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LARGEMOUTH BASS FISHING
LARGEMOUTH BASS FISHING WITH THE WALKING WORM
By Ken Liebeskind
Yalesville, Connecticut
The best largemouth bass fishing can be achieved when you know what the fish like to eat and where they swim. If we examine the feeding habits of largemouth bass we find they like to eat crayfish, worms, frogs and insects. The largest bass eat large prey and as the water temperature increases, they feed more often.
Largemouth bass spawn in the spring when inshore water temps reach 60 in shallow bays, backwaters and channels. They look for areas with firm bottoms of sand, gravel, mud or rock in water from one to four feet deep.
If you're largemouth bass fishing in the spring, look for the bass in shallow water. In the summer they'll move to deeper water, although they may come into the shallow water early or late in the day to feed. If the water temperature exceeds 80 they'll move to very deep water. In fall and winter they'll move back to shallow water to feed. The big question for largemouth bass fishing is always what's the best lure to use. Of course, there's a wide variety to choose from.
Fishermen know that when largemouth bass fishing, fish love worms
more than any other food
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The Walking Worm has constant curling
action that drives the fish crazy.
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Largemouth bass fishing anglers use crankbaits to cover a large area of water in a short period time. Buzzbaits, plugs, stickbaits and other surface lures work well for largemouth bass fishing in thick cover. Jigs work well for largemouth bass fishing because they can be retrieved rapidly and used for trolling. Metal spoon lures can be weedless and retrieved slowly, crawled along the bottom or skittered across the surface.
After considering all these lure options, you can't forget the plastic worm, the most popular largemouth bass fishing lure that can be rigged to be weedless or to get into the thickest weeds. It can fished fast or slow from top to bottom. And of course it's available in an assortment of colors, with darks like black, blue and purple the most popular.
www.scientificfishing.com, the world leader in scientifically designed lures, offers the Walking Worm, the plastic worm lure that traps air between tail segments to move naturally like a live worm. This is the plastic worm that beats all competitors because of its constant movement that generates the most frequent strikes. The Walking Worm beat a crankbait and another worm lure in a test because the crankbait wasn't a worm and the worm lure stopped moving when it hit bottom. Only the Walking Worm looks and moves like a real worm so it generates the most strikes. Professional anglers have used the Walking Worm to catch monster bass, with a number of records set.
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