I WISH Someone Had Told Me This Years Ago...(Bass Fishing Tip) Ep. 148

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  • Опубликовано: 4 дек 2024

Комментарии • 29

  • @Kctfishn
    @Kctfishn 2 года назад

    That’s a big thing to understand. Presenting a bait to feeding fish vs triggering inactive fish. Understanding the position of the fish to know they are in feed mode.

  • @peanutskustomz2466
    @peanutskustomz2466 Год назад

    You are spot on. I watched a RUclips video today and he had all this technology and was literally chasing a school of fish that would not bite anything he threw.

  • @bobbycolson1957
    @bobbycolson1957 2 года назад

    Great advice

  • @rodcashman4793
    @rodcashman4793 2 года назад +1

    Great video 📹 good luck on your doctors appointment 👍 I know what that's like for the 12th I'll be traveling 5 hours to get my right wrist fused. Hopefully things will be better. Just two weeks ago went fishing about 2 hours caught 3 bass & missed 3. Water temperature was 43.

  • @glennboone7832
    @glennboone7832 2 года назад

    Good one brother. Thanks. Hope all the appointments give good news.
    My question would be why do you think the shallower fish bit and the deeper fish did not?

  • @DanielBoone337
    @DanielBoone337 Год назад

    LOL man I burned up half my day on Toledo Bend today chasing the fish in the backs of creeks in about 25ft on brush tops because I guess the water dropped down in temperature enough that all the bait fish was out there along with a lot of bass or at least I think they were all bass I only caught 1... but you ain't wrong these day it's extremely easy to get caught up with the technology we have and forget to just fish like the old days. Just recently found your channel and really digging the content keep it up brother!!!

    • @AndrewUpshawFishing
      @AndrewUpshawFishing  Год назад

      Thanks buddy! I have been there too many time. Easy to get caught up with it

  • @oklahomachris6298
    @oklahomachris6298 2 года назад

    We had this on crappie the other day they would chase the heck out of our bait never would commit. Plastic or live bait neither would work didn’t try hair jig but don’t think it would have a change. Good luck with everything bud

  • @scottclark1168
    @scottclark1168 2 года назад

    Man I'm glad I can't see em lmao,it would drive me bonkers,great video Andrew,keep up the good work and good luck to ya

    • @Davo2233
      @Davo2233 2 года назад

      Andrew, are you seriously saying that you cant catch a fish that isn’t actively feeding? What is a reaction bite then? If you put a reaction bait 3 inches from a fish and work it like you would any lure you have tricked a bass into biting in the past by pure reaction won’t work on a suspended livescope fish im going to have to call B.S. on that!

  • @cgfishingandoutdoors9336
    @cgfishingandoutdoors9336 2 года назад

    Me and my buddy was heading to Toledo bend this morning but had boat trouble yesterday so having to wait

  • @jamesbarron1202
    @jamesbarron1202 2 года назад

    Watching live tournaments you’ll see lulls throughout the day when nobody’s getting many bites and then at a certain time of day, all the sudden most of the field starts getting bit.

  • @mikegardiner3934
    @mikegardiner3934 2 года назад +1

    haha, I don’t even have live scope, but I know that is a weakness I have in staying at the same place too long. How many times do you tell yourself, “I know they’re going to turn on any minute”. Lol.

  • @Ryan55
    @Ryan55 2 года назад

    🤘🏼🤘🏼🤘🏼

  • @edwardcowan7012
    @edwardcowan7012 2 года назад

    I don’t have live scope. I’ll stay on a bed fish for an hour. Any other fish gets one cast. I’ll take my chances with the dumb east ones

  • @bruce7992
    @bruce7992 Год назад

    Nice video Andrew. FFS is ruining fishing, wish it was outlawed. jmho

  • @cjnugent4102
    @cjnugent4102 2 года назад

    One of the main reasons I follow certain channels is to learn something most importantly learning from others mistakes. We can all benefit from that, I appreciate ur content and Pray all goes well with the healing of ur hand and skin €^n£r!🙏🏼🇺🇸🎣

  • @joepotaczek
    @joepotaczek 2 года назад +1

    Need to get used to if you see them you know they are there and if they don't bite move on right away in my opinion if they are gonna bite it will be right away I'm new to livescope but I haven't let it mess with my routines all I know now is that I'm actually around fish instead of before when I was hoping I was. Just my opinion I'm no professional.

  • @academicmailbox7798
    @academicmailbox7798 2 года назад

    Andrew, I hinted at this before. With the thing of effects from this virus.

    • @academicmailbox7798
      @academicmailbox7798 2 года назад

      What I discovered (the first time around, and it took on a whole epic style journey quality of it's own after multiple infections and injections, and dealing with fall out's from each event). The first time around that whole 'circus'. I found that I bounced back fast. From a physical point of view. Was able to work, exercise. Do all of the things.

    • @academicmailbox7798
      @academicmailbox7798 2 года назад

      What really seems to take longer to recover. Is ability to process things, as quickly or as comprehensively. As one can normally do with one's intelligence. It's a hard thing to describe. I'm listening to Andrew explain the 'hand injuries' and the rest. The various specialists and working with the different branches of the medical system. In order to solve different things. What you'll also notice, is that someone like Andrew would normally be able to wrestle with this stuff. And wrestle a situation, or a challenge into submission. By sheer will power and weight of determination, and concentration. That's the part that one doesn't recover for a long time. After these virus type illnesses that are out there now (even when one has recovered well enough physically speaking). I found that one's endurance levels for coping with hard situations. Was not the same as it used to be.

    • @academicmailbox7798
      @academicmailbox7798 2 года назад

      I remember years ago, I remembered these friends we had. They had an only son who was struck by an oncoming vehicle near to his residence as a teenager. And he survived being struck by the vehicle and lived. However, he'd been in a coma for a while, and he was damaged permanently from a cognitive standpoint. I remember at one point his parents asked me if I would visit him at his 'trades school' that he attended (they were training folks with learning difficulties to have trades like masonry, carpentry and various other skills). Meaning that it took them much longer than a normal young person to pick up basic skills and trades. It was a long process. The guy had been one of the brightest, smartest kids I'd ever come across. When he was younger. We all assumed he'd grow up to be this genius like his father had been as a scientist. And instead, their only son. They asked me if I would visit him at masonry, brick, block laying school.

    • @academicmailbox7798
      @academicmailbox7798 2 года назад

      The whole idea was to provide the guys with a sense of their own independence. In being able to manage. Because lots of the kids there who had injuries to the brain. They remembered times when they were young, before they had certain accidents. And the fact that they could learn some skill, or some trade. Was a really big deal to the kids. I was thinking about it the other day. And with that illness that many people had with viruses and associated treatments. In the past number of years. It struck me, that aspect of this. It was a lot of the professionals who do 'heavy lifting' from a cognition point of view. Where they need to process complex things from an intelligence point of view. That's where the recovery from the virus was often the slowest. Suffice it to say, that anyone coming away from even one infection, and bouncing back into recovery. It's just something to remember. That one may not reach full capacity in certain ways. For a twelve month period sometimes.

    • @academicmailbox7798
      @academicmailbox7798 2 года назад

      I remember at one point, after three or four different things that happened. I can recall a time period. When around one to two hours worth of cognitive work. Was about the daily limit I knew I could manage. Other stuff, like shopping, cooking etc. Maintenance and house keeping no problem. Just the normal 'heavy lifting' stuff that requires intelligence. Not so much. And it's going to matter to anglers too. Because they have to use their decision-making skills a lot. Even at 'half capacity', say four to six hours of cognitive work stamina stage. Where one is almost getting back to normal. Without a hundred percent recover from this thing. You'll find you still need to 'plan' things (basic stuff like you mention, about hospital appointments and other things). That are a bit out of the norm. You'll find that you need to give yourself a bit more time to plan those, and not leave yourself as strapped for time etc.

  • @texoma_outdoors
    @texoma_outdoors 2 года назад

    Its easy for me to not be distracted by ff sonar, I don't have it and never will 😂

  • @secretbassrigs
    @secretbassrigs 2 года назад +1

    Livescope is dumbing down tournament fishing.

  • @cgfishingandoutdoors9336
    @cgfishingandoutdoors9336 2 года назад

    I stay 15 minutes each spot at a time and keep trolling

  • @cuivre2004
    @cuivre2004 2 года назад +1

    I always repeat to myself "Never be content to NOT catch fish". Too many times I get locked into a "casting cycle" instead of a "fishing for purpose cycle". Break out of the trance and MOVE!