Flipping and Punching | Everything You Need To Know!

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what's up guys Tim little Matt Allen welcome back to tactical Bassin today we are going in-depth everything you need to know about flipping and punching we're covering it all big baits drop shots some other techniques you might not have tried out you're gonna want to check this out these summer videos that we've been doing would not be complete if we didn't do an in-depth flipping and pitching video we've done them in the past but it's time for an update this is the first video Tim and I have got to sit down together in what like six months we have been traveling separately all over the place we've come together and done some fishing but we hadn't had the opportunity to sit down and talk with you guys so today we're putting our heads together we're bringing you everything we're bringing you the stuff you're expecting how to rig how to flip how to punch but we're going to bring you some things that you don't expect as well I'm gonna kick it off with one of those things so there's a few different ways to rape for punching but this is one that I've really not seen talked about and it is something that I did for years and years and years and years without talking about it when the going got tough but the fish were still in the cover I went in there and started drop-shotting for him we're gonna circle around and get really in-depth with all of these different rigs here in a second to check it off though why don't you talk about what this is to start with why are the fish in here what is flipping and punching let's get a quick rundown there and then we're going to go really in-depth absolutely summertime it's hot out you get that real thick grass you get those match you get the real thick grass lines on the two lines those fish like to get up into that real thick cover it's cooler it's where the bait fish tend to hang out it's easy ambush points you get all those little tule points those grass points back up in their ambush points it's it's it's more comfortable for the bass ephie up underneath that cover so you have to be able to go in through and get them out so punching heavy flipping that rig that he was just talking about that shot that drop shot through that stuff that canopy if you will that's what those vows are gonna be starting off yeah punch rig Lois you guys have heard about a punch rig what this is this is a Texas rig style bait you got an ounce to an ounce and a half tungsten sinker to some kind of a creature bait to a heavy what do you wanna call like a super line hook if you will in hook flippin style yeah a flippin style hook something that's not gonna band when you're throwing 65 pound test or 80 pound you know braid through that stick thick stuff to get those fish out you need a real heavy set up so you're going with a straight braid typically 65 pound test some people use 80 you're gonna use that real heavy tongue you know tungsten weight you want that tungsten weight to be able to penetrate like a like a missile through that stuff and get that bait crashing down through there because it still is a reaction bite and then you follow that up with your favorite with your favorite creature bait and we're gonna talk about all of this stuff in depth huh circling back around of what you just said the the whole game here you know what Texas rigging is right everybody throws a Texas rig saenko or Texas rig to preach or bait or anything else but the whole concept here is we all like frog in and throw in top water and call and fish up out of the grass get them to chase down a lipless crankbait in the spring well when it gets so thick that you can't do that anymore this takes over it's still those same fish but they're in a place that you could never reach any other way if they're not willing to come up through it for a frog you have nothing left except to punch so circling back to this drop shot I'm gonna run all the way through this setup the idea is very simple it is a drop shot so you've got a hook suspend it up above a weight and that's it that's all there is to it but you punch through and you're able to go with a little lighter weight because if the weight goes through it will build up speed before the worm gets there and it'll suck the worm right through the hole so I can usually get away with a quarter to a half ounce lighter on the drop shot setup then I will on the creature bait so if I'm flipping and and a half on the creature I'll flip an ounce on the drop shot and you can come down from there you want to go as light on your weight as you possibly can when you're flipping and punching because that weight is up there banging around pulling that hook out of that fish if you're flipping with a two ounce weight you're going to lose a lot of those fish now you do it because the fish are and they're so thick you have to but if you don't have to if you can get in there with an ounce or three-quarter get in there with lighter weight you'll land more of your fish so back to the drop shot what this essentially is is just a tie on drop shot weight here's a here's a standard version that's I got 3/8 or a half ounce tungsten and you just tie it on instead of clip it on well they come in giant varieties too this one was the first one on the market and this one's long since been discontinued but there's some brand new options made of tungsten instead of lead that are so much better than this we're gonna link all that for you in the video description so you know exactly what to do but like Tim said 65 pound braid I'm using a 3 OTT super line hook not a giant hook and not a giant worm but it's super lined so it's strong then about an 8 inch drop and then I tie on that weight again when you flip that weights gonna punch through suck that worm through get to the bottom shake it let it sit shake it let it sit shake it no bite pull out try again it's just a finesse ear approach a more natural easier form to eat not such a big package approach to punching for the worms themselves I'll circle back to the specific worms I've got three of them but the baits themselves are all smaller 6 to 7 inch worms with shorter ribbon tails I like the ribbon tail because it's moving so fast when it comes in you get a good swim but you know some worms have big long ribbon tails you're not going to find me using those because they get caught up in all the junk on the way in and the way out and it's a mess so shorter ribbon tails are best for this approach that is the drop shot set up if you haven't done it which you probably haven't because most people are not power shotting or Bubba shotting whatever you want to call it through that heavy cover you need to try it now the only other variation is the Tokyo range this guy has had all sorts of popularity in the past year you tie on up here there's your hook and then you've got this straight wire dropper the concept and you're not gonna have that 8 inch lead but if you just want an easy way to go it's easily adjustable it's consistent you can punch right through there take that Tokyo rig oh thank you take your tungsten weight that you would normally be Texas rigging with put it on backwards so it's facedown and then all you do is take a pair of pliers and bend the end of it up so that that weight is stuck on there and now you've got essentially the same setup as that drop shot rig just a more compact package and that will work extremely well - yeah the benefit of the drop shot rig is the fact that it's drops on rig its suspending that bait up in the fish face right you know that the Texas rig the punch rig when you come through that's going all the way to bottom on that setup the weights going to bottom and it's suspending that bait right in their face totally different look definitely a different look and there's days when it's it works a lot better than then this guy right here so getting back to the punch rig I kind of flew through it a little bit now I'm gonna go a little bit more in depth on the style of vulvar stops the style of hooks because if you guys have been following us for a while you know that Matt and I use different tackle for this so going through this rig again 65 to 80 pound braid typically 65 there are a bunch of different bobber stops punch stops on the market we like to use a few different ones these guys right here this is a sixth sense really good sometimes if I'm throwing a outs and a half an ounce in three-quarter a real heavyweight I'll rig two up here just to keep that weight from sliding up you know when you're going through that real heavy cover you want this thing as streamlined as possible get through so you hold that real heavy way with the two bobber stops now let's talk about the hooks this right here this is actually Matt's rig right there what hook is that for you that's that jungle book that's the owner jungle 404 OTT and I like to use a straight shank hook you can see these hooks right here hopefully see it's just a straight shank versus this has the little ninety degree the little bend in it that's ewg style again straight shank now the difference when this is rigged in the worm well this is rigged in the worm it sets back into itself but has a different hook angle then a straight shank so if you look at that the hook of the tip of the hook tip is parallel to that bait right there slam flush lays flush now when you rig a straight shank gonna bait when you rack when you rig a straight shank hook now that that hook point is pointing at like a 45 degree angle back up see the difference now there's not a right and a wrong way I think there is and I think so too but we both have success in both styles yeah this is the stant what Tim is doing is is considered the norm that's straight shank hook tons of power when you hit them hard you could show them how well you know I don't have one rate little pin yeah typically when you're rigging these you're tying a snail knot and what that does it kicks the bait I had a 90 degree angle out so you get that real good hook penetration through the roof of the mouth so when it's hanging below the weight it's hanging like this or it's not actually on the bottom like this right when you set the hook with a Snell not on a straight shank it'll cause this to kick out like that and stick them in the roof of the mouth right that's the theory and it does work the reason that I choose to go the other way the other way more than anything two things I feel like have a better hook up to land ratio that might just be my fishing style they're a great fisherman they do both the biggest thing for me is my baits last longer because I'm not constantly punching through I get it in there and get it rigged than that it stays that's what I like about it and you also think we've talked about this a bunch you think that once you get that hook penetration through with that little 90-degree hook it holds the fish better lose a lot less fish he thinks he loses a lot fish a lot less fish because of that hook angle and the way that it turns inside the fish's mouth again not not a right or wrong but that is two different ways that you can rig a punch set up now some guys will actually throw on a punch skirt you know there's different fisheries that a fish like that bigger presentation so what you do you run your bobber stop on first some bobber stop on the line then your weight then your weight and then you thread this thing on right there then your punch skirt then your hook and bait and it essentially it turns you into a jig right you got you got that secondary action of a skirt you know when you're down there hopping it that skirts fluffing up you're you've got a lot bigger profile in without the punch set up now fishing them you know there's probably different ways to fish a punch set up but my my favorite way to do it is it's flip in there let it fall on slack line and you're gonna really want to get you to know your setup you want to know the the weight of your entire setup because a lot of times you're not going to feel these fish bite as this comes crashing through the mat there's going to react and eat it so when this comes through the mat and you lift up on your rod and there's nothing there reel down and sit wing because they ate it on the fall but if they don't eat on the fall flip it in there let it fall hit the bottom check your rod make sure it's not heavy or light shake-shake-shake shake-shake-shake do it all over again next spot and you move very quickly because this thing comes crashing through the stuff they're either gonna be on it or they're not yeah I'm really glad you said something about it getting weightless because I want to talk about since we're on a little tangent here the different ways that this bike can feel because the first time that you come out here let's say especially to Tooley's or bullrushes or any of this stuff you know your big heavy grasses and you go throw that thing back in there because sometimes the fish are right here on the front sometimes they're back they're out of sight and that rig will get those fish out of there when they're in there the first time you do it you pitch in there and you're feeling a hundred different Reed's and here coming what's a bite gonna feel like as I've traveled around one of three things is going to happen I can't tell you which is coming because it's completely different on every Lake I know exactly what it feels like on this Lake one of three things is coming be prepared for all of them but I'm telling you right now you will be second-guessing yourself like crazy until one of the three things happens and then you will know so you don't need to second-guess yourself even though you're going to first one like you said it's just gonna go slack on you you're gonna pitch through you're waiting for bottom and it's just not there they just you didn't go and slack you out you're in trouble you better hit them hard second way you're gonna flip in their land and it's gonna go boom I mean they Massacre it that is what will typically happen if you're on a fishery where other people aren't punching because these are unreached fish they're untapped maybe guys are froggen most guys aren't punching not deep in the cover so they will eat like a freight train the third one which is what we have here you'll flip in it hit bottom just shake it you'll never feel a thing but when you pick up its that telltale heavy mush it would feel like nothing except that if you're a jig fisherman a worm fisherman you know that mush you know it from drop-shotting where you pick up and that doesn't feel right throw in a shake yet all of a sudden there's something there same thing here you'll get a feel for what an ounce or an ounce and a half feels like and all of a sudden it's not that it doesn't feel like a clear bite but it is very clearly different and when it's different swing for the fences two things on that be careful when you swing for the fences because if it isn't a fish now you're bouncing half bullet headed your way that is just make sure you're wearing you know sunglasses and stuff you don't wanna lose an eye or anything like that but I wanted to add a little bit on the bite itself because when you night when I first start doing this with you it was very frustrating because I would flip in there shake shake shake nothing and I feel a chunk I'd real downswing and here comes the bullet at me and I missed so many fish that to that I was feeling was the fish spitting it not eating it so make sure you're on it as soon as that falls through you're checking it because if you feel that bunk you missed them yeah that's great alright third variety this guy right here flipping and punching with a big jig there going to be two versions you've got flipping jigs and punching jigs what's the difference somebody changed the name that's the difference right they've got the same stinking hook and I'm a little bit different head shape but essentially the jig that you want for this type of fishing is going to be a pointed head it's going to help split the cover and then the bait can follow through and fall flipping with a jig is amazing it's probably my favorite way to do it day in and day out because it has by far the highest hookup to land ratio if you stick them and you keep pressure on them most of them make it in the boat when they've got that big tungsten out there in front of them and they're thrashing and it's flopping it just rips itself out that's what Tim's point was about to bobber stops that keeps that tungsten from going up the line and just whipping it at least keeps it in there tight like a jig the other nice thing about a jig is that it has a weed guard that's where the the weedless nough scums from well that weed guard when it's in a fish's mouth and it's compressed is also putting back pressure against that hook it's helping pin the hook in place and lock it it's like a second barb so it really helps your hookup to land ratio now the two different jigs the biggest difference is the flippin jig that I like to use that's that no Jack flipping jig only comes up to a three-quarter ounce if you need heavier than that you go to a punch jig you can get them all the way up to like an ounce and a half things you need to know about flipping with a jig one you have to go heavier on your weight because you do have a weed guard it's a little bit bigger package to try and drop through a hole in the cover so if I can get away I told you with the drop shot I can go lighter on weight with the jig it's the opposite if you're flipping three-quarter ounce tungsten Texas rig I'm flipping a one ounce in my jig I'm flipping announcing a quarter in my take Strega flippin an ounce and a half of my jig just takes a little bit more to get it through but it works so well you get that larger profile it's as if you've already got the punch skirt and everything else right when you put a punch skirt on you're essentially building what looks like a jig instead of just having a jig the biggest advantage to the Texas rate is that it does get through easier especially when the cover gets crazy thick like they don't make a two and a half ounce punching jig to get where a 2 ounce tungsten can go so there are times where you are just plain in cover that it's too thick for the jig it's not going to work and you just forget about it but if you can get a jig in there it will catch them you've rigged it up the same way except that it's an exposed took so just standard jig trailer rigging you just thread it on there and you rely on the weed guard for your weedless protection but it works those are your three different or four different if you want to refer to the two different Texas recipes for different ways to rig these things you want to jump into baits start talking about some of those specifics or where do you want to go from here yeah let's talk about baits you know there's a lot of different creature style baits on the market beaver style baits on the market again the whole point of this is to be streamlined as much as possible so baits that I really like flipping or punching with on the Texas rig you got organized over the rage bug for different appendages on here make sure you pull these apart when you separate them before you rig it up but that gives a lot more action on the fall as this things fall and you got a lot of appendages tentacles down there arms flailing around so you're just getting a little more commotion a little more movement out of the bait as its coming through same thing another striking the rage it's the rage craw little slimmer body profile but a lot bigger claws a lot more a slower paddle again it's just you got to play around with the fish on your fishery but I typically like a beaver style bait you know the new kinky B for the spicy beaver something with a little action the tentacles and of course the you know the tried-and-true the sweet beaver but any of these beaver style baits rage style baits they they work do you have any specific favor up favorites you like I do the jack so that's the standard beaver just like Tim said the biggest thing you need to find out on a given day and it will typically apply more than a day so like so far this summer I've done way better here on baits that kick on their way down then I have on a standard beaver which is different than yours years pass I don't know why in the past I did way better on the standard beaver than I did on anything that would kick so that's the biggest difference know that you've got some baits like a beaver that are going to be essentially dead action they're all profile alright it falls it lands it looks good but it doesn't swim down there it doesn't swim back out so you've got that once you get into the baits the kick then you've just got varieties of how hard they kick overall profile that sort of thing so Tim already talked about a couple of my favorites but just to add a couple more this is hands-down my number one flipping bait that's a jackal Archelon this is the gill color and it to me it looks nothing like a gill but man they eat it up in here what it is is think like a tube so it's got a solid head but the rest of this is actually hollow inside so when I Texas rig it I actually leave my hook point inside the interior of the bait and it is unbelievably weedless it's fantastic I don't even understand how when I set the hook that point gets out of there and gets up it makes no logical sense to me but it works I have an amazing hook of ratio so incredibly weedless with a great hook of ratio that's hard to find I get that nice action like a beaver that kind of dead action appearance on the bottom except that these flat paddles do get a really good kick going in and going out it's not exaggerated it's not big like a rage craw but they do have a kick it's just a great balance that's my day in and day out they then the other one that I use especially when I start getting some murkiness in the water is the kinky beaver this one much like the standard beaver and much like the spicy beaver all three of those good gracious so standard no action spicy beaver ton of action kicks hard on the way in and out the kinky beaver is somewhere in between it kicks hard on the way in and out but it's also just got more body it's a bigger profile overall and I do really well on that one I mean look at the color that I that I grab right that's what I had on my grudge standard natural big bold obnoxious I throw it when that water gets murky those are the colors I stock it in I don't even have it in a natural color that's not what I'm fishing it but this bait one thing I want to point out it is bigger it's got appendages but you'll notice that we have not picked up a single large creature style bait no brush hog no manbearpig no lizards no 10-inch curly tail worms the reason why is that all those longer appendages get caught on everything you want to drive yourself nuts throw a bait with long appendages and hit one of these and have it go Shh and tie itself into a knot you can't get back out of those two leaves it will drive you insane so every single one of these baits is a bait that will slip in and out of cover really really well without giving you any trouble yes streamline and very small profile you can change your bait depending on how much kick you want but all this stuff that we covered you know everything from the abrade the reels and rods we haven't talked about that yet well they're the baits the tungsten blue link of all that stuff down below in the video description so you guys won't have to go the last one to talk about is back to the worms there are so many different worms on the market over the years that I've been punching through the mats punching and heavy cover I've had three worms that just work consistently first one that smaller PowerBait worm that do we have one right now 7 inch yeah I've got one right here so that's it right there it's a great worm power rate worms stink I don't know what is on them they stink but fish eat them it's got a great action in the water it's got a ton of movement on the way down with that curly tail but again it's not a big oversized curly tail it comes in and out really well compared to some of those longer tails yeah that guy there which is the smaller zoom dead ringer same deal it's got a bigger sized tail but it's not long it's not a big long tail that's gonna wrap up on everything slips in and out of cover extremely well and then the last one is also a zoom this is the you tail very cheap bait inexpensive it's small slips in and out of cover really well I have flat Cottam on this thing year after year after year and it's the only thing I use it for and I don't pull a you tail worm out for anything else but it is so good in this exact situation those are the three worms on everything that's out there on the market those are the three that I've got all the confidence in and I throw all three of them in very natural colors watermelon watermelon red green pumpkin black flake all natural because if it is murky water if it is dingy water we're going to that big punch rig because they can find it and they eat it the only time I go to the drop shot is when the other stuff is not working when you're punching you're trying to catch big fish the drop shot they naturally get a little bit smaller overall I don't know why but my fish always lose a pound or two but the difference is I can catch them when I can't catch me right when you need a bite it will get you a bite that's and one thing to add on if you guys have noticed on all of these baits the colors are pretty much similar we're going with real natural colors or real dark contrasting colors black blue haematoma junebug something they can see in that dark up under that dark mat or in that dingy water yep get yourself one of each or two of each but a bold standout color and a natural and you're golden one more tip for you I think Tim's about to start talking rods and reels here's a tip for you if you want to save yourself some money and you go out here to start flipping and your braid is faded like mine is here and you don't want to go by yourself all brand new spool a braid just because it's faded sharpie get the fat sharpie the one with the flat tip yep and if you can take a razor and put a little slit in it but it'll tell all the difference you get that braid right in between that tip of that pin and it colors your colors that braid back to a dark color instead of that bright you know when you get braids it's that dark gray and it looks fantastic you don't have to do anything to it but over time it will fade to a light green almost a white when you turn it back to a dark shade it just works better and you can save yourself because your braid is still good after it turns white it's not until it starts getting frayed and messed up that you need to change your spool unless you're punching you need that dark color so you know obviously dark braid is not going to stand out in there one bit but if a big piece of white braid falls down in there that will stand out so let's talk rods and reels we kind of covered I covered for a braided line a little bit again heavy braid fifty sixty five eighty pound test but when you're trying to get four or five six ten pounders out of this heavy cover you need a rod with enough backbone to get that book penetration into their mouth and get that fish out I like a seven six to an eight foot heavy or extra heavy rod because you are powerful and you're throwing heavy weights hooks and you're throwing in the thickest of cover you know Matt and I we've raved about it for years that ex fried 7/11 extra-heavy is hands-down our favorite Rob's hunch and rod and it's what not available until it's backordered at the moment so we have a handful of some rods we're gonna recommend I know you really like that rod I like this one that's the mega bass it's a bunker-buster it's a higher end rod but we will recommend down in the video description you know and at any price point my favorite rod personally is that X pride 711 extra heavy but that doesn't help when you can't get them so from top dollar all the way down to inexpensive we will recommend you in the video description a handful of really good flipping and punching rods at every price point one of my favorite rods for the power shot technique the drop shot technique or the lighter jig technique is gonna be the seven six heavy X pride those are available it's a lighter rod than the extra heavy the seven-eleven but if you're on the lighter side of the flippin and punching you can get over you can get away with the seven six one last thing to add on rods actually I have two things that I want to add to that one is that we are talking about dedicated flipping and punching rods right now this is a rod that that is the only thing you're going to use it for at 7-eleven extra heavy ism is awesome but when this bite is over you're gonna stick it in the rod rack and forget about it until the next time you need that rock there's not a lot of crossover if you're a guy that doesn't do this a bunch and you just want to dabble with it what you want to do is get a good frog rod seven three two seven four extra heavy and we'll link you two of those down in the video description so I have to the that we like for this either one of those is a rod that will work it's not perfect but it will a 7-3 extra heavy absolutely pull a fish out of there I mean you can torque on them I would rather have a little more length but not if you're not looking for that Kieron it will do it it will get them out and then you can turn around with that rod you can throw a frog on it you can take it for a heavy jig on it you fish it in the wintertime with a big jig you could I mean if you need it I guess you can even throw a great big worm on it right there's a lot that you can do with it and it's not dedicated last thing I wanted to add was something so you keep talking my old brains in trying to remember what it was yeah so we talked about you know the heavy rods the big tall rods some but they like mass today our rods that you're they're dead they're specifically for that technique shorter rod you can get away with the 737 for extra heavy something you would frog with you could Carolina rig you can do whatever as far as reels you're gonna want something typically with a higher gear ratio because when you when you flip or you punched through that mat and you're trying to catch up to check your line you don't want a five to one or even a six to one you want something that's like seven to one or even an eight to one the higher gear ratio reel you're give it a little bit on that that low in that torque you know but you get a lot more luck you can cover a lot line pickup yeah you can cover up a lot more line in a couple real twists reel turns with that higher gear ratio so I'll typically go with a 7 1 or 8 to 1 gear ratio reel on those big I agree with you I like a 7 to 1 and he nailed it the biggest thing with punching that you don't think about is how much reeling you're going to do like at a normal day of fishing you cast out and you slow work of 8 back to the boat but with this it's like punch here shake shake shake shake shake burn burn burn burn burn burn pitch shake shake shake shake burn burn burn there's a ton of real yeah a 7 to 1 or higher is absolutely the way to go I did remember what I wanted to talk about last thing for you this is safety Tim already touched on these weights coming back like a bullet and it is no joke I have seen people hit my last boat I had three different people punch holes in my cowling guys that were on my back deck they had one zingin and literally just punched a hole through my cowling into my motor I've had two people hit on the head it's a serious deal I mean an ounce and a half a tungsten will kill somebody if it hits you right so here is a tip that will make all the difference it's hard for me to do with our camera angle right now but I'm just gonna explain through it essentially if I throw out there and I get stuck now if I'm swinging on a fish that's different but you get stuck in the junk all the time it gets caught up and you've got to pull it out the biggest mistake that I see people make is they lean back on that rod to try and get it out of there and they load that rod up when that thing pops free it's coming hot and that is when everybody gets hurt it's not when there's a fish on when there's a fish on it typically goes smooth it's when the guy stuck in the junk and wrenching on it and it comes free that people get hurt so the biggest tip I can give you is that what we are throwing these things I fish it with a flat rod meaning I throw it out there and I keep my rod pointed straight out I don't load that rod up I don't bow it up I stay pointed and you'll see you know I'll snap that rod tip I'm working my bait but when it's time to reel out I don't blow up I point and reel right now I'm stuck in junk so if I just keep going it still comes to me and if it breaks loose the braid doesn't have a lot of stretch so there's not a lot of force there to come rocketing back if it breaks loose it'll just drop instead of unloading that rod and coming back at 100 miles an hour you will appreciate that one if you haven't done it because I can go through days of punching and not have a single weight come flying back across my boat it never happens because you just work it and reel it out but if you try and load up and get those things to come free it's a matter of time before somebody gets hit and it really is a serious deal so be careful punching there's a lot of momentum there take your time to think it through when a fish eats it you let them have it but the rest of the time be careful yeah real quick so when you do get hung up in your street real down and slowly just pull that bait and it'll come off of the clump whatever you're on grass or the toolies you don't need to you don't need to do like that because then it will come flying at you just reel down and slowly pull and then also on the Hooksett if you do like a 45-degree hook set or a side hook set instead of us straight over the head hook set it'll keep the bait from coming at you yeah it'll miss you if it does come that's a great point guys we hope this helps you this is a long video but we wanted to really go in depth because this is a fun technique you can catch monster fish doing it this technique has only been out in the public eye for 10 or 15 years it's a relatively new technique in the past when we were younger once those fish went back in that stuff they were gone just wave goodbye a wait for them to come out in the fall it took time for somebody to figure out how to go in there and get them so on a lot of Fisheries around the country it's still brand new your fish have never seen it and they will respond so much better than you think they will - you going in there and getting them out we hope you enjoyed it if you did hit the like button subscribe to the channel we try and do these instructional videos for you we go in-depth we do three videos a week we're here to teach and to help you become a better angular we'll talk to you soon see you [Music] you you
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Channel: TacticalBassin
Views: 404,322
Rating: 4.9309354 out of 5
Keywords: bass, fishing, bass fishing, Summer, flipping, pitching, punching, punchin, flippin, flipping jig, jig fishing, jig fishing tips, heavy cover, summer bass fishing, fall bass fishing, texas rig, how to catch bass in shallow water, fishing weeds, how to catch bass in weeds, lily pads, tullies, reeds, weed bed, shallow bass fishing, creature bait, how to fish a creature, dropshot, drop shot, dropshotting, tacticalbassin, tactical bassin, dropshot worm, plastic worm, crawdad, rubber worm
Id: -gE1dLnVImQ
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 37min 56sec (2276 seconds)
Published: Mon Aug 26 2019
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