Bass Angler Magazine

MAKING PREPARATIONS FOR BASS FISHING TOURNAMENTS

Do you jump at the chance to bass fish? Do you possess a competitive streak? If your response to these questions is yes, you should consider a bass fishing tournament. These tournaments started in the mid-1960’s and have developed into a full-time, huge business industry featuring various triple-A circuits, two professional tours, and numerous small, local derbies.

Looking for a bass tournament to opt in for shouldn’t be too difficult, simply make a few inquiries at nearby bait stores, seek the web, or search for flyers up at boat inclines. After that, it is now the turn to come up with the tournament entry fee and making preparations fish.  These bass fishing tournaments can be heaps of good times for beginners and also the experts. While simply showing up in a tournament is an awesome approach to spending time angling, the individual that wants to be a serious participant in such a tournament needs to make some preparations to be fully ready

The best hunting boots are very important; whether you’re in the marshlands targeting on fish, or gallivanting here and there rough landscape hunting down that buck, you will want your feet  to be secured at all times. You may need to do some shrub making and play out some dubious moves in territory where individuals don’t generally walk. You will require strong and tough boots to take you to the extent that you want to go.

Bass fishing tournaments put a radical new turn on the game, by including a weight and time elements that at no other time existed. Many people can get various numbers of fish, however, would you be able to get big ones? Will you have the ability to do it in few hours under possibly antagonistic conditions? These are questions that even expert tournament fishermen battle with, so we figured that it would be a smart approach to reach out to a few top tournament experts and concoct the following ways to successfully get ready for an angling tournament, whether it is your first time or your hundredth time.

How to Prepare For Bass Fishing Tournaments

  • Dress Fittingly

If you are pathetic, you can’t fish viably. Without question, the top tournament experts we’ve talked with all made mention of proper attire as the critical stride in preparing for a bass fishing tournament. Simply because the weather forecast says the weather will be clear doesn’t imply that a storm will not blow in on the tournament day. Bring along spare layers, a good hat, and a good raingear. Suitable dress likewise applies if the forecast is greatly warm also – bring along sunscreen, lightweight fabrics and long sleeves.

  • Become Acquainted With The Waterway You Will Be Fishing

Virtually every lake in U.S has been mapped out and this could favor you if you take the advantage, particularly if you have never angled that lake. Locate topographic maps that will depict contour lines. Satellite picture maps also assist hugely with acquiring knowledge about the lake; you can also get maps that download straightway to you GPS on your fishing boat.

  • Develop a Game Plan

You should try as much as possible to get on the water two or three days before the fishing tournament to acquire knowledge on how the fish are stinging, and what places you can get them on. This is called pre-angling, and it’s an enormous stride in preparation for the bass fishing tournament. While pre-angling, try to concentrate on patterns and sorts of structures, rather than particular spots. Utilize this information to build up a rough sketch of how you plan to make your attack. It should not be specific, yet successful bass tournament fishermen more often than not have a structure set up to help them for the duration of the day.

  • Prepare Your Tackle

It may be alright when fun fishing to utilize the same dull hook you have been utilizing all through the summer, or maintain the old wrinkled line on a reel, yet those fishing items can cost you in a competition setting, where a missing fish can mean a lot of cash. Ensure that your reels are oiled and have a new line, ensure that your moving baits have sharp or new hooks, and ensure that you have everything sorted out so you can quickly reach out to them during the derby.

There is nothing more regrettable than spending five minutes checking out the base of your fishing boat for a particular fishing item while the fish are stinging you. Also, ensure that you have enough of whatever your essential pattern is. In case you’re getting them on a purple worm, toss a couple extra sacks in the fishing boat – you would prefer not to run out.

  • Have An Emergency Plan

Game plans are awesome, yet what happens when you blow into your main spot where you anticipated on beginning only to discover a neighborhood pan-fisherman grounded right on it. On the other hand, when the meteorologist’s predictions of light easterly winds transform to a storm from the west that muddies all your water. Having an emergency backup plan is important to any successful bass tournament fisherman. One approach to doing this is to try and discover two distinct patterns that you can get fish on. If one fails, simply change to the next. Consider what a transformation in wind direction, rain, clouds, and angler weight will do to your plan, and create contingencies.

  • Consider timing

Timing is tremendously critical in bass fishing tournaments. Head down to the bank early in the daybreak with a topwater and you may get a huge amount of bass; head down to that same bank in the afternoon on a bustling Saturday and see the number you may get. There are some patterns and spots that work great in the daybreak, and others that get to be effecting later in the day. Think about this when building up your plan and while pre-angling. If you rehearse late into the day and discover bass schooled up in a place, they may not show up there in the daybreak. This turns out to be much more critical on the off chance that you angle tidal water, where the level of water is in steady flux.

Baits or Lures To Begin with Bass Fishing

Bass fishing is a seasonal and regional game. The types of baits that will be good for you will depend strongly on what season it is and where you live. Here are some common types of bait good in catching bass:

  • Crankbaits

If you are fishing from a boat or the bank, you can be certain that a crankbait will result in getting fish. Crankbaits are type baits that help you to cover water quickly when searching for bass. Most people commit the error of simply throwing and reeling it back straightaway. While you can get some fish along these lines, crankbaits are best when a fisherman varies his retrieve. That implies reel it, jerk it, thump it against rocks and stumps, and do whatever else to make the crankbait move inconsistently.

  • Soft Plastics

More fish have been gotten on soft Plastic bait than another kind of bait. Plastic tubes, worms, and animal bait do a good job emulating natural rummage. A texas-fixed plastic worm is an incredible approach to angle blown over trees, vegetation, rocks since it is mostly snag-resistant and weedless.

  • Topwater

Topwaters may not often catch the most fish, but they deliver the most exciting and memorable fish strikes. Topwater lures such as frogs and poppers are a great blast to utilize and they always pull in the meanest and greatest bass in the water. These baits work incredibly on main lake spots, along riprap banks, and around standing timbers.

Conclusion

Every single day you spend on the water is a learning day. So anything you are able to learn today will improve your fishing skills tomorrow. Utilize these tips to get ready for your next bass fishing tournament and most significantly, be safe and have a fabulous time!

Author Bio

Kevin Steffey is an avid hunter and freelance writer, the founder of Deer Hunting Field. He loves spending time in the field with his rifle more than almost anything else. He also occupies his off-time discussing deer and their habits online. But more than anything, he wants to teach and educate about hunting …

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Mark
Mark Lassagne, born and raised in California is the creator of the popular, BASS ANGLER magazine. Mark a skillful professional angler, outdoor writer, promoter and top competitor on the western tournament circuits. www.marklassagne.com

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