Little Spanky Review by: Walker Smith

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I’m not necessarily a deep swimbait fisherman. My favorite fisheries are often fairly dingy and offer excellent shallow bass fishing opportunities, so I’ve never really had an opportunity to master the technique. I do, however, love throwing swimbaits in shallow water and it’s been a really productive pattern for me lately.

I’ve had a lot of time to test the Netbait Little Spanky for the past several months and it has really earned its keep in my tackle collection. I was thrown for somewhat of a loop when I realized how small it was, but I’ve been able to apply it to several scenarios with a lot of success.

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Strike King KVD 8.0 Magnum Squarebill Review by: Jason Sealock

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The big bait craze that catapulted onto bass fishing through swimbaits out west has bled into other categories the last couple of years. Oversized topwaters have proven to be very effective for big bass. And now it appears oversized crankbaits catch bass equally well. After watching Greg Hackney throw a big crankbait on Pickwick to win the FLW Tour event, I was pretty anxious to review the new Strike King KVD 8.0 Magnum Squarebill crankbait.

I live on the Tennessee River. It’s full of bass. But more importantly it is full of big forage. Big bluegills, big gizzard, Tennessee and Hickory shad, big herring and mooneye. There are lots of big things for bass to eat on this lake. So it makes sense that big crankbaits, swimbaits and topwaters play here often.

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Morristown Marine is proud to announce additional incentives for the Morristown Marine Team Trail for the 2015 Trail

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Morristown Marine is proud to announce additional incentives for the Morristown Marine Team Trail Invitational Highest Finishing Skeeter / Yamaha Bonus Program in 2015.

 

The 2015 Morristown Marine Skeeter/Yamaha Bonus Program will be as follows:

 

1st Highest Finishing Skeeter / Yamaha  $3500.00

2nd Highest Finishing Skeeter / Yamaha $2500.00

3rd Highest Finishing Skeeter / Yamaha  $1500.00

4th Highest Finishing Skeeter / Yamaha $1000.00

5th Highest Finishing Skeeter / Yamaha  $750.00

6th Highest Finishing Skeeter / Yamaha $500.00

7th Highest Finishing Skeeter / Yamaha $250.00

 

Morristown Marine is excited about the additional incentive, when combined with the Tournament Payout, Skeeter Real Money, and Morristown Marine Boat Bucks it provides a very attractive payout for the local anglers.

 

Jeff Stone – Senior VP and General Manager of Skeeter Boats: Skeeter and Yamaha are very proud to be affiliated with Morristown Marine and the Morristown Marine Team Trail Invitational. Sam and Delores have done a great job promoting Skeeter and Yamaha in the East Tennessee area for the last 5 years and we look forward to many more years with them in the future.

 

Kevin Polston – Regional Sales Rep: It is unbelievable what Sam and Delores have accomplished in the East Tennessee area, not only in East Tennessee but the whole Southeast with the Morristown Marine Team Trail Invitational. I want to personally thank all the anglers who purchase a Skeeter/Yamaha package for placing your confidence in Morristown Marine and Skeeter/Yamaha and looking forward to a great 2015 tournament season.

 

 

Make Money and Save Money this Month with LEER by: admin

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With a Carhartt College Bassmaster National title, and a 6th-place showing in the 2014 Bassmaster Classic, few tournament bass anglers have accomplished as much as early in a career as 23-year-old Jordan Lee, and his recent enrollment in the LEER “Cover Cash” bonus program reflects his rare ability to consistently recognize a winning pattern at such a young age.

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