Randy, this might be the absolute most important video you've ever made....you can't catch em if you can't find em. Keep the videos coming, and thank you. I wosh you and your family the best. Take care.
@kenk3958 ай бұрын
You're passion truly shines through on these types of seminars. Thanks!!
@carloslopez96257 ай бұрын
The art of fishing thank u.💪
@FredFroderman8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@davidjacoboski46578 ай бұрын
One of you our best videos. You can’t catch fish until you locate them.
@rickrogers84557 ай бұрын
Awesome content! Learned a ton! Keep it up
@briancarson46488 ай бұрын
Thank you Randy for the great video! Only one of your on the water videos tops this one. Once again…your instruction on fishing gives many of us a much better understanding of fishing! Thanks!
@therlc54 ай бұрын
Tremendously informative…thank you! If only you could give the same info for northern lakes; eg, NY Finger lakes. Regardless, your wisdom and generosity are very much appreciated.
@dabearsfan35338 ай бұрын
RANDY Thanks for the seminars, i have kearnes more in the past few weekss than i have previous years..THIS ADVANCED FISHING CHANNEL IS AWESOME!
@thebear748 ай бұрын
yay, taking notes
@guessguess84068 ай бұрын
great information Sir thank you for all you do
@GhostRider19745 ай бұрын
Is Greer's Ferry lake similar in fishing characteristics and tactics as Table Rock or Bull Shoals? It is very very deep and clear. Great videos !
@Nate_Higgins8 ай бұрын
I caught my first plopper fish last September on steep clear banks on Beaver. So, that tip definitely rings true to me.
@stonehorn46418 ай бұрын
Get a choppo next time, it’s a better lure all around. The first generation ploppers are incredible, I have a bunch, but they changed them 4-5 years ago. Now the tail deforms from both heat and bending in tackle boxes. I have about a dozen of the originals left in a couple of sizes, and a bunch on 2nd gens, and choppo’s. The Choppo is far better, and cheaper. The Plopper has awful hooks as well. They dull extremely quickly.
@stonehorn46418 ай бұрын
I have a very specific method for breaking down every body of water I fish, depending on time of year. I’m definitely going to add a few of these tips. Generally I get out navionics, map out the places I can expect to find fish, and I set waypoints on the map (not on my finder, on my pc app). Then I number the spots and make a list of what im looking for. Hot summer? I want heavy grass for largemouth and deep water for smallie. Then i do a run from top to bottom. I’ll burn a tank of gas just checking the lake and checking the points. When I find what I’m looking for in a place it should be, I mark a waypoint on my finder. I also mark bait. Once I’ve covered everything I want to, I start fishing points. Once we get our schedule in the winter, I immediately start checking any new bodies of water, to the point ill haul my snowmobile out and run the whole river or lake just to get familiar with it. Late March and April I start finding weekends to get out and fish them. I want to fish every new body at least 3 days before tournament week comes around. I use the whole week, and just look at my surroundings and throw search baits. we are allowed to pre-fish until Thursday at 1pm. Ill fish Sunday through Thursday with my wife (get yourself a wife that loves fishing as much as you do gentlemen). That’s when I really break down my waypoints and check my points and banks, and dial in lures. Ill be going to our first stop, which is a new to me river, next week. The tourney is first weekend of may. I have my maps made, now it’s time to check those spots and see what’s there. A slow jaunt up the river, Mega 360 and maps with AT2 for finding bait.
@alexcabral82292 ай бұрын
It would be great if you can make same type video on central Florida. I have learned a lot from different aspects of baits and application. But the cover situation and weather patterns are different in Central Florida. I watch as many of your videos I can, just feel like a lot don't apply to FL. Seems to be the anomaly state.
@_warky6 ай бұрын
Randy, great video. What does "lower part of the lake" mean?
@1chefbr8 ай бұрын
Great seminar, Randy! As usual! Also a great seminar for post forward facing sonar junkies so they can learn how to bass fish the right way
@dawnparker20148 ай бұрын
Great tips. Thank you
@steve56428 ай бұрын
Great seminar Randy - thank you. Regarding research (Google Earth, etc.) to better understand the unique character of your particular body of water as Randy points, also take time to research publications put out by your state's wildlife & fisheries agency. You'd be amazed at the amount of information that may be available online on the origins of the lake, population studies, habitat improvement initiatives, stocking history, studies on prey, vegetation, etc. This may not be so in every state for all lakes, but definitely worth a check.
@MichaelSwirzewski8 ай бұрын
Ive always said: you can throw the best lures with the best presentations in front of no fish all day & not catch a thing. Gotta get on em' to get em'.
@NolimitracingRC8 ай бұрын
Best way is to use live scope ..everyone knows that
@johnmckinnon95428 ай бұрын
What happens to the Randy blauket jigs? They were awesome!
@curtisadkins44538 ай бұрын
All of that stuff is good to know and definitely helps but don't pass up an opportunity to talk to the "old man" sitting on a bucket at the end of a pier or dock.
@MrBigDaddyUSA7 ай бұрын
All fish live in water. Not all water has fish.
@dabearsfan35338 ай бұрын
Randy, there is no sound in this video
@dabearsfan35338 ай бұрын
Lol, now there is sound, might have been on my end, I apoligize
@everettsmith9718 ай бұрын
A needle in a hay stack of needles? Lol
@SpookyRedz8 ай бұрын
Here , summer pattern , find deeper water and moving water with grass , deeper cuts , points with moving water