Brian Latimer

Belton, SC, United States

23 Oct 10:22

The whole process of finding new areas should be the fun part! Doing what you mentioned over and over builds a catalog of areas to fish and experiences

22 Oct 12:57

I’m almost certain there’s at least a few more. If you’re from sc, ga, Nc chime in!

Reply

Commented on I love my bird too

21 Oct 19:25

21 Oct 19:24

Let’s do this on live tonight

Reply

21 Oct 19:23

There’s a few in my garage sale

20 Oct 20:25

This is such a good question. It’s a little more in depth than I can really explain in depth here so I want to do a whole video. First of all you’re not crazy. We all deal with this! Yes some trailer will mess with a spinnerbiat . Yes you can tune it by bending the wire. I’ll do a whole dedicated video about this. I love this question. I can’t believe I over looked this simple yet relevant topic after all these years. THANK YOU

20 Oct 20:22

Is this Anna?

20 Oct 20:21

Where was this Tim?

20 Oct 20:18

This is great news man. What made you throw a jerkbait?

20 Oct 20:18

So water temperature behavior/activity is actually very miscommunicated. Bass aren’t necessarily feeling and interpreting the weather the exact way we do. In fact, bass can actually be more active in more areas of the lake during colder water periods. Mainly it’s about oxygen levels in the water. There’s really no ā€œmagicā€ water temperature I’ve found. ESPECIALLY IN THE FALL. I’ll explain this in a video later because there’s so many moving parts. I always think in terms of water temp movement. Is it warming, stable or cooling. That’s all. Even during the spawn you’ll see claims that bass spawn at ā€œ65-68ā€. That’s not the full truth. It’s a great guide. However if the water temperature stabilizes and the day length is correct (month) bass will spawn . It can 55 degrees. Sooooooo in short no they NEVER stop feeding because of water temperature. There’s always a way. ALWAYS. Our methods adjust. Where we look my change but there’s always bass biting even when there’s ice or when there’s 100 degree water ( like South Carolina) the show keeps going on