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Por El Bassdozer y Los Amigos
Welcome to Our World!

Approximately sixty anglers compete on Mexico's Pro
Angler Tour, including Carlos Gloria, Dago Luna, Pedro Carrasco and
Jorge Bruster who helped contributed to this story.

Mexican anglers are masters of catching big bass. They have the
most modern bass boats, highest-powered engines, latest electronics,
top-of-the-line tackle - and possess the expertise to use it all.

Mexico's tournament anglers are better-powered and
better-equipped than bass anglers in Europe or some other countries.

Larry Evans of GYB, Eliud Garcia, Gary Yamamoto and Jose Garcia
meet at ICAST, the annual international tackle trade convention in
Las Vegas. The Garcias operate BEST FOR BASS pro shops in Mexico.
They attend ICAST every year and make business trips to
manufacturers headquarters during the year to discuss, handle and
test rods, reels, lines, lures, clothing, bass boats, motors and
fishing electronics in order to determine which of these are the
best possible products for bass fishing in Mexico. Anglers there
owe BEST FOR BASS deep gratitude for pre-screening, selecting and
thereby equipping Mexican anglers with the most ideal, trouble-free
and reliable products for them. In this way, BEST FOR BASS role has
served as a cornerstone for Mexican anglers' progress, advancement
and success in the world of bass fishing.

The elite National Freshwater Fishing Team from Mexico won the
gold medal in the 2007 world championship of bass fishing held in
Spain. 2008's team (shown above) will compete in October 2008 in the
the bass fishing world championship to be held in Italy. The team's
outfits are the same uniforms as worn by Mexico's Olympic athletes.
Next to his team tournament partner, Arturo Fuentes, is Carlos
Gloria (far right). Carlos is one of Mexico's top pros and top
fishing guide who shares his successful tactics and many years of
experience with you in this article.

Pedro Carrasco and Jorge Bruster are top tournament pros who
share tips with you in this article, based on their many years of
Mexican fishing success.

Mexican anglers shown here are some who have contributed their
years of experience and insight in order to publish this definitive
article for you. From left to right: pro Pedro Carrasco, Russ
Bassdozer, FLW Tour pro Brent Ehrler, Mr. Rodolfo Garcia (kneeling)
of BEST FOR BASS, Eliud Garcia of BEST FOR BASS, Carlos Cano
Villalobos and pro Jorge Bruster.
Recommended Rods for Fishing Mexico
Selecting suitable rods for Mexico is a daunting task of
separating the wheat from the chaff. For all practical purposes,
most spinning rods can be summarily dismissed. Mexican anglers don't
ordinarily use (and most don't own) spinning rods.
That leaves us with baitcasting rods.
Of these, I estimate that 90% of bass fishing baitcasting rods on
the market may not suited for fishing in Mexico. Main reasons are
the rod power's not strong enough or the rod tip action's too soft.
The remaining 10% of powerful baitcasting rods on the market
still may or may not be suitable for fishing in Mexico. Finding a
good rod for Mexico is like trying to find a needle in a haystack -
and you can make expensive mistakes by buying the wrong ones.
On the other hand, if you live in Monterrey, Mexico or visit one
of the BEST FOR BASS pro tackle shops there, then the rods suited to
Mexico are easy to find. They're at BEST FOR BASS. The Garcia family
members and Arturo who operate BEST FOR BASS have done all the hard
work, pored over all the rod catalogs, and met personally with rod
manufacturers. They've handled and considered all rods at major
tackle trade shows. They've gotten feedback on rods from the top
tournament pros and many avid, expert bass anglers in Mexico, and
BEST FOR BASS shop staff actively fish the tournaments themselves.
BEST FOR BASS knows what rods work well, and for what techniques.
They stock only the very best rods suited for fishing in Mexico, and
they educate and inform anglers as to the best rods for their needs.
If you can't get to BEST FOR BASS, we'll share a couple of
reliable rods that BEST FOR BASS has recommended to me, and that I
favor for fishing in Mexico now.
In terms of power and action, many Mexican anglers rely on two
basic rod powers/actions and so do I. No angler should fish Mexico
without:
- a heavy action rod suited for 50-65 lb braid, mainly for
working Texas rigs shallow or deep
- a medium heavy action rod also suited for 50-65 lb braid to
handle most everything else - spinnerbaits, buzzbaits,
crankbaits, for example.
Now, not all models of heavy action rods stocked by BEST FOR BASS
are the same. However, heavy rods (as a group) act more similar to
each other than do medium heavy rods.
With medium heavy rods, the differences between different medium
heavy models can be quite dramatic. Some medium heavy rods don't
pass. They're just a little too light for everyday usage in Mexico,
and these "light" medium heavies are not recommended.
Falcon's Expert, Carra and Falcon's other rod series are reliable
rods that BEST FOR BASS has recommended to me. BEST FOR BASS also
recommends St. Croix and other fine rod brands too. In considering
all their recommendations, I selected and favor these two Falcon rod
models in Mexico:
- Falcon Expert #EC-7-H. 7'. Heavy with 65 lb braid for Texas
rigs, jigs or other weighted sinker rigs
- Falcon Expert #EC-7-MH. 7'. Medium Heavy with 50 lb braid
for weightless plastics, spinnerbaits, crankbaits, lipless, etc.

Falcon Expert #EC-7-H Heavy
(top) and #EC-7-MH Medium Heavy.
Mexican anglers (really depending on how short or tall the
angler) prefer 6'6" or 7' rods. What's good is the most popular rod
models in Mexico like the Falcons shown above, they come in both
6'6" and 7' and are identical in every way, except length. So a
short hombre's likely to use the 6'6" rods. A tall amigo may opt for
the same rods but in the 7' length.
Gary Yamamoto Tournament Rods. Two rods that
recently performed flawlessly in Mexico are Gary Yamamoto Tournament
Rods. These are new rods for 2008 and they have now been proven
successful in Mexico:
- Gary Yamamoto Tournament Rod #SM3601HF. 7'0". Heavy with
50-65 lb braid for Texas rigs, jigs or other weighted sinker
rigs
- Gary Yamamoto Tournament Rod #SM4661XHF. 7'6". Extra Heavy
with 50-65 lb braid for Carolina rigs, big swimbaits and other
extra heavy applications.

Gary Yamamoto's 7'6" Extra Heavy (top) and 7'0" Heavy Tournament
Rods worked fabulously. Gary Yamamoto custom-designed these rods for
use with his soft plastic baits. Many adjustments were made to every
feature of these rods until Gary perfected the rod actions that were
optimal for fishing with GYB soft plastics. A top Mexican pro who's
the first to fish with these rods remarked upon their sensitivity to
detect even light bites - plus raw power to set the hook, to control
and land huge bass quickly.
Technique-Specific Rods Not Used So Much. You won't
find many anglers with rods marketed as spinnerbait-specific or
crankbait-specific models (or similar technique-specific rods). They
tend not to pack the chutzpah to control belligerent behemoth bass
charging through some of the worst heavy cover you'll ever face.
Some of the top pros do use them, and feel they gain
technique-specific presentation advantages, but they will say that
many technique-specific rods raise their risk of losing fish in
heavy cover because such rods tend to run a little light for Mexico.
The majority of anglers in Mexico rely on two all-purpose, highly
dependable rod models - the heavy and the medium heavy - in the
manner described above.
Indeed this makes perfect sense to me. Why? Because most of the
rods (even relatively heavier models) marketed as
spinnerbait-specific or crankbait-specific, they tend to be too soft
in action, have too slow or parabolic a bend to even rip a stuck
lure off heavy cover, never mind power-winch a deeply-buried big
fish out of it.
So although some avid Mexican anglers may own say 5-7 rods (for
example) and may make use of them all when they fish - they're
mostly 5-7 (or however many) of the generic, all-purpose heavy and
medium heavy models described earlier, and they're used for all
techniques and tactics.
Hot Reels
Reels to Use. Two of my favorite reels for this
style of fishing are the diminutive Daiwa Sol and Daiwa Fuego
models. These two reels are incredibly small and light - but
powerful as all heck. They will withstand years of flipping or
casting in Mexico with 50-65 lb braid, for which the spools have
ample line capacity. They have become my preferred reels for fishing
in Mexico.
Rodolfo, Eliud and Jose Garcia of BEST FOR BASS first set me up
with these two reels when the Sol and Fuego first hit the market
several years back. At first I didn't know what to expect. The Sol
and Fuego looked like a mismatch for heavy rods and heavy cover.
I quickly realized that their very smallness provides an
advantage in palming the reel in these heavy cover situations. Due
to their small size, these reels almost melt into your hand and
disappear while using them - and their power is second to none.
There is no advantage to using a larger reel here. Quite the
opposite. For flipping and casting heavy cover all day long, the
smaller, lighter yet incredibly powerful Daiwa Sol and Daiwa Fuego
will give you an advantage over bigger, heavier reels.
As good as these two reels perform, as rugged and solid as they
are, many Mexican anglers cannot get past how small the reels seem
to be. I've stood at the reel counter display at BEST FOR BASS and
I've tried to instill confidence in anglers there that the Sol and
Fuego are two of the best choices. Most anglers who are unfamiliar
with them, prove unwaveringly hesitant to trust such small reels
under such extreme fishing conditions as found in Mexico. I don't
think I've ever convinced a prospective buyer to purchase one from
BEST FOR BASS. They'll listen to my spiel, give the spool a spin,
and then purchase a bigger, bulkier reel.
After all, a reel is "supposed" to be big if you want to catch
big bass in bad cover.
So for those who need the security blanket of a bigger, beefier
reel, then I recommend the Shimano Chronarch 100 or Shimano Calais
100. Both have the bigger, heavier look and feel that meets the
comfort level of most anglers. These Shimano reels look big and
brawny compared to the Daiwa Sol and Fuego, yet the Shimano's do
have low profiles that can be palmed fairly effortlessly all day.
They just don't melt and practically disappear into your mitt the
way the Daiwa Sol and Fuego do.
Braided Line or Bust
Overall, 50-65 lb braid is the main line in Mexico for one main
reason: it minimizes the overall odds of losing baits or losing that
big bass of your lifetime in heavy cover. For that reason, 50-65 lb
braid makes perfect sense.

"I'll occasionally use some other brands, but the best overall
braid for me is PowerPro," says pro Dago Luna. "I favor this line's
harder nature. I think PowerPro's stiffness gives me more
sensitivity to detect bites and to sense the lure contacting cover
on Texas and Carolina rigs."
"Also, PowerPro does not cling to your rod tip or cling to brush
as much as softer braids do, so it comes through brush better,"
according to Dago.
"I've also enjoyed using Berkley Fireline Crystal 20-30 lb braid
in more open areas with cranks and lipless because it has the little
stiffer feel like PowerPro and the Crystal has lower line visibility
than other braids. So I've used it for cranks and lipless for those
reasons" mentions Dago.

Dago Luna (left) and Carlos
Gloria fish tournaments together.
For flipping and pitching shallow cover, pro Carlos Gloria
recommends, "The brand of braid I use for pitching and flipping
right into the trees is Western Filament Tuf Line. The most
important tip I can give you why I use this one in particular for
flipping is because when I'm fishing trees, I never take my eye off
the line. If I see the line stop before the lure hits the bottom, I
know a fish has got the lure and when that happens, you know you
have to reel it in very fast or the fish can get away. What I mean
with all of this is that the Tuf Line floats more and the line's
color contrast is more visible to me that way. And well, to do that
(see the line float on the water) you have to pitch first, and then
strip some line out of the reel with your hand a little faster than
the Texas rig or whatever you're using sinks. So you strip a little
more line so a little bit extra floats on the surface, thereby
creating a most visible and effective strike indicator. For flipping
and pitching shallow cover, I do not use my rod to feel for bites as
the rod is not as perfect a tell-tale."
"With the depthfinder, you can see how deep is the water under
the boat. But that isn't always the depth of the trees you flip at.
The trees may be up on a little underwater bank, the boat may be
over a little underwater channel. What you need to know more than
exact depth of where you flip is the exact time it takes - exactly
how much time your flipped lure takes to sink to the bottom at the
base of the trees. If the line does anything different before that
length of time - if the line stops, stalls, slows down, speeds up or
of course twitches or starts to move sideways instead of straight
down, a fish has it. You will never feel anything. You are not using
the rod sensitivity here. So precisely timing your lure's descent on
each flip, and comparing how long the lure takes to hit bottom each
flip is critical - and it varies with different weight sinkers and
depths."
"With Carolina rigs or fishing offshore structure, that's
different. Watching the line for bites is not possible there. You
need to feel bites with your rod's sensitivity in these cases. The
rod I use for offshore has 65 lb PowerPro, and for the Carolina rig,
I use 20 or 25 lb test Yo-Zuri Hybrid for the leader," recommends
Carlos.
Mono and Fluoro
Not Used
So Much. It's not that monofilament and fluorocarbons
lines aren't used at all - they're just not used anywhere near as
much as braided line in Mexico.
Some of the top pros do make regular use of mono and fluoro here,
and feel they gain technique-specific lure action advantages in some
cases. They also feel mono or fluoro reduces their percentage of
lost fish (with certain lures like crankbaits) due to less thrown
hooks while playing them on fluoro or mono versus braid.
"For crankbaits, lipless and spinnerbaits with relatively open
water casting lanes in between light to moderate cover, I opt to use
Yo-Zuri Hybrid line, 12 (for smaller cranks), 15 or 20 lb test
depending on the particular lure and the density of cover," says
bass pro Carlos Gloria.
"This line is neither mono nor fluoro but a hybrid of both. It
has good abrasion resistance like fluoro and stretches like mono.
The stretch is what braid does not have. The stretch is what helps
keeps the hooks intact when a bass tries to jump or shake itself
free. Line stretch will keep more jumping fish pinned with Hybrid
than with braid using spinnerbaits, crankbaits and lipless,"
explains Carlos Gloria.
"But if I'm fishing cranks or lipless in heavy cover, I'll have
to use braid. I'll use Power Pro that's for sure, 30 or 50 lb, not
more," says Carlos. "I also use 50 lb PowerPro with spinnerbaits
where there is heavy cover, because you may have to make a long cast
over and under some trees and branches in order to hit the right
spot. PowerPro is a harder line than Tuf Line. What I mean is when
you cast and it's a little bit on windy side or it's late in the day
and you are tired and not making such sharp casts, PowerPro stays
really straight on the cast. Tuf Line and other lines tend to drift
over and drape over some branches or trees and you'll lose one good
cast that way. The PowerPro's going to fall straight down in between
the trees like perfect. That's how important one cast can be. The
biggest bass of your life or the one that is going to make you
winner of a tournament could be there."
Don't Drag It Out
With 50-65 lb braid, Mexican anglers use minimal reel drag - or
else fish will use even the slightest bit of drag to get into trees
and get away. Therefore, little or no drag is used. Battles with big
bass that would take several sweat-soaked minutes elsewhere are over
in a few short seconds in Mexico. This ability to land big fish
quickly is critical in heavy cover. However, Mexican anglers are so
skilled at fighting fish rapidly this way that they do the same
thing (land giant bass with little or no drag in seconds) even in
more open water.
"The key is to know when the big bass wants to jump, and to use
the downward rod angle to prevent a jump. All the while, you never
stop moving the fish toward you, not letting it move where it wants
to, except toward you" says Carlos Gloria.
"Bass don't normally go around jumping out of the water. There is
only one reason they ever do - because they are so good at unhooking
themselves as they jump. If you can prevent them from jumping, they
cannot get off the hook, only when they jump."
Mexican anglers tend to use some of the mightiest hooksets you'll
ever see. "This is necessary to instantly move bass up and out of
deep cover immediately upon the hookset. Since braid does not
stretch, an inch of rod tip movement equals an inch you're moving
the bass. So you are not only setting the hook but extracting the
bass from where it's holed up in heavy cover at the same time in one
single rod movement. If you do not set the hook very hard, there
will always be some little bit of line available that the bass can
use to run under cover. So any kind of half-hearted hookset gives a
fish the opportunity to gain freedom in heavy cover," says Carlos
Gloria.
The drag is kept so tight that it will rarely slip when you hook
an "ordinary" small to medium size fish, Instead the powerful
hookset moves ordinary fish several feet up out of cover. "Big bass
are not nearly so easy," laughs Carlos. "When you set on a big bass,
you will hear a "Zzzzvvvttt" sound of the braid on your reel
begrudgingly give a couple feet of drag. When I hear that sound, I
know this fish is one too big to budge it on the hookset. Big fish
cannot be moved, even with all that hookset force, and the tight
drag slips for a split second as you lean into the hookset,"
explains Carlos Gloria.
"With the drag set tight, and a big fish that can't be budged
even by your hardest hookset, something's got to give - and you hope
it's not your hook, but that may be the weakest component in your
tackle set-up" winces Carlos. "You'll find out right there and then
if your hook choice is any good. If it's not, it will come back bent
open and the big bass will get away. A bent hook, whether it's bent
by a bass or by pulling out a snag should no longer be used. It's
seriously weakened. You can't bend it back in shape and expect it
will work. The damage is done. And the fact that a hook even bent in
the first place, that's really a message telling you to get rid of
that brand or model of hook entirely, and switch to a better,
stronger brand or model of hook."
A Lesson in Locating Shallow Water Bass
Some say the problem in locating shallow water bass
in Mexico's lakes is that there's literally too much good-looking
shallow cover where bass can hide. So there's just too much heavy
cover that looks too good, and it can confound and confuse an angler
as to exactly where to find the fish.
It makes things a whole lot simpler, and it puts the
odds in your favor, if you summarily dismiss and never even attempt
to fish 90% of the good-looking heavy cover you find in Mexico (or
anywhere else for that matter).
Instead, only focus on finding and fishing the 10%
or less of heavy cover that runs along original waterways - the
original main rivers, its side stream tributaries, creeks, original
flood washes, original smaller lakes/ponds (either natural or
man-made) or whatever other forms of water or watershed drainage
veins of any kind that may have existed on the land before the lake
was impounded. If you take this approach and mindset, you will be
fishing exclusively the original watershed system that still remains
intact underwater. These now-hidden original "waters of life" rank
among the most productive fish-holding locations even after the
damming and filling of any impoundment in Mexico (or anywhere else
for that matter).
Many good Mexican anglers (or anglers elsewhere)
partly do this, but are not completely aware that they're doing it.
For instance, when I visit and fish with different friends in Mexico
(or elsewhere), they'll proudly take me to enjoy many of their very
best spots with them during the day. Almost always I anticipate that
they will mention to me at some point at each good spot that,
"There's a stream bed that goes through there," or "The water will
drop off suddenly soon, because a small pond used to exist right
here," or "Our boat is over a little deeper channel here and the
trees we're flipping to are up on its former bank, now ten feet
underwater," and other comments that connote their "good spots"
invariably tend to be associated with or in proximity to the
original waters that existed prior to the impoundment.
Most anglers in Mexico (or anywhere else for that
matter) tend to know some of these "good spots" associated with the
flooded land's original water features. What most do not know,
though, is an overall plan and system to find and manage fishing the
"rivers under the lakes" as I call it, including the original ponds
and small lakes too, that are now under the impoundment.
Make it your plan, make it your system of fishing,
and you'll never look at an impoundment as if it was a lake again.
It's a flooded river system and you should fish it that way. You
won't be sorry and you won't really care to try the other 90% of the
"water-less" impoundment.

An original stream bed runs directly below where pro
Dago Luna stands here. Bass like this 7 pounder retain a natural
affinity for cover bordering these natural waterways lying hidden
beneath the impoundment.

Fish in shallow heavy cover tend to stay holed up
deep in the direct center of trees. Your chances of catching fish
tend to get lower the further away your cast or lure gets from the
center of individual trees. It's as simple as that. You need to flip
your lure into the very center of trees, near the trunk where the
fish tend to stay most of the time. It's a difficult task, but your
lure needs to land far inside the tangle of outstretched smaller
limbs, and hit bottom near the thickest main tree trunk.
If you can only see the emergent upper crown or ring
of branches that constitute the tree top but you can't see the
submerged main trunk - then aim to land perfectly dead center as if
there was an imaginary bullseye you are aiming at in the exact
middle of the emergent circle of outstretched tree limbs.

The limbs and branches of a mesquite tree tend to extend upward
and radiate outward from the center on a 30 degree angle as shown
above. Together, they form an ice cream cone-like 3D shape with an
open, empty space in the middle of the cone where the ice cream
would go, and that's right where to cast. Where the branches emerge
from the surface, they form a circle, with each branch positioned on
the outer perimeter of the circular area. Bass tend to lie near the
bottom inside the open space in the middle of the cone. That's the
sweet spot that your Texas rig needs to go into (the open middle
area of the cone). That's where good fish will tend to be, hunkered
down, usually on or near the bottom in the middle of the cone. The
open inner cone that holds fish is approximately as wide as a
mesquite tree is tall. So a flooded tree that's five feet tall has a
cone area inside that's about 5 feet wide. A tree that's 20 feet
tall may have an open inner cone area that's 20 feet wide inside.
That's where your lure needs to go, in the middle of the inner,
empty cone, which is where bass tend to hole up.

Thick bands of impenetrable shallow cover such as
that shown above, behind Pedro Carrasco, make it impossible for bass
anglers to ever fish the actual terra firma shoreline located many
hundred of yards behind this thick band of trees. Instead, Mexican
anglers probe the outer tree lines. The reason why the
sharply-defined tree line behind Pedro may have originally formed,
before the lake was impounded, is there may be an abrupt, sheer,
rocky, soil-less, dry ridge that suddenly dropped off and resulted
in a tree line, or else there may have been an original waterway and
that tree line grew along its original banks. In both cases, there
will tend to be a drop-off underwater, say 20 feet of water exactly
where the tree line ends, and the trees themselves may be in say 10
feet of water. That's a real good place to catch fish like this one
Pedro has!

Hola amigos from bass pro
Pedro Carrasco of Monterrey.
A Lesson in Offshore Structure and Deep Cover
Mexican anglers fish lots of offshore structure. Main lake
points, humps, underwater islands, channel ledges and all manner of
offshore hot spots are fished daily by Mexican anglers. On a typical
day, fishing starts in the morning in shallow brush, flipping Texas
rigs or tossing spinnerbaits, for example. If the shallow bite shuts
down or is not working, Mexican anglers shift focus to offshore
hotspots. The same heavy rods, 50-65 lb braid and same Texas rigs
are used offshore, say in 10 to 30 feet of water.
Even offshore structure in Mexico has heavy cover (mainly
mesquite trees) on it. And the chances of hitting a giant bass are
equally as good offshore as in shallow cover. So the use of heavy
tackle and snag-resistant Texas rigs makes as much sense in deep
water as in shallow.
For these reasons, Mexican anglers use the same heavy tackle,
50-65 lb braid, tight drags and Texas rigs offshore too.

Eliud Garcia (left), proprietor of BEST FOR BASS tackle shops and
Russ Bassdozer fishing deep cover offshore. On the surface, offshore
fishing may look like snag-free open water, but it's not. There is
almost as much heavy tree and brush cover offshore as in shallow
water. It's just not visible to the eye. Big fish and heavy cover
make stout tackle and Texas rigs the most popular offshore option,
same as in shallow cover.

Tree lines like this are obvious when they emerge in shallow
water as shown here being fished by pros Jorge Bruster (left) and
Pedro Carrasco. What's not so obvious is that these same kinds of
tree lines exist offshore submerged under 10-30 feet of water behind
Pedro and Jorge.

Pedro Carrasco, a top tournament angler, bested this bass
(approx. 7 lbs.) while fishing offshore structure with a light
weight Texas rigged lizard and 50-65 lb braid. The structure was a
very long, underwater main lake point, about 8-12 feet on top and
dropping off to 25 feet deep on the original river channel side,
thick with gnarly brush and trees.

Jorge Bruster, one of Mexico's top pros, landed this bass
(approx. 9 lbs.) with 50-65 lb braid and a light weight Texas-rigged
lizard. The fight lasted only seconds. Mexican anglers have
perfected a unique fighting technique whereby they adroitly use
their rods instead of line drag to expertly land big fish in almost
no time, without losing them. This bass hit in 12-20 feet of water
far offshore on a wide flat peninsula that protruded way out into
the main lake. Most every offshore spot has treacherous underwater
trees and brush that give big bass chances to foul your line and get
away.

Another nice offshore bass (approx. 6 lbs.) is released by
Ricardo. He's a very good team tournament angler and proud to be a
member of Mexico's original bass club, formed about 25 years ago.
This bass hit a bullet-weighted Texas-rigged 5" Senko (9-series) in
color #913 (green pumpkin with luminous chartreuse tip). Again, a
very long main lake point with plenty of tree and brush cover in
12-25 feet of water was the trophy bass location.
Plásticos Fantásticos
Gim'me Five! Family members Rodolfo, Jose, Eliud
and Pepe Garcia are avid bass fanatics. With store manager Arturo,
the Garcia family proudly operates two BEST FOR BASS pro tackle
shops in Monterrey, Mexico.
BEST FOR BASS informs us that these are
the five top-selling and most productive Yamamoto soft baits in
Mexico, shown from left to right:
- Yamamoto's 8" Big Grub
(10-series) in color #066 black chartreuse core-shot
- Yamamoto's 7" Lizard
(13-series) in color #919 green pumpkin lemon laminate
- Yamamoto's 5" Senko
(9-series) in color #901 watermelon cream laminate
- Yamamoto's 5" Senko
(9-series) in color #906 watermelon lemon laminate
- Yamamoto's 7" Lizard
(13-series) in color #901 watermelon cream laminate

Two Colors are Better Than One. That doesn't mean
one color won't work. Classic monotone colors like green pumpkin
(297) or watermelon red pepper (208) are top producers that will
catch fish all day every day.
However, the water color in many of Mexico's lakes often runs a
pale tea brown or else a pale pea green, and can range from lighter
to darker brown or green in different areas of the same lake. In
fact, brownish and greenish water can often be found at different
areas on the same lake. Sections of very dark and quite clear water
also exist on every lake, but to a lesser degree. The predominant
water color fished most often in Mexico is stained green and stained
brown water, in varying degrees.
These kinds of water colors, plus the fact that heavy cover often
blocks a fish from fully seeing a bait, these sight-diminishing
factors combine to raise the odds that you'll get more hits quicker
with soft baits that embody marked visual contrast between two
colors on the same bait.
Any two colors may do the job in any combination or pattern.- and
it is not so much the colors or a natural baitfish blend, but the
contrast between the colors that clicks with fish. It could be a
laminate where the bottom is one color, the top another color. It
could be where the body is one color and the tail tip is another
color.

Silverio Machuca (left) and Carlos Gloria are two of the premier
tournament pros and the top fishing guides in Mexico. Bass (approx.
6-7 lbs.) hit a highly-contrasting color Texas-rigged Senko cast
down the middle of an original small stream bed (only a few feet
wide) that meandered between heavy mesquite tree cover in 3-4 feet
of water. It does not matter much (within reason) what the two
colors are; what matters more is that they contrast.
Shown below, the rainbow trout color #908 (top) is a secret "big
bass" color of Mexico's pros in the know. There are little or no
rainbow trout in Mexico's bass lakes, but the marked visual contrast
of green and bubblegum clicks with fish, often big ones. Shown in
the middle is the "luminous" as it's known in Mexico. Color #913's
chartreuse tail tip is luminous, like a little beacon beckoning
behemoth bass to belt it. Shown at bottom is color #927. It combines
two of Yamamoto's top ten colors - #157 smoke pepper with purple
flake back and #031white pearl blue with silver belly - to make
color #927 a worldwide producer of large numbers (quantity) and
large sizes (quality) of bass.

Fifty Ways to Rig a Senko. The 5" Senko (9-series)
is regarded by many worldwide as the best bass bait ever made. Many
Mexican anglers may be inclined to agree with that, and they rig the
Senko many ways, such as:
- Weightless. What can be
said except weightless is what made the Senko so famous, and
always a good way to rig one.
- Gary's New Jig. Shown
top left. A new jig style designed to Texas-rig soft plastics.
- Carolina Rig. Mojo
in-line Carolina sinkers (shown top right) are favored in Mexico
for Carolina-rigging on deeper offshore structure. These have a
line hole bored directly through the sinker from end to end. The
thinner Mojo shape comes through heavy cover better than other
bulkier Carolina sinker shapes. Mexican anglers may Carolina rig
on deeper offshore structure with as little as 3/16 and up to
one ounce sinkers, depending on the fishing spot. Mexican
anglers who Carolina rig a lot may carry an additional rod - an
extra heavy and longer 7'6" model primarily for Carolina
rigging. This is a longer and heavier rod than used for Texas
rigs.
- Screw-In Sinker. Shown
bottom left. Sizes from 1/4 to 1/2 oz are used to keep a sinker
and Senko together as one unit for flipping into heavy cover.
Lighter 1/32, 1/16 and other lighter sizes tend to be used as
casting aids. With a weightless Senko, especially on windy days,
a very light screw-in sinker helps casting accuracy and distance
while reducing spool snarls. Secondly, a small screw-in sinker
helps prevent heavy cover from pulling the head of a weightless
Senko down off the hook.
- Bullet Sinker. Shown
bottom right. The mainstay of anglers in Mexico. There are ways
to peg a bullet sinker in place, however Mexican anglers tend to
let a bullet sinker slide unpegged on the line. This lets a soft
bait express a little more freedom of movement and independent
action. Mexican fisherman constantly assess how much weight or
how heavy a sinker they have on the line. They'll vary the
sinker weight throughout the day until they hit the sinker size
that's just right to trigger more bites quicker. This
attentiveness to sinker weight as a strike-inducing variable
applies to Texas rigs in shallow cover and also offshore
structure. A switch in sinker weight can make a difference in
how many hits - and a difference in sinker weight will affect
how many snags happen. So it is wise to constantly calibrate the
correct sinker weight to use to maximize hits and minimize
snags. Usually, a heavy sinker will snag more. Some days it may
be problematic. Other days, not. If you sense you are snagging
too much, lighten the weight. Every day is different.
Okay, so maybe there aren't fifty ways to rig a Senko, but
Mexican anglers do possess knowledge of many rigging variables, big
and small, that all add up to their success with Texas rigs and soft
plastics.
And although we used the Senko as our example in order to talk
about the rigs above, keep in mind that most any other soft bait
(Yamamoto Lizards, Kreatures, Yamamoto's Big Grub, etc.) can all be
rigged in the ways described above.

3/16, 1/4, 5/16 oz sizes
with 5/0 hooks.
Swimming Senko and Gary's new Jig. The 5" Swimming
Senko (shown in laminate color #912 green pumpkin/watermelon) was
new last year, and immediately proved successful in Mexico. This
year, Gary's Jig is new. For Texas-rigging soft baits like the
Swimming Senko, Gary's Jig proved exceptionally snagless during its
debut this year. Gary's Jig fished through Mexico's heavy cover
proved to be about as snagless as the traditional Texas bullet
sinker rig. The Swimming Senko has a tail like a swimbait so that it
can be swam along through shallow cover on Gary's Jig - or on a
traditional Texas sinker rig. It is not designed to work weightless
like the original Senko. Instead, the Swimming Senko is designed to
swim it through heavy cover. It performs especially well when fish
are actively roaming the shallows early each morning, when it's
overcast or windy. In fact, it's common to run out of Swimming
Senkos first some days, and then spend the rest of the day mainly
fishing with 5" Senkos and 7" lizards.

You Gotta Love the Lizard. Dr. Rogelio Villarreal
of Monterrey with his lifetime personal best. Rogelio landed this
behemoth on a lizard. Lizards are a staple of Mexican bass fishing.
Lizards are steady producers of monstrous bass. Either on a Texas
rig or Carolina rig, the wider, flattened body of a lizard and the
protruding side legs provide a little better snag-deflection,
ushering the hookpoint away from snags before they happen. In
comparison, a thinner, round bait like a skinny worm puts the hook
point into much closer proximity to snags. That little extra bit of
snag protection given by a lizard is what makes it a winner.

"Shakey" Carolina rig
lizard. 3/4 oz Mojo sinker. Rattle strap. 7'6" Extra Heavy Rod.

L-i-z-a-r-d spelled success
with this mammoth monster.
Big Twin Tail is Big Surprise
(and Long Overdue)! This trip (in 2008) was the
first time that pro and fishing guide Carlos Gloria had ever tried
Yamamoto's 17-series double tail on a Texas rig - and it instantly
proved productive! Using Gary's new jig, Carlos hit several nice
bass right away on the Double Tail Grub, including a massive
eight-pounder that hit it within the first few casts. For the next
two days, Yamamoto's big twin-tail grub generated a noticeable
number of hits and fish. "Best of all, the grub's bulky size makes
it selective for big bass," says Carlos.

Yamamoto's 7" Big Double Tail Grub (17-series) is shown above in
color #520 (black body blue tail) and #521 (black body with red
tail). Yamamoto's 8" Big Single Tail Grub (10-series) in color #066
(black body with chartreuse tail) is also shown for size comparison
purposes. Both the double tail and single tail are big, beefy grubs.
Both were designed around the same time (mid-1990's) by Gary
Yamamoto in Mexico for Mexican bass fishing. The big single tail
went on to become one of Mexico's most famous big bass baits.
Meanwhile, the big double tail fell into relative obscurity - until
now.
You can bet that Carlos Gloria, his fishing partner Dago Luna and
I will be Texas-rigging the unsung 17-series double tail in Mexico
from now on. You should use it too. Big bass will thank you for it.
It just may become the new "secret" Yamamoto bait of Mexico - twelve
years after Gary designed it for that purpose!

Gary and Beverly Yamamoto (shown here on Baccarac) are "veterans"
of many trips to Mexico. In Gary's case, he's made more than fifty
trips spanning two decades. Yamamoto originally designed the world
famous 5" Senko during fishing trips to Mexico in the early 1990's.
During that same time period, Yamamoto also designed, the 17-series
Double Tail Grub and the 8" Single Tail Big Grub in Mexico for
Mexican bass fishing.
Do You Want to Super-Size That Senko? Another
large size GYB bait designed by Gary in Mexico in the mid-1990's for
Mexican fishing is the super-sized 7" Senko (9X-series). I brought a
big bundle of them to Mexico on my recent trip. The 9X is GYB's
biggest Senko by far. It's 7" long, has quite a girth and weighs a
lot even without any sinker. Suffice it to say, a lot of soft
plastic goes into a 9X Senko.
For Mexican anglers, the 9X Senko is not commonly used (and may
not even be sold) in Mexico tackle shops today. But I knew it needed
to be tried there now. So I gave a small handful of big 9X Senkos to
every Mexican angler I fished with this time. I really hoped that
they would try them. Only Dago Luna did. That's good for Dago
because he landed a 7-pounder and many other fine bass with the
super-sized 9X Senkos Texas-rigged on Gary's new jig. "The big 9X
Senko (on Gary's Jig) seemed to get more hits than any other soft
baits I tried that day," says Dago happily.

Dago Luna, a leading tourney pro, landed many bass like this on
7" Senkos (9X-series) Texas-rigged on Gary Yamamoto's new jig. Dago
flipped Gary's Jig with the 9X Senko dead-center into the crowns of
shallow flooded mesquite trees.
Another angler who has discovered the big 7" 9X Senko is Rogelio
Villarreal. "One bait that always produces monster bass is the big
7" Senko wacky-rigged. Big bass love this presentation. You need to
use a rubber O-ring or a rubber band in the middle of the Senko, so
the bait lasts a longer time. If you place the hook directly in the
Senko, they'll tear off the hook too quickly. Not only doe this
cause a bad backlash if the big Senko flies off during a cast, but
you will run out of them too quickly, and that's the most terrible
thing that can happen to you in Mexico. So use an O-ring, a rubber
band or another way to help wacky-rig the big Senko so it lasts,"
explains Rogelio.
In a pinch, however, the 7" Senko can be wacky-rigged by
double-hooking it as shown below. Exposing the point as shown is
recommended for better hook-ups.

La
Kreatura in Mexico. No, we are not talking of the
mysterious chupa cabre here, but something almost as surreal. Hard
to believe, but the Yamamoto Kreature is considered a down-sized or
finesse bait in Mexico. It's true the Kreature is a bulky, compact
flipping bait, not quite as big as other soft plastics used in
Mexico. However to hear it called a "finesse" bait fished on 50-65
lb braid is unusual yet true. That's the role of the Yamamoto
Kreature in Mexico. I usually prefer to Texas-rig the Kreature with
skirt-to-front (like a Yamamoto Hula Grub). In this way, the
Kreature displaces more water, creates more turbulence and causes a
commotion like some kind of creature in the water.

BEST FOR BASS tackle shop's #1 selling color and the leading
"finesse" bait in Mexico is the black chartreuse color #522 Yamamoto
Kreature. Shown Texas-rigged with blue plastic bead. When the sinker
hits the bead, it makes a click that may entice fish.
Other Undiscovered Yamamoto Models for Mexico.
There are several other Yamamoto soft plastics that have worked fine
for me in Mexico too, such as the hefty 6-1/2" Kut Tail Worm
(7X-series). I've had good results with Yamamoto's 5" Swimbait
(SB5-series) there too. Most anglers in Mexico, however, have not
tried Yamamoto Kut Tails or Yamamoto Swimbaits yet.
Also, we had good action with the 17-series Big Double Tail Grub
on our most recent trip, but other anglers do not try them in
Mexico. Same thing with the huge 7" 9X Senko. Good results on this
last trip, but the 9X Senko may not even be sold in Mexico at this
time.
Therefore the 5" Senko, Swimming Senko, Big Single Tail Grub,
Lizard and Kreature constitute the main Yamamoto fare used in Mexico
at the current time.
Hopefully, Mexican anglers will soon enjoy discovering other
Yamamoto baits like the Big Double Tail Grub recently used by Carlos
Gloria, the 9X Senko used by Dago Luna and Rogelio Villarreal, plus
the 7X Kut Tail Worm and Yamamoto Swimbait will certainly work as
well for others as they have for me.
Super Line Hooks or Bust
Mexico features bigger
fish in badder cover caught on heavier rods and lines with tighter
drags than most anywhere else on the planet. Because of these rare
and extreme fishing conditions, hooks have to be in line with the
rest of the program. Only specially-designated Superline hooks will
do. Most every hook manufacturer has these Superline hook models.
Overall, the 5/0 hook is the single best size for most soft plastics
used in Mexico. Keep in mind that different brands and models of 5/0
hooks vary slightly in size. 4/0 is about as small as practical, and
only useful for relatively small baits like the Yamamoto Kreature
for example. 6/0 may
be more roomy with relatively bigger, beefier plastics like the
Yamamoto 8"
Big Single Tail Grub and the 7" 9X Senko. But overall, 5/0 is my
mainstay hook size for soft baits in Mexico.

Big Spinnerbait Bass
Texas-rigged soft plastics are by far the most popular lures in
Mexico. Spinnerbaits are second most popular.
The reason why spinnerbaits are so popular in Mexico is that
spinnerbaits come through heavy cover better than most other lures
(except the Texas rig).
The wire arm safely guards a spinnerbait's hook from snagging in
heavy cover. That makes the spinnerbait a top lure in Mexico.
Following are photos of trophy bass all caught on spinnerbaits in
October 2007 at Lake Baccarac by a small group of friends. Please
enjoy their spinnerbait bass photos first. After that, we'll tell
you tips how you can increase your chances to land trophies like
these on spinnerbaits in Mexico.

Dr. Rogelio Villarreal (above) of Monterrey and friends (below)
landed these trophies - all on spinnerbaits - during their trip to
Lake Baccarac in October 2007.






Tips for Mexican Spinnerbait Adventures
Many anglers who hope to tangle with Mexico's trophy bass can put
the odds a little more in their favor by throwing the biggest
spinnerbaits possible - full one ounce - and under the right
conditions, even monster 1-1/2 oz spinnerbaits!
Normally, 1/2 and 3/4 ounce spinnerbaits are the sizes most used
in Mexico. Full one ounce spinnerbaits are not as popular. However,
the bigger presence of a one ounce spinnerbait tends to attract
bigger bass and can support bigger blades. The odds are you will
catch fewer but larger bass on larger spinnerbaits. So anglers who
want to be selective for trophy bass should consider using bigger
spinnerbaits (up to one full ounce) more often, ideally with bigger
blades to catch bigger bass than 1/2 or 3/4 oz models.
Double Willow blades are by far the most common spinnerbait blade
configuration on the planet, and double willows (one nickel, one
gold) are favored in Mexico also.
One problem (or opportunity depending how you look at it) in
terms of Mexican fishing is that most spinnerbaits on the market
don't have any bigger than size #5 Willow blades. On most
spinnerbaits, the front Willow tends to be a size smaller than #5.
The back Willow may be a #5 at most. These size blades will catch
many bass in Mexico (including big bass).
However, using bigger than #5 blades increases your odds for big
bass.
"One of the most important tips for
trophy bass is to use bigger blades," says Mexican pro and fishing
guide, Carlos Gloria. "Blades bigger than #5 are more selective.
Bigger blades will catch fewer yet bigger bass. Smaller blades will
catch more numbers of smaller bass."

Bass with a big tilapia.
"It is amazing the size of the prey they can eat. So your chances
are better when you use bigger baits for bigger bass," says master
angler Rogelio Villarreal.
Willow blades do come in sizes #5-1/2, #6, #7 and #8 is the
biggest Willow blade on the planet. These size blades are rarely
seen on spinnerbaits for bass, but if you want the biggest bass that
Mexico has to offer you, then offer them these bigger blades, on one
ounce spinnerbaits - and make sure you use no less than 6/0 long
shank hooks to ensure your odds of hooking them solidly.
In terms of blade colors, you have four basic options: 1) front
and back nickel, 2) front and back gold, 3) front nickel, back gold
and 4) front gold back nickel blades. Many days, all four of these
blade configurations will work. Some days, you may notice or suspect
that one of the four set-ups seems to work better. So be attentive,
try several of these configurations every trip, and see if it
matters. Keep in mind, many days it may not matter much.
Painted blades also have their moments, although most anglers do
not throw painted blades much. Fishing is all about bettering the
odds, and trying painted blades for a few minutes each trip will
increase your chances, through empirical trial and experimentation,
of showing bass something they may want to bite. One blade painted
white and one painted chartreuse, for example- or two blades painted
white - are both reliable configurations always worth trying for a
few casts every day. If you happen to get a bite, it's then worth
trying for a few casts more. If you get a second bite, you're onto
some good fishing here. It's as simple as that.
In terms of spinnerbait skirts, the most popular colors are
chartreuse/white, all white and all chartreuse. Actually,
spinnerbaits don't come in many other colors except those three.
Ninety percent of the spinnerbaits available on the planet are
chartreuse/white, chartreuse or white. Those three colors do work,
but if you can get spinnerbaits in other colors, they will also work
nicely. Green pumpkin, watermelon candy, watermelon/white, june bug,
black blue, black red, watermelon red, bubblegum, fire tiger and
many other spinnerbait colors are hard to find - but increase the
odds that you'll show fish something they may want to hit. Fish can
be selective like that.
The
spinnerbaits shown below have heavy duty closed wrapped loop eyes on
.040 diameter wire arms. This provides better odds that
you will land any lunker largemouth that latch onto one of these
spinnerbaits. Because the wire loop is wrapped closed, your line
can't slide up the arm and force the swivel end loop open as can
happen with an unwrapped open R-Bend arm. The closed wrapped eye
does not fatigue and snap as easily as an open R-bend wire. In
Mexico, the odds are lower you'll land lunker bass on unwrapped open
R-bend eyes. And the odds are lower that you will land big bass on
arms less than .040 diameter wire. Odds are higher you'll land more
bass on closed wrap loop eyes of at least .040 wire diameter. So
play the odds. You'll come out ahead in the long run, with more big
bass to show for it.

1 oz Spinnerbait. #5-1/2
front blade. #6 back blade.

1 oz Spinnerbait. #5-1/2
front blade. #6 back blade.

1 oz Spinnerbait. Dual
interlaced front blades. #7 or #8 back blade.
Don't Forget the Heat Shrinkable Tubing Too
Thin wall heat shrink tubing is a nice add-on to prevent the
fishing line from fouling in the wire wraps during a cast. It's
vexing to make a cast and have the line foul in the wire wraps.
You'll spend annoying little moments stopping in between casts to
unwrap the line out of the wire loop. Worse yet, a lunker bass can
snap your line more easily when the line's fouled in the exposed
wrapped wire eye. Covering the wrapped wire in heat shrinkable
tubing ends that potential problem. The heat shrink tubing can help
to keep the line positioned properly, prevent fouling, and it only
takes a few seconds to add it onto the eye.

It's also recommended to use the heat shrink tubing
on open R-Bend wires. This will help keep the knot placed on the
R-Bend, and reduces the chances that the knot will slide out of
place and up the wire arm when fighting a fish.
Spinnerbaits All Day Every Day
Spinnerbaits are one of the most popular lures in Mexico, second
only to Texas-rigged soft plastics.
Early morning is the best time of day to fish shallow heavy cover
with spinnerbaits. Bass tend to be up in shallow cover during the
morning hours, actively looking for food. So morning is the best
time to use the big one ounce spinnerbaits with big blades. This is
a good time to use some of the bolder, brighter color skirts too.
Fish will tend to be aggressive and active in the morning in shallow
cover. So the bigger, bolder spinnerbaits have more appeal at this
time. Due to their size, presence and coloration, they can be
glimpsed and sensed from further distances through the
sight-blocking, shallow heavy cover.

One ounce spinnerbaits cast farther and more accurately than
lighter spinnerbaits - and long, accurate casts are keys to
spinnerbaiting thick shallow cover. The X's above mark small open
pockets tight against the bank. These kinds of sweet spots on the
bank tend to hold good bass. The problem is, heavy cover tends to be
so thick, that it is too time-consuming and therefore
counterproductive or even impossible to move a boat close-in along
the bank. Usually, a boat can only maneuver effectively with the
trolling motor down when kept in the more navigable water
representing the outer tree line, which puts you a far cast off the
bank. So one ounce spinnerbaits can hit sweet spots on the bank when
cast from the outer perimeter of the tree line.

A boat can be impossible to operate inside the heavy tree line or
up against the bank, but a one ounce spinnerbait can hit tight spots
accurately from a long distance where the boat can't go.
In the section above, we emphasized one ounce spinnerbaits in
order to up your odds for bigger bass. In addition, 1/2 and 3/4 oz
spinnerbaits do play a part, and we will tell you how now.
As the morning wears on, say by nine or ten o'clock, the shallow,
active spinnerbait bite may tend to shut down. Fish may still be in
the shallows, but may start to hole up in the center of flooded
mesquite trees, not willing to come out of the cover to chase
spinnerbaits any more. So by mid to late morning, especially on
clear or bright, sunny wind-free days, Texas-rigged soft plastics
flipped directly into the heart of heavy cover may tend to be the
better choice when bass stop roaming the shallows and start to hole
up in heavy cover by mid to late morning.
By noon or early afternoon, activity may diminish or be finished
in the shallows by this time on some days. However, fish in deeper
water may still remain active. So odds to find active fish may be
better in deeper water after noon, say 10 to 20 feet deep. This is a
good situation to try slow-rolling spinnerbaits along the bottom.
Deep bass tend to relate directly to the bottom much of the time.
Therefore, slow-rolling a spinnerbait must stay close to bottom. In
this situation, small-to-average size blades may work better because
the reduced blade size helps a spinnerbait to better hug the bottom.
Keep in mind, there are many trees and brush on bottom in deep water
too. That's the strike zone. Also, when we say reduced blade
size, this may mean a #5 Willow back blade plus some smaller size
front blade, for example.
Chances for slow-rolling trophy bass are good on offshore
structure in Mexico. Therefore, the stronger, more reliable .040
twisted eye wire arm is still a good choice for slow-rolling in deep
water.
Slow-rolling involves a lot of pauses during the retrieve to let
the lure periodically settle back to the bottom. You will reduce
your chances for a hit if you let the spinnerbait lift too high
above bottom. So always throw in a few pauses to let the spinnerbait
settle back to bottom, then resume reeling. A lot of hits may come
when you pause reeling as the spinnerbait settles.
When the spinnerbait is felt bumping brush or trees, then rip or
lift the rod high and/or reel quicker until the spinnerbait clears
the snaggy spot. As soon as the snag is no longer felt, then pause
to let the spinnerbait settle back to bottom. You'll receive many
hits right at that moment.
Below are two good blade configurations to slow-roll close to
bottom in deeper water:

3/4
oz. #3 front blade. #5 back. Ideal to slow-roll deep water.

1/2 oz. Strong .040 wire
arm. Good deal for slow-rolling deep.
As the day progresses, if it becomes overcast or if wind creates
a chop on the water, then there's a good chance that shallow bass
may again become active and start roaming the shallow shoreline
flats again under overcast or windy conditions. If that's the case,
the same larger spinnerbaits as used in the early morning may
produce in the shallows again.
On the other hand, if the afternoon remains sunny and relatively
windless, you may need to tone down the size, color and blades of
spinnerbaits used around the shallows or to try up high for bass
suspended in the crowns of flooded treetops. In Mexico, downsizing
means a 1/2 oz spinnerbait with more muted or subtle colors, more
natural or baitfish-like colors, plus smaller blades, giving an
overall smaller, compact, more natural appearance. You can think of
this as a finesse or more stealthy, subtle spinnerbait for high sun
and low wind situations, such as the following spinnerbait examples:

1/2 oz Spinnerbait. Neutral
coloration and "downsized" blades.

1/2 oz Spinnerbait. Natural shad coloration. "Hammered" blades flash
less.
The above two spinnerbaits are typical in weight (1/2 oz ) and
blades (size #5 and smaller) of many spinnerbaits on the market. In
Mexico, however, these "smaller" spinnerbaits can be considered
finesse lures for tough time periods during the day when the sun is
high, the wind calm, making a subtle, downsized presentation
necessary to fool fish that would shun bigger, bolder spinnerbaits
under those conditions.
In summary, spinnerbaits can - and should - be used all day every
day in Mexico. It's as easy as 1-2-3:
- Start shallow early in the morning with big, bold
spinnerbaits (which can produce all day under overcast or windy
conditions),
- Slow-roll deep water with bottom-hugging spinnerbaits after
the early shallow bite dies and
- Finesse fish out of the treetops under bright, calm
conditions with natural-looking, downsized spinnerbaits.
During the course of a fishing day, I may try 5 or 6 or 7
spinnerbaits, each with different features. There's really no
substitute for showing fish a diversity of lures. Some days it seems
they'll hit them all. Other days, they may show selectivity for one
over the others. You'll never know unless you try them!
In this article, I have only touched on the basics for
spinnerbait success. There are many skirt colors, many blade shapes
and colors that all will work. Bass will hit many more spinnerbait
colors and blade combos than most anglers will ever try. I hope you
may see now, if you simply tie one spinnerbait on your line and use
the same one all day long, you are not going to catch as many bass
as you can by showing them different spinnerbaits during the day.
Pro Carlos Gloria agrees. "Especially during a tournament, if
spinnerbaits are working, I may have 3 or 4 rods with different
spinnerbaits tied on them. I will pick up each rod and try each one
of those spinnerbaits one after another in each spot. By showing
fish several different spinnerbaits, I catch more bass quicker than
if I only used one spinnerbait."
Crankbaits and Lipless
Crankbaits and lipless are mucho popular all year round
everywhere in Mexico.
Mexico's pescadors use crankbaits of all kinds, including
shallow, medium and deep billed divers. And the lipless are an
everyday item. In parts of Mexico, the lipless is the third most
popular and productive bass lure. Texas rigs and spinnerbaits are
first and second, respectively. Lipless are third.
Using 50-65 lb braid, lipless are possible to work through
moderately brushy areas, basically ripping them over, through and
off every limb they encounter. It's hard and tiring work to fish
lipless this way, but your exertion can be rewarded handsomely some
days.

Ripping lipless in brush is
tough but rewarding work.

Top: Bigger lipless is
selective for big bass. Center: Super deep (14'-18') diver. Bottom:
Deep (8'-12') diver.
Crankbaits with big diving bills are not as easy to work through
brush, but buoyant, shallow-diving models can be worth the hassle to
bounce them through the mesquite tree tops at times.
One of the very best situations for diving bill crankbaits are
flooded roadbeds or flooded stream and creek beds that don't have a
whole lot of brush littered straight down the open middles of these
areas. Just match the diving depth of the crank to the approximate
depth of the road bed, creek or stream channel.

A flooded road bed obviously runs down the middle of
the above photo. This can often be a red hot situation for
deep-diving crankbaits. Pay particular attention to working both
sides of the road, close to the edges of cover, but casting down the
open middle areas can prove productive too.
"A little trick with crankbaits on road beds (or any
patch of open bottom) is to try one that is rated to dive deeper
than the actual water depth itself. Say there's 8 feet of water.
Well, I may try a crank rated to go 8'-12' feet deep using a
stop-and-go retrieve to let it hit bottom, then stop so it floats up
a little, then go so it hits bottom again. You can even use one
rated to dive 10 to 14 feet, and by holding the rod tip very high,
you can get it to almost skitter or slide its bill along the bottom
in a fish-attracting way," reveals Carlos Gloria.
Deep-diving crankbaits are also popular choices on
offshore structure. Cranks that dive to different depths such as
medium deep (6'-8') runners, deep (8'-12') divers and super deep
(14'-18') divers are deployed to match the approximate water depths
found at offshore locations.
Topwater Fishing Frenzy
Soft plastics, spinnerbaits, cranks and lipless work well all
year long across Mexico.
Topwater fishing is the one technique that's seasonal in some
parts of Mexico, meaning it is not as productive during the winter
months, but can be phenomenal in spring, summer and fall.
When the surface bite is on, sturdy topwater lures like Super
Spooks, Chug Bugs and buzzbaits are very popular and just so
exciting to use for Mexico's big bass!

Top: Chug Bug popper. 1/2 oz
buzzbait. Heavy .051 wire. Baby Bass Super Spook.
The criteria for topwater lure selection for Mexico is threefold:
- Not only must a good topwater lure attract fish with its
action
- It must be solidly-constructed with relatively large, sturdy
hooks so huge bass cannot tear it apart
- Plus it must be big enough and weigh enough to cast with
relatively heavier rods and lines
Based on these criteria, many of the topwater lures on the market
are not constructed well enough, have hooks too small or don't weigh
enough to be practical in Mexico's big bass fishing situations.
Rogelio Villarreal is not a fishing pro, but he is
an avid expert who fishes frequently during the year. He
concentrates all his efforts on fishing for trophy bass. The main
lake he fishes is Lake Baccarac.
"On Lake Baccarac, it is like a ritual that early in
the morning from first light until 8 or 9 o'clock, you use big
topwater baits in the shallows. On a recent trip, I had the
opportunity to try two new topwaters made in Japan - the hard
plastic Deps Buzzjet wakebait and the hollow rubber Deps Basirisky
frog - with excellent results mainly in the low light of early
morning and late afternoon. Other topwater baits that are my
favorites include the little bigger Rio Rico poppers and of course,
big Super Spooks," says Rogelio Villarreal.

L to R: Yellow Magic Magnum,
Chug Bug, Rio Rico are little bigger than usual poppers.

Rogelio Villarreal has done
well on new Deps Buzzjet, Basirisky frog and of course the Super
Spook.
Although Rogelio makes wise use of them, hollow
rubber frogs and soft plastic topwater toads do not seem so popular
yet among Mexican anglers in general.
"During the midday hours in between the morning and evening
topwater fishing frenzies, we use mainly soft plastic swimbaits at
Lake Baccarac with impressive captures," explains Rogelio.

Yamamoto 5" Swimbait (SB5
series) excels in Mexico, but isn't used in all regions yet.
Soft plastic swimbaits are more popular in some regions of Mexico
(Baccarac and El Salto for example), but are only just beginning to
try them in other regions of the country. This is similar in the
USA, where soft swimbaits have been more popular in some states and
regions, but not others.
Other lures like jigging spoons or hard plastic billed jerkbaits
are not so commonly used in Mexico.
And jigs of any kind, just are not big on the Mexican bass
fishing scene in most regions yet.
Flipping Jigs Come to Mexico in 2008
On this trip, I was delighted to make a brand new use for the
Yamamoto Kreature bait in Mexico - as a jig trailer on a 1/2 oz
flipping jig with a stout hook. Coupled with a Yamamoto Kreature
bait, it presents a bulky profile that's not been seen yet by most
Mexican bass. Best of all, it works!

Well-designed, streamlined
bullet-nosed flipping jigs await their turn in Mexico.
I had not tried flipping jigs here before, and in most regions,
Mexican anglers do not use them. So I never took any jigs to Mexico.
There are regions in the USA where anglers don't currently flip jigs
either. For instance, Florida. Jigs are rarely flipped in Florida
for the same reason cited in Mexico - because they say jigs snag too
much in heavy cover.
On this trip to Mexico, however, I had an unexpected stowaway -
one stout flipping jig. So I asked myself, "Why not?"
This flipping jig worked just fine. It did not seem to snag any
more than a Texas rig. If you think about it, the streamlined
bullet-shaped nose of a flipping jig is not that different from a
Texas rig bullet sinker shape.

A
flipping jig proved admirably snagless when cast deep into the heart
of heavy shallow cover.
Best of all, there were a few moments
when the flipping jig seemed to get more hits faster than the
esteemed Texas rig!
There is no doubt now that a well-constructed flipping jig is
about as snag-free, and holds promise as a new alternative to the
Texas rig in Mexico's heavy cover. Will flipping jigs produce more
or bigger bass than Texas rigs some days? That question remains to
be answered by the adventurous few who will be among the first to
embrace flipping jigs in Mexico.
Football Jigs Come to Mexico in 2008 Too

Trey Kistler of Kistler Rods
(left) and FLW pro Scott Martin in Mexico where Martin recently gave
a seminar on football jigs.
Since Scott Martin's recent clinic, football jig fever has hit
Mexico in a big way. Pro tackle shops like BEST FOR BASS have just
received the first shipments of football jigs, which are selling
like hot cakes (or should we say, hot tacos)? Many Mexican anglers,
inspired by Martin's seminar, plan to try football jig fishing as
soon as possible.
Now, football jigs have been used for decades in the western US
(Gary Yamamoto won the 1995 US Open using football jigs). They've
been favored forever for offshore structure fishing in Arkansas,
Missouri and thereabouts too.
However, football jigs can also be considered "new" in a way. Top
FLW and BASS pros only started to win major events on football jigs
within the past two seasons, and that has sparked new interest in
many regions where football jigs have not been used yet, including
Mexico.
My only caution to Mexican anglers who are eager to try them is
that many models of football jigs tend to have hooks not strong
enough to fish with heavy tackle and powerful braided line.
Point is, many football jig hooks are not strong enough to fish
that way. Football jig hooks are often designed for medium - not
heavy - tackle. Hooks used in many football jigs are not "superline"
strength. They'll bend. Fish will be lost, big ones.
Fortunately, one football jig that has a heavy flipping hook is
made by Gary Yamamoto.

Gary Yamamoto's Heavy Duty Football Jig Head.
There's no worry that heavy tackle, 50-65 lb braid or a huge bass
could ever straighten the hook in Yamamoto's football jig. Plus the
stiff wire guard offers serious snag protection. Yet the hook can be
set easily despite the wire guard, on the heavy tackle that Mexican
anglers use. Yamamoto's Weedless Football Jigs (44W-series) comes in
3/8, 1/2, 3/4 and 1 ounce sizes, all with super-stout, long shank
4/0 Gamakatsu hooks that won't bend.

Yamamoto's 11-series skirts and double tails can be mixed and
matched with football jig heads. 5" Pro Double Tail (16L-series)
shown on left and right. 6" Double Tail (12-series) shown center.
Deep Wood Goes Good with Arkey Jigs
Traditionally, football jigs have been at their best in deep,
rocky lakes and on offshore structure with very little or no cover
(brush, trees, etc.). Football jigs are originally designed for
rocks, gravel and hard, bare bottoms.
Due to heavy offshore cover in Mexico, football jigs may (or may
not) work so well in Mexico's tree and brush-infested offshore
areas. Nevertheless, Mexican anglers rightly plan to find out what
football jigs can do soon.
One other jig head style that is not in the fishing news
headlines lately but may be more beneficial to Mexican anglers is
the Arkey jig. The flat, wide shape of an Arkey jig has many of the
same merits as the flat wide football head, except the Arkey comes
through heavy cover and flooded trees far better than a football
jig.
Arkey style jigs were originally designed, as the name implies,
in Arkansas over 45 years back by inventor Bob Carnes. At that time,
many of the bass fishing impoundments there were newly-made. With so
much freshly-flooded standing timber, the Arkey jig was devised to
fish through the trees without snagging. So the Arkey jig is
something designed for fishing deep, flooded trees. For that reason,
Mexican anglers should certainly try it. Best of all, a good number
of Arkey jigs tend to be made with the heavy-duty hooks required in
Mexico.

Arkey jig heads are wide
like football jigs, tend to come through wood better and have heavy
duty hooks.

1/2 oz green pumpkin red
Arkey jig with green pumpkin red (color #318) Yamamoto Flappin' Hog
trailer.
That's all I have to say about jigs for now. Historically, they
haven't been used much in most parts of Mexico.
Contacts If You Go To Mexico
Eliud Garcia
BEST FOR BASS Pro Tackle Shops
Monterrey, Mexico
Phone 011-52-81-8370-0505
Email
bestforbass@sicsa-qc.com
Hector Aguilar
BIG BASS Lodge
Lake Guerrero, Mexico
Phone 011-52-81-8346-8066
In USA 1-800-531-7509
Email
jjaguilar@guerrerolake.com
Website
www.guerrerolake.com
Carlos Gloria
Fishing Guide and Top Bass Pro
Monterrey, Mexico
Phone 011-52-81-1157-6262
Email
crgloria@yahoo.com

Carlos Gloria hefts a
brace of bass.
Dago Luna
Bass Channel TV
Monterrey, Mexico
Email
lunadago@gmail.com
Website
www.basschannel.tv
Pedro Carrasco
Top Bass Pro
Monterrey, Mexico

Pedro Carrasco's
lifetime personal best released on February 23, 2008.
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