Brian Latimer

Belton, SC, United States

Posted

Nov 10 at 01:28 PM

01:00

This is by far the best thing about the SUF app. What do you think?

2

Nov 10 at 10:24 AM

Yeah! So May anglers never fish a laydown correctly. A bass in a laydown is probably pretty comfortable in my mind. Unless you really irk him it’s probably not going to move. It’s all dependent on the type of laydown and position of course. I’d make sure I bring my bait through every “lane” available .

Nov 10 at 10:02 AM

So can I persuade you to shift your thought framework a bit? Everything on this app is actually a workshop about the lakes that you fish for fun and compete on. If I could wish I could help you in any way it would be to help you create a process. Processes are re-usable. They never get old or outdated. Techniques, areas, lures, gear, waypoints evolve. Once you develop a process you'll become UNSTOPPABLE! HOWEVER.... yes🤣 The plan is to do just that with the sponsorship program I'm doing within the app. Look at lakes and come up with a plan for the tournaments.

Reply

Nov 10 at 09:54 AM

I'll have to check out lake mayo! l've never heard of that one!

Posted

Nov 10 at 09:50 AM

There was a question recently about choosing the right color. That's a hard one to give facts on but I sure can share my opinion and experience with it. Comment with your favorite colors in this video and lets compare notes.

10:01

Selecting The Right Color C...

This how I select my Crankbait colors
2

Nov 10 at 09:49 AM

Is it as warm there as it is here? Our water is still in the 70s. that's making fishing a little tough.

Nov 10 at 09:48 AM

Im waiting on the video to finish processing. It'll be available to view again

Nov 10 at 09:47 AM

That's classic fall fishing. Do you own any rock crawlers?

Nov 10 at 09:46 AM

Depending on the lake, 15ft foot is really deep! This is really hard to explain but here's my best stab at it. Take a look on your graphs and see where's the deepest you can find a abundance of structure OR food. That's about as deep as you should go. On my lakes 40-60 is normal beacuse we have timber from 35ft and deeper. On the Tennessee river the ledges are usually from 10ft-20ft so its rare to catch them deeper than MAYBE 25. My whole point is deep is always relative to the body of water. For you it may be 15ft. In some lake 8ft is deep. Finding fish that are not on visible structure (offshore) is probably a better way for me to describe what I'm often speaking about.

Nov 10 at 09:41 AM

I've seen more 5+ from you up north than I've seen in a 200 boat event up there. What is the deal?