Monthly Archive for November, 2008

HYPER WORM

Lake Belton on the hyper worm
Lake Belton on the hyper worm

     Professional Angler and Lake Fork Tackle owner Mark Pack has always designed some of the most creative baits in the industry.  This year, Lake Fork Tackle has created some new baits that have action so nasty, it just makes bass itch.  This new line of baits is the Hyper Series, and the name is well suited.  Most of the baits are designed with swim cuts, similar to the popular Live Magic Shad.  The Hyper Worm is a highly versatile bait that has been on the front deck of my boat for the last few months.  I’ve found this bait is especially effect around unmated grasses, boats docks, and marina slips.  It’s paddle tail and swim cuts displace plenty of water to let the bass know it’s there.  My approach for more active bass is swimming the 5” and 4” hyper worm on a 3/16 to ½ once jig head around these areas.  With the jig head I always rig the bait with the tail’s flat side facing horizontally in line with the hook.  This gives the bait better side to side action.  I will also Texas Rig the 5” Hyper Worm with the tail’s flat side facing down.  You can still swim it this way, but when you stop it and are twitching it on the bottom, the downward faced tail sweeps up more mud.  Also, you want at least a 3/16 once weight when Texas rigging or on a jig head.  This allows the baits to have enough force to flutter down when sinking.  Similar to a lipless crankbait, you can rip this bait through the grass to trigger strikes, and swimming the bait under boat slips in marinas is deadly!  It can also be a great bait on boat docks because you can skip it back underneath easily and swim it or work it slow.  That’s two presentations on the same rod, which makes a great search bait. For pressured situations, I’ll make a 45º cut in the tail.  This cuts out the wide swimming motion and creates subtle action in the tail.  I’m still finding ways to catch bass on these things, so if you haven’t seen the Hyper Series yet, you’re in for a surprise.   

Tommy Martin: The “Real” Reason I Fish

Beginning

Many people ask me what got me started in bass fishing?  My simple and easy response is Tommy Martin.  I guess its appropriate that I tell you why and how he got me fishing.  It all started when my father, who was a Head Football Coach and Athletic Director, moved to Hemphill, a small town in deep deep east Texas.  Well we lived there a few years, and I fished out in the pasture ponds with my ol favorite lures a beetle spin and a yellow cricket crankbait, but yet I didn’t bass fish yet. One day my parents decided to move to the lake, all I could think of was getting a chance to fish another place since I had practically seined my favorite pond. Continue reading ‘Tommy Martin: The “Real” Reason I Fish’

Attitude is EVERYTHING!!!

The sport of bass fishing, whether for recreation or in tournaments, presents anglers with countless variables over which we have no control- wind, water clarity, fishing pressure, or poor weather conditions. That being said, one thing that has helped me TREMENDOUSLY is developing an attitude that is 110% positive. What I mean by that is whenever I encounter a situation that nearly everyone would see as being negative, I try to list at least two good things that will result from it. For instance, if the wind is blowing 20 mph on your favorite fishing spot; yeah, that’s bad for boat control, but at the same time it will keep other fisherman and pleasure boaters out of the area, it stirs up the water column (oxygenating the water, pushing plankton around which keeps the baitfish active which makes the bass more active, AND it helps to position the fish). Continue reading ‘Attitude is EVERYTHING!!!’

Lessons From Grand

There is one way to win, and 10,000 ways to lose…

I’m sure it will be a moment I won’t soon forget. I was sitting on the edge of my motel room bed, staring at about a dozen and a half rods and reels sitting across from me. And after all the line was changed and all the baits tied on, I was still sitting there; just thinking. I had a mental checklist that I must have gone through 100 times and 200 times after that. The weigh-in had ended 2 hours ago and my heart still felt like it was going to beat its way out of my chest. I was sitting in second place with just over 17 pounds and only a half pound out of the lead in one of the most significant collegiate tournaments in history. “Relax, keep up your confidence and just go fishing”…I got the same words over the phone from Roumbanis, Kriet and JVD. I knew what to do, I knew where they were, I knew how to catch ‘em and I knew they were big. I only needed five bites and there were plenty to go around in the area I was fishing…which, by the way, I had almost all to myself. I had the capacity to do this. I knew I did…I could feel it. Continue reading ‘Lessons From Grand’