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Screen Shot 2014-08-07 at 7.42.24 PMSmith Mountain Lake

Screen Shot 2014-08-07 at 7.46.25 PMLake Anna

Screen Shot 2014-08-07 at 7.49.42 PMClarksville VA

A look at the Grey Goat Spinnerbait By Bobby Saffel

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Grey Goat Spinnerbait Review

Spinnerbaits are more of a confidence bait for me. I know I can get a bite on a spinnerbait when times are tough. I’ve recently been using a new-to-me brand of spinnerbaits and impressed with the quality. In this review, I will point out the high points of Grey Goat Lures Spinnerbait.

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The first thing on this spinnerbait that catches my eye is the skirt. The band on the skirt is a beefy keeper that is difficult to pull down. I believe this is a plus and aids in the durability of the spinnerbait. I attempted to pull the skirt down in order to look at how it was constructed but couldn’t without fear of tearing it up. The skirt appears to have a flare band that’ll make the skirt “pop” when the bait is killed in the water. This can be good on a stop-and-go retrieve. Of the three colors I sampled, all the skirts came with a built in trailer skirt. This does help give the bait a bulkier look.

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The hook is a 4/0 Mustad hook. This is a good all around hook. It has some flex meaning it will not snap easily. The hook has a trailer keeper which is a plus for me since I like trailers on all my spinnerbaits. The arms on the spinnerbaits are made of a thin wire stainless steel construction. These spinnerbaits can be fished around laydowns and pads without any issues. The slender head comes through cover pretty well and have some nice 3D eyes on the head. The blades on a spinnerbait are extremely important. I haven’t had any tarnishing issues with the blades on these spinnerbaits. When I did some research on their website, I found that they put a clear coat on all their brass blades. This appears to help keeping them look brand new. Grey Goat Lures use quality split rings and swivels in their baits.

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Personally, I feel that another thing that makes a great company is variety and good customer service. While these baits are not main stream just yet, they do offer a good, stress free website. While, browsing their website, I was blown away with the number of colors these spinnerbaits come in. While, 3/8 oz is the only size they currently come in, they do have plans of adding additional sizes to fit the task at hand.

I believe that Grey Goat Lures is on the right track with their baits and have proved to be fish catching machines. They can be purchased at www.greygoatlures.com. Give them a shot, I think you’ll be as pleased as I am.

Take a look at what's new New from WARPATH Lures! – Sink-o-Stix ®

 

New from WARPATH Lures! – Sink-o-Stix ®

 

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The NEW 5” Sink-o-stix ® from Warpath Lures are infused with large grain salt, however they are tougher than other baits with a unique soft plastic formula. Texas rig, wacky rig, Flip it, or swim it. The can be fished like any worm presentation and they make a fantastic MJ rig by adding a small pinner to the tail. You can actually see and feel the difference in our baits, roll one between your fingers and watch as the grains of salt move to the surface leaving the plastic in great shape. The tough formula means more bass per bait and the salt and scent makes them hold on longer for a solid hook set.  

 

Colors available: Midnight Blue (Black with Blue Fleck)  

 

                            More colors coming soon

 

 5 pack “Silhouette Frog” $3.99 + $3.99 shipping 1-25 bagscv

 10 pack “sink-o-stix” $4.50 + $3.99 shipping 1-25 bags

        FREE shipping on all orders of 26 or more bags!

 Click Here To Order Today

World Records and Sponge Bob Square Pants Ten-year-old angler enjoys cartoons and beating the pants off IGFA records

 

World Records and Sponge Bob Square Pants

Ten-year-old angler enjoys cartoons and beating the pants off IGFA records

 

Park Falls, WI (August 5, 2014) – Seeing a line out the back of a boat near Long Island is commonplace. Fleets of 30-some-foot charters troll and rig the mid-Atlantic for stripers, sea bass and weakfish daily. But catching a glimpse of line off the transom of a 950-foot container ship? You blink a few times, rub your eyes, and wonder if the sun and surf are playing tricks on you. But once you’ve realized it’s not a mirage, but instead an 8,000-ton vessel indeed sporting outriggers, you tip your ball cap and text your fishing buddies.

 

Grandpa Winters and Julia Ketner with a pair of Kentucky Lake largemouth bass.

 

 

You likely saw Captain Wes Winters and his merry men. A now retired Westhampton, New York commercial maritime pilot, Captain Winters often treated his crew to bluewater trolling while moving freight athwart the Seven Seas. He tells stories of container-ship-caught mahi-mahi being “fixed up” in the galley and sailfish hooked off the coast of Miami.

 

But when asked about his greatest fishing moment, Grandpa Winters immediately turns to his granddaughter’s ongoing quest to establish and smash International Game Fish Association (IGFA) records.

 

In Winters’ eyes, 10-year-old Julia Grace Ketner is quite the catch. Ketner was four years old when she found a picture of a girl holding a plaque in grandpa’s IGFA quarterly publication. She turned to her mentor and said, “I can do that.” And so began a now decade-long and -lasting commitment to setting and besting IGFA records.   

 

Under the tutelage of Grandpa Winters, Ketner has literally been putting on clinics. To date, she owns 24 approved IGFA world records — ten of which were caught on St. Croix rods. She also has 28 pending world records — 25 of those on St. Croix rods. In addition to this impressive resume of ‘Small Fry’ category successes, are three female line-class records.  

 

Julia Ketner demonstrating she can do it with a flyrod, too. 

 

 

Although young Ketner’s records are cast wide, from saltwater to freshwater, she has clear favorites; the fishing phenom names mahi-mahi, white marlin and locally-grown pickerel as her top species to tangle with.

 

What drives Ketner besides her documented achievements? “It’s fun. It’s exciting to fight a big fish,” she says with a glow. That’s a feeling that obviously doesn’t discriminate against age or dull with graying. And to the Captain’s delight, she also chases fins to “fish with Grandpa and spend time together.” That, in fact, is the essence of it all.   

 

St. Croix Rod first became aware of the motivated lassie at an IGFA function where V.P. of Product Management and part-owner Dave Schluter met Grandpa Winters and Ketner. The rodsmith was so enamored by the girl and her pursuit that he fashioned Ketner a custom Avid Pearl embossed with her name. She fishes the Pearl proudly and sets records with it to this day. 

 

Notwithstanding Ketner’s beyond-her-years competitive spirit, she does have a normal-kid side. The 6th grader giggles at Sponge Bob Square Pants and loves playing with her sister, Abby.

 

By the way, 8-year-old Abby already owns one IGFA record and has another pending.

 

Like granddaughters, like grandpa. 

 

___   LINK to the story   ___

 

Julia being presented with her 2013 Female Small Fry award at the 11th Annual IGFA World Record Achievement Awards banquet.

 

 

About St. Croix Rod

St. Croix Rod is a family-owned and managed manufacturer of high-performance fishing rods headquartered in Park Falls, Wisconsin with a 65-year heritage of USA manufacturing. Utilizing proprietary technologies, St. Croix controls every step of the rod-making process, from conception and design to manufacturing and inspection, in two company-owned facilities. The company offers a complete line of premium, American-made fly, spinning and casting rods under their Legend Elite®, Legend® Xtreme, Legend Tournament®, Avid Series®, Premier®, Wild River®, Tidemaster®, Imperial® and other trademarks through a global distribution network of full-service fishing tackle dealers. The company’s mid-priced Triumph®, Mojo Bass/Musky/Inshore/Surf, Eyecon® and Rio Santo series rods are designed and engineered in Park Falls, Wisconsin and built in a new, state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Fresnillo, Mexico. Founded in 1948 to manufacture jointed bamboo fishing poles for a Minneapolis hardware store chain, St. Croix has grown to become the largest manufacturer of fishing rods in North America.

 

 

 

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Cory Schmidt

Traditions Media, LLC

[email protected]

218.821.4148

David Rose

Traditions Media, LLC

[email protected]

231.276.9874

Eco Pro Tungsten War Cry Buzzbaits with Justin Lucas TW met up with Justin Lucas to discuss the new Eco Pro War Cry Buzzbait at the 2014 ICAST show in Orlando. – Icast 2014

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Eco Pro Tungsten War Cry Buzzbaits with Justin Lucas

TW met up with Justin Lucas to discuss the new Eco Pro War Cry Buzzbait at the 2014 ICAST show in Orlando.



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Set the Hook! with Pat Rose – Aug 02, 2014 – With John Crews & Casey Ashely

Set the Hook! with Pat Rose – Aug 02, 2014

casey_ashleyjohn_crewsGuests on this week’s show were Bassmaster Elite Series Pro Casey Ashley and Bassmaster Elite Series Pro John Crews.

If you missed the show, you can listen to the podcast here.

On The AirYou can listen to the show on any of the following Set the Hook! with Pat Rose radio network affiliates: Saturday 7-8 am EST on ESPN 105 1 The Zone espnchattanooga.com, 1-2 pm EST on Fox Sports Radio 1670 foxsports1670.com (IHeart Radio app), 7-8 am CST on KEWI 690 am 103.4 FM saline247.com (Tunein Radio app), Sunday 9-10 am EST on Copperhead 1240 Soddy Daisy, TN 1240wsdt.com (Tunein Radio app), 4-5 pm CST on 1480 The Fan! 5-6 pm EST on WKWN 1420 AM 106.1 FM Trenton, GA discoverdade.com/1061FM.htm (Freestream Radio app).

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Please send any comments or suggestions about this website to [email protected].

7-foot, heavy-action Fitzgerald All Purpose Casting Rod by: Terry Brown

 

It seems there are more fishing rod companies these days than you can shake a stick at. While most of them feature a few unique characteristics that differentiate them from others, I believe the three biggest selling points for consumers are weight, balance and price.

I’ve been extensively testing the 7-foot, heavy-action Fitzgerald All Purpose Casting Rod while fishing topwater frogs and creature baits and in my opinion, it totally encompasses everything most consumers look for in a bass fishing rod.

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The Inland Sea… A Fitting Name by Tim Grein

Champlain

The Inland Sea… A Fitting Name

By Time Grein

There is a section of Lake Champlain called The Inland Sea. I am not sure why it is named that, but I would propose renaming the entire lake “The Inland Sea”. It would certainly be fitting. I was at Champlain for a week, and I don’t think we had an entire day of decent weather the entire time. In fact, the first day of the tournament greeted us with 6-8ft waves. This is not my first time in big water, so when I say 6-8, that’s what it was. Bone jarring, scary big, water.
The tournament didn’t really turn out like I had hoped. The first several days of practice, I stayed up North in Mississquoi Bay. I really felt like 16-18lbs a day was what I could catch. I focused on more offshore type grass spots with drops and rockpiles. The water was falling, and the fish seemed to be coming to me, which is always a good thing. Any time you are catching 30-40 a day, you have to be pleased. Especially when you are laying off of them also. I spent some time looking for smallmouth as well, but with the weather being so salty during practice, I really felt like my time was better spent looking for largemouth. In retrospect, I really don’t have a problem with this decision. I do believe however if I had been able to locate a few more smallmouth, that I would have been higher in the standings.
The tournament arrived and we had a strong south wind. This strong wind, pushed the water back into my area, raising the water level a foot. I am not talking about a small area here. I am talking about an area that is probably 5 miles long and 2 miles wide. The worst part about it, is I didn’t realize what was happening until the tournament was over. With the water level rising, all of the largemouth I had located, headed back to the bank and off of the very specific isolated stretches I had caught them on. Fortunately, I did have a flipping spot with some deeper grass that had smallmouth stacked on it. I was able to flip this area both days and catch some decent smallmouth. By the way, if you have never flipped for smallmouth, it is like setting the hook on a concrete block. It is a blast. I was able to catch basically 14lbs a day on this spot, and all I really needed was one more 3.5lber to get a check, and 2 more for a top 20. This was a very tight tournament, and one bite really went a long way. Had I realized what was happening to the largemouth, I may have been able to make a small adjustment and catch one or two better ones, but I didn’t. I guess the moral of the story is to pay attention. I never would have thought about the water rising, but on big bodies of water, the wind WILL affect the water levels on certain ends of the lake.
Next time maybe we will discuss foul weather gear and the system I use to keep myself as dry and as warm as possible.

Preuett, Parker face off for Classic berth – Bassmasters.com

Preuett, Parker face off for Classic berth

Shaye Baker
Bethel’s Zack Parker and ULM’s Brett Preuett will go head-to-head in the final round Carhartt Bassmaster College Series Classic Bracket.

HIAWASSEE, Ga. — The saying that one would rather be lucky than good applies to many things, especially so in fishing. Brett Preuett of the University of Louisiana at Monroe endured a string of bad luck Monday, but still managed to knock out opponent Bentley Manning of Tennessee Tech. Preuett lost several keeper-size bass, but most notable piece of bad luck was the fact that he fished more than four hours with two hooks from a 2/0 treble hook lodged firmly in the back of his neck after an errant cast. The hooks had to be removed by a doctor.

“I tried to make a long cast in a hurry, but left too much line out and snagged myself in the neck. It hit so hard that it straightened out the split rings,” he said. “But, I wouldn’t stop fishing for anything. If I had a toe cut off I’d probably try to keep fishing because I love it so much.”

It’s that drive that’s gotten Preuett this far, putting a limit weighing 9-5 in his boat and getting him past the bad luck he’s endured, but his fiercest competition will come Tuesday.

“I’ve got to catch ’em much better than I did today; it’s going to be a battle,” he said. “I know that B.A.S.S. made (the Championship and Bracket) this hard for a reason; it’s got to be tough to make it to the Classic. Zack’s a great fisherman, so it should be tight tomorrow.”

Preuett said that the most difficult obstacle for him to overcome Tuesday will be execution.

“I’ve got to capitalize on my bites and put fish in the boat,” he said. “That’s been hurting me, and I know Zack’s going to catch ’em tomorrow, so I’m going to have get each bite into the boat.”

“Everything’s on the line, and I know I’m on the right fish to win this thing, so that makes me feel better,” he said. “No matter what, I know everyone’s proud of me, but I do want to win for all the people sending thanks and prayers and I just want to come through for everybody.”

Preuett sent Manning packingMonday, but Manning, with several years of eligibility left, says he’ll be back. He weighed two fish for 4-11 on Monday.

“I didn’t lose a fish today and put every one that bit in boat. Two were short, and I did everything I could. I fished quite a bit of new water today because I thought I figured something out yesterday, but apparently I didn’t,” he said. “But, the whole experience has been awesome. This has been one of the toughest lakes I’ve fished on, and the first couple of days me and my partner whacked ’em, but the last few days have been hard.”

Opposite of Preuett’s bad luck has been Bethel’s Zack Parker. He’s not lost a fish for several days and everything has gone his way so far. His 5-fish limit of 9-9 bested Robert Giarla’s single fish that weighed 1-5.

“I only got six keeper bites and I think I’m going to change some stuff up tomorrow,” Parker said. “I saw some stuff today that I think will help me tomorrow if I can adjust to it. The lake is changing a lot, and I think it’s changing right now, so I gotta make some adjustments to keep it going.”

His early morning spot has been key the last two days, and the hole seems to keep replenishing overnight. His biggest decision Tuesday will be whether or not he stays the course and starts there, or takes a new approach to an ever-toughening Chatuge.

“I didn’t let up today; I fished hard all day and everything just fell into place,” he said. “The Lord blessed me with my fish, and hopefully tomorrow will be another good day.”

He stressed that zigging when Chatuge zigs is paramount.

“Tomorrow, the most important thing will be making adjustments. I had two fish over three pounds blow up on my topwater and that hasn’t happened all week, so even not catching those fish tells me that if I get bit it’s going to be a bigger one.

“You can’t be worried about anything. You’ve just got to go out there and fish your best. It’s whoever can figure those fish out that day,” he said. “This afternoon, having those fish blowup gave me some confidence in throwing that topwater tomorrow.”

Unlike Parker’s inexhaustible honey hole, Robert Giarla seined shallow water but came up short.

“This has been a dream come true, because I never thought I’d ever get here, so to have it happen is amazing. Hopefully my run here gives Tennessee Tech’s fishing team some credibility and maybe even a new sponsor,” he said.

Like Preuett, Giarla had a run of bad luck Monday, but he couldn’t recover.

“I had two fish spit the bait, one of ’em I never connected with, and basically everything that could’ve gone wrong today went wrong,” he said. “I had five keeper bites, and when you don’t connect this happens. But, I’m not holding my head down one bit. This has been awesome.”

Like Manning, Giarla has a few years of eligibility left and plans on making a return next year.

The conclusion of the Carhartt Bassmaster College Series Classic Bracket is Tuesday, where either Preuett or Parker will be crowned champ and earn a Classic berth.

Bass Pro Shops Northern Open #2 ake Champlain – Plattsburgh, NY, Jul 31 – Aug 2, 2014 -Shin Fukae shines at Lake Champlain

Shin Fukae shines at Lake Champlain

James Overstreet
Texas pro Shin Fukae worked both deep and shallow patterns on Lake Champlain to win the Bass Pro Shops Northern Open #2.

PLATTSBURGH, NY– Lake Champlain has been good to touring pro Shin Fukae.

The Palestine, Texas pro became a two-time winner at Champlain Saturday by taking first place in the pro division of the Bass Pro Shops Northern Open with a three-day catch of 56 pounds, 13 ounces. He earned the top prize of a Nitro Z9 bass boat/ Mercury 225 Pro XS outboard rig worth $40,000 and $7,595 in cash. Fukae previously won a FLW event at Lake Champlain in 2010.

He caught all of his fish on two baits– a Gamakatsu shad-shaped worm on a drop shot rig and a 4-inch Senko attached to a 3/16-ounce wacky rig jighead. The drop shot rig worked best for smallmouth while the wacky rig coaxed bites from quality largemouth. Fukae noted the drop shot is his key bait whenever he fishes Lake Champlain because he can “catch so many fish on it.”

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