When bass slide off the bank into 15–40 feet (or deeper), the right lure is what turns “empty water” into effortless bites. From football jigs and drop shots to deep crankbaits and blade baits, these are the proven tools to reach the strike zone longer—without the guesswork.
Sportfishing
Techniques, gear reviews, and trip reports for freshwater and saltwater anglers.
Summer Crappie Fishing: Best Proven Tips for More Slabs
Summer crappie fishing is all about timing and adapting—start early or late, fish deep along channels and drop-offs, and key in on structure with your electronics. With live minnows (and light line) plus vertical jigging or slip-bobbers set at the right depth, you’ll zero in on where the slabs are holding.
Big Baits: Best Must-Have Strategy for Trophy Catfish
Go bigger if you want trophy catfish—large baits deliver the stronger scent, movement, and energy payoff that big blues and flatheads can’t ignore. Upsize your cut or live bait (and your gear) and you’ll trade “dinks” for fewer, heavier bites that actually have record potential.
90-10 Fishing Rule: Best Proven Move to Catch More
90% of feeding fish hang out in just 10% of the water—so if you’re not getting bites after 30–45 minutes, switch it up and target the highest-yield ambush spots like potholes, grass edges, docks, and riprap. Master that simple 90-10 Fishing Rule, and you’ll spend less time guessing and more time landing fish.
Blue Catfish Baits: Must-Have Affordable Picks
Blue catfish are aggressive, scent-driven powerhouses—and the right bait can turn a tough day into a trophy moment. From fresh cut shad to garlic-soaked chicken and stink baits, here are the most affordable, must-try options (and exactly how to fish them) for more strikes.
Blue Catfish: Best Must-Have Habitat Tips
Blue catfish can top 100 pounds, but the key to landing these elusive giants is knowing where they roam—deep channels with structure, moderate-to-strong currents, and muddy bottoms that bring in bait. Match your strategy to the season (night in summer, deep holes in winter, spawning flats in spring) and you’ll be in the right spot at the right time.
Blue Catfish Must-Have Tips for Effortless Trophy Catch
Blue catfish can top 100 pounds and fight hard, so if you want an easier shot at a trophy, focus on deep channels by day and baitfish schools at night—then match your gear with fresh shad or skipjack and the right rig for drift, anchor, or bump fishing. This guide breaks down behavior, seasonal patterns, and pro-safe tips so your next blue catfish outing is dialed in.
Overcast Weather: Best Must-Have Daytime Catfishing
Overcast skies turn down the light and crank up catfish activity—extending feeding into the middle of the day and making scent-driven bites even more effective. Head to shallow flats and transitional cover, bring strong-smelling bait, and be ready for a great daytime run even if the weather is windy or lightly rainy.
Fishing Hooks Must-Have: Replace for Better Catch
Sharp, unbent hooks mean better penetration, fewer missed bites, and more fish landed—so if you spot dull points, rust, or even slight warping, it’s time to swap them. Keep your tackle box stocked with quality replacements and a quick sharpness check so every cast has your hook working at its best.
Bobber Fishing for Crappie: Best Must-Have Tips
Crappie love light, suspended bites—so bobber fishing is one of the easiest (and most effective) ways to put more of these tasty fish in your cooler. Learn the must-have gear, the right depth, and the best rigs, baits, and techniques to stay on the school all season long.
Fly Fishing Rod Materials: Must-Have Affordable Picks
Choosing the right fly rod material can make all the difference in feel, control, and performance—whether you want affordable durability from fiberglass, bite-detecting sensitivity with graphite, a balanced mid-ground from composite, or the classic feel of bamboo. Want easy picks that match your style and budget?
Large Streamers for Trout: Must-Try, Best Tactics
Ready to get more aggressive trout into striking mode? Learn when to throw big streamers, how to present them (strips, dead drift, swing, or jig), and which patterns work best to trigger chase-and-attack reactions.
Small Streamers: Must-Have Best Tactics for Trout
Think small to catch smarter—small streamers mimic trout’s natural forage, win over finicky or pressured fish, and land more hookups in clear water, tight cover, early/late season, and even at night. Discover when to go size 10–16 and how to fish low, slow, and subtly for those “easy meal” strikes.
Streamer Tactics for Trout: Stunning Effortless Wins
Streamer fishing for trout gets seriously exciting when you match the right color to the conditions—light for clear, sunny, shallow water that calls to baitfish, or dark for murky depths and low light where silhouette wins. Next time you feel “nothing’s happening,” make the quick switch and watch those follows turn into strikes.
Streamer Flies: Stunning, Best Hatch-Match Guide
Ready to stop “matching bugs” and start thinking like a trout? This hatch-matching streamer guide shows you exactly how to imitate baitfish, crayfish, and leeches—then dial in the right pattern, size, depth, and retrieve to trigger explosive strikes.















