One thing I've learned about big fish, is that, they will take advantage of what ever they can get there mouths on. I recalled once, I drop shoted a small bass, about 3/4 lbs size, as it was coming to the boat, a big fish, I'd say easly 13-15lbs, came up under the boat and swallowed this little bass. Not just mouth the bass, swallowed it whole, nothing sticking out of it's mouth. I was just shocked. Now I have a big fish on, that is heading to the bottom, on 6 lbs maxima line. Tried my best to work it back in deeper/cleaner water, no way. Headed to some under water tree's, bye, bye, bye big bass
One of our pro-staff guys (John Kerr, US Open champion 2003) continues to catch 10 lbs to 15 lbs on small drop shot baits. Of course in the winter, its all about putting anything in front of the big girls.
Big fish loves anything in front of their face. If it doesn't have to swim far, its all there's. It's also impressive how fast big fish move. They are super quick. That initial burst is just impressive.
Looking forward to throwing the big baits. Let see if we can get the big tucs to go crazy!!
Mel "Kahuna bass"
Dark side live baiter
Ca_Bass wrote:My old bass tournament fishing partner caught a 19.4lbs bass on 7inch plastic finesse worm and I've watched him catch a few bass 11-15lbs on the same pastic worms. So yes you can catch big fish on small baits with technique. He also does a lot of fishing with big swim baits and has won the California big bass championship 3 times I believe and two years in a row once this way. A big fish will try to conserve it's energy by eating large meals. At the lake in California we used to fish at the 15+lbs fish seem to primarily eat rainbow trout(Unless they're spawning or it's right in front of their face). I know I've seen world record large mouth chasing rainbows...man that gets your heart pumping. My personnel best large mouth was 10.4lbs, I caught that on a big 8inch soft plastic jerkbait. I wish I could find that picture..it was from when I was 14.