Showing posts with label bass fishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bass fishing. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

How's the weather in your livewell?

I just got back from a tournament at Oneida Lake, my first after having installed my new V-T2 Livewell system from New Pro Products.  This unique system is designed to improve the overall quality of your livewell both when it's holding fish and when it is not.  If you're like me, you probably had no idea what was happening in there.  You add water, recirculate it from time to time, make sure the aerator is working, keep a bottle of Rejuvenate on hand, and have been told to keep ice on your fish when it is really hot.  Stop right there, and listen to what I'm going to tell you because that kind of behavior is actually harming your fish.

Click here to read the rest, you can also read the rest of my blog Reel Weather at Weather Underground at http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JimRoot/show.html.


Sunday, June 29, 2014

Don't let cold fronts chill your bite!



We normally think of summer as hot, humid, and the cold fronts can be a thing of relief that we welcome. For bass anglers, these drops in temperature can be really demoralizing. When temps that have been hovering in the 90s suddenly drop over night to the 80s and below, this can have a dramatic impact on the bass in your home lake. This can be a really frustrating time, because it normally has meant a really intense feeding period leading up to this change. 

Click here to read the rest!

Sunday, April 6, 2014

The "Crawside" of the Moon



Understanding crawfish patterns and coloration is key to big bites!




There are very few people in the world who don't throw jigs or other crawfish imitations when bass fishing. Some people have no less than three jigs tied at any given time on their boat. So what is it that makes them so deadly on bass, and how do you know what color to use? There has been a lot of research recently that says it's not enough to throw a tube, you need to know the correct pattern.


Click here to read the rest at my feature blog at Weather Underground, Reel Weather.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

My first appearance in a product catalog

Here is a glimpse at the Dobyns Catalog for 2014.  I was very fortunate to be included in it and am really excited about it.  Huge thanks to all of them!!!


Wednesday, April 17, 2013

5 In The Box with Stephanie Hemphill




Stephanie Hemphill is sitting on her couch in her pj's editing fishing videos.  Having seen a couple myself I imagine it being really difficult for her to edit.  Big fish, huge Texas smile, I think Bill Dance might see a decline in his ratings in the near future...

Q:  Stephanie, why do you fish?

Because it's the love of my life.  It is every great memory I have growing up.  I can be myself and admire all the beauty the way I want to see it.

Would you say you were "born" with it, or you got it over time?

I was born with it.  My whole family fishes, women included.  At six months old I was in a playpen with my mom on her pontoon boat.  Every weekend from the time I was 2 I was in my dad's boat bass fishing.

Are you fishing competitively now?

I am, but I'm selective about what I enter.  I'm paying my own way, so I have to use my money wisely.  I don't enter a tournament unless it's one I imagine I can win.  Nobody cares if you finish 20th or 50th.  I'm trying to do what's best for my career.




Does that change it at all for you, the sport of fishing?  Are you able to go out and just relax and fish with your buddies or are you disappointed if you come back having caught less than 17 or 18 pounds?

I'm OK with not always catching them.  I love fishing with my buddies and just enjoying the beauty that God made.  Wow if only everyone could experience that, then everyone would fish!  But I don't complain when I catch a big girl now and then!

We all love big girls!  And speaking of catching them, what's your favorite technique?  Flippin'?  Swimmin a jig?  Burnin' a crankbait?

I have a few.  Swimmin' a jig and carolina rigging for sure.  I love a good football head jig too.  




You hunt too?

I used to hunt as much as I fished, but I figured out I was missing some of the best fishing of the year in the fall and now I don't hunt anymore.

Do you ever think guys underestimate you and your ability and say to themselves "She's hot but she can't fish to save her life"?



Yes, but I don't let it get to me.  I know I can fish, and I can prove it!

I imagine you having that grin on your face thinking to yourself "just wait until I shove a 7 pounder in your face, buddy!"



HAHA, YES!!!

What is your favorite lake?

Falcon.  Because at any time you can catch a BIG girl.  That's what Texas bass fishing is all about!

Least favorite?

Sam Rayburn because it's my home lake.  I grew up (basically) being taught how to fish Big Sam so I'm supposed to be awesome here.  So when I don't do well on Rayburn I feel like I not only let myself down but my family as well.

The internet is such an amazing resource for information, but is there anyone who has shown you different techniques or who has helped improve your knowledge of the sport?

Yes, Elite Series angler Clark Reehm.  I live with him and we always have new baits being mailed to us.  So I get to not only see lures that aren't even out yet but I get to try them too.  I'm very hardheaded so when he tries to correct me on techniques I have to force myself to listen (but I don't always like too).




I believe everyone has their own way of doing things.  Sure a certain pro may say to do it this way or that way but it may not work for everyone.  So I basically listen to what Clark says, but add my own personal touches to it.

And on that note, let's jump into our 5 In The Box!

1.  What's it like on a Sunday when you and Clark are both at home and not on Tour?

I'm fishing and he is at home on the computer.  He is also the cook at our house.  You may die if you ate my food...

(I'm laughing)

It's true!

2.  Do you have any pre-tournament rituals or superstitions?

I eat a pickle during the tournament.

Why?  (I'm laughing)

First time I did it I caught a 7 and three 5's.  So eat a pickle every time and see if there's something to it.  

(I'm not laughing)

Oh, and I love them.  :)

I'm gonna try it.

Watch, you're gonna message me and say you caught a double-digit!  Also I fish with some of my pawpaw's rods.  He died on the lake a few years ago and he was the best fisherman I've ever known and I feel like they're lucky.  He would catch fish when nobody else could!




3.  If you had to guess where your best finish would be in 2013, where would it be and where would you struggle the most?

My best would be at Red River in September.  Worst I have no clue.  It all depends on if my little green friends like me that day.

4.  What's the one body of water you would pick to fish in 2013 if you had your choice?

Amistad.  My fishing style suits me well there.  I have a lot of confidence there (the big girl I caught there last year in the tournament helped a little with that...).

5.  What's one thing people might not know about Stephanie Hemphill?

When I was a little girl I told my dad that I wanted to be a pro fisherman.  I knew that at 7 years old. He told me that a girl couldn't be a pro fisherman.  Well I want to prove him wrong and become exactly what he said I couldn't.  I want other women to know that this isn't just a guy's sport anymore.


Thanks so much for your time.  I appreciate you giving me an opportunity to talk with you about this wonderful sport!  Good luck to you!

Thanks, Jim.  Good luck to you, too.  I'd also like to thank Omega, Dobyns, rahfish.com, xx2, and Tackle Center.








Wednesday, September 19, 2012

The Deadliest Catch LIVE From Cayuga Lake

September 8th, 2012

I have fished big water my entire life.

I have fished big water in Upstate NY my entire life.

I have fished big water in Upstate NY my entire life in conditions that would make some experienced southern anglers cry.  I know this for a fact, because I've seen it.  Never have I ever been scared.  Not at Erie, not at Ontario, not on Oneida, and certainly not on Cayuga Lake despite having lived in a house on the East Shore where the waters of that beautiful Finger Lake were 10 feet from my back door and boat sat in a mooring 5 months out of the year.  Never, that is, until I fished Cayuga on September 8th in the Toyota Tundra Bassmaster Weekend Series event out of Union Springs NY.

I've spoken to several guys I know that I've become friends with that I met on that trail last year who also happened to fish that day and we all agreed on one basic point:  no matter how many times we talk about that day, and no matter who we tell, nobody understands just how bad it was.
"We speared 3 waves, the second would've knocked me out of the boat if it weren't for the console."
"My 100 MPH rain suit from Bass Pro failed, and I got soaked underneath it".
"Waves were crashing over the side, it was hailing/raining, and we couldn't see more than 10 feet in front of us because it was completely grey".
"I saw a guy waving his net, he was broke down.  I tried to help him, but I quickly realized I'd sink too.  I told him "Buddy, I can't help you except to call the Coast Guard" and he understood and thanked me for slowing down."

How the hell are you suppose to fish in weather like that?  The short answer is, you don't.  You do the only thing you can:  find cover.  We found ours, as did some others, in a very secluded place, but we paid the price for it when we left and had to return.  Truth is we had no business being on the water that day.  Nobody did.  The lake was unfishable after 8:30 am, forcing people to dock or seek shelter in a secluded hideaway.

The fishing had been slow prior to that, too.  I'm not sure if they sensed the change in weather, or if the recent cold snap had them in transition,  but few people found "good" fish, and even fewer had limits.  I'm not sure what the lake is doing now, as I have resisted any thought of return to that place since getting beaten up that day.  With a similar forecast on the horizon for this weekend at Oneida I've wanted to save my nerve for that.  Hopefully I won't look around and have to ask "Where's the Discovery Channel film crew?".

Good luck, and be safe.