For night time fishing..Black or Purple
For daytime fishing Watermellon Pumkin Seed.
2006-07-19 02:12:31
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Overall the best plastic bait for bass fishing in ponds is any plastic worms in darker colors such as black, purple, pumpkin seed, dark red and brown. Ponds are usually dark green and have lower light conditions so you'd use darker colored bait.
2006-07-07 18:42:09
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answer #2
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answered by James K 1
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Smaller plastic worms. Try several colors, find pond bass will hit 1 color 2or 3 times and stop. Switch up the colors
2006-07-21 03:52:04
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Well, every pond is different in structure, size, and depth. Not to mention water clearity and how much vegitation is growing. So when it comes down to fishing bass, having a variety of hard and soft plastics does matter. I prefer something more lifelike like a plastic minnow and have had many success. I do alot of shore fishing and its exciting. You do get better results early in the morning and late in the afternoon. Must try lures are "Mr. Wiggly" or "Jr. wiggly". Storms minnows works well too! Weedless is the key. Hope these two lures will bring excitment to your tackle.
2006-07-08 05:07:02
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answer #4
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answered by kodak 1
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I've never used plastic bait but I've had great success with using "popper" lures early in the morning or near dusk. If you don't know, poppers are lures that when you cast them out and they hit the water they make a "popping" sound and the bass turn and hit them right away. Check at your local tackle store and I'm sure that you can find them.
2006-07-07 18:42:01
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answer #5
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answered by Martin S 7
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The best way to approach it is go get some worms creature baits , and lizards , pick out different colors of each, get some 3/o hooks , 1/8 ounce bullet weights and go fishing, try all kinds of areas. get your confidence built up on a few of them , and you are home free, hope it helps.
2006-07-08 17:06:27
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answer #6
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answered by bassfish 2
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Well in the spring I use Sonic and YUM lizards... greens and chartruese. Then in the spawn I use topwater weedless scum frogs or Sonic frogs... in all three shades of green... and I'll drop shot them or float them. As the summer comes and all through the fall... I like Storm rattle worms, fineseworms, Berkley Gulp 7 inch worms or YUM worms... grape curtail, pumpkin seed, or grape with a chartruese tail. Drop shots and Carolina Rigs work really well here in the south. Just watch the thermocline. As the fall turns to winter and the water temperature drops... I go to Carolina and Texas rigs with basically the same setups as summer for types and color.
2006-07-08 06:37:25
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answer #7
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answered by tcatmech2 4
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properly if u favor stay bait i ought to characterize minnows. worms artwork strong yet sunny, bluegil and different fish many times locate them first. if the pond is deep ur perfect guess ought to apply a blend of spinner and buz baits. if the water is shallow i continually have a castmaster, or poultry tail. the position i fish in a wide ond maximum large bass are chanced on contained in the shallows. and throw some spinners close to three fallen timber and weeds to get the bass out fo there hiding spots. and in case you employ a minnow forged close to weeds or large merchandise contained in the water and hook the minnow contained in the tail and allow him to war. an dif u can manage it i even capture sunny and use them as bait and placed a biggg hook on the line. that's propose and u want to have staying power for it yet u can land some HUGEE fish by employing creating use of this technique. purely allow the sunny, blugil war out contained in the pond and if he begins to tire out and doesnt bypass launch him decrease back into the pond. yet make efficient u hook him in his mouth. bass love all those issues i purely metioned. strong success
2016-11-06 01:09:40
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answer #8
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answered by ? 4
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Any scented plastic worm works good. Use bright colors on bright days and dark colors on dark, cloudy days or at night. Let it sink to the bottom and reel it slowly dragging it across the bottom. Works great around cover areas like brushpiles.
2006-07-09 15:31:00
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answer #9
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answered by Ravid 1
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I use a dark and light purple rubber worm, it is about 10 inches, and has a big flowing tail. Sometimes i cut it in half and use the half that has the tail on it, cause the bigger worm the bass usually have to hit, then swallow, so when you feel them hit, wait a second then set the hook. happy fishing
2006-07-08 04:14:51
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answer #10
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answered by catfishrod69 1
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