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Why Flipping a Lighter Weight Generates More Bites in Bass Fishing



Terry Bolton talks about why he often uses a 1/4-ounce weight instead of a 3/8-ounce bullet sinker when flipping around wood, docks, and sparse cover. Not only will it give the bait a more natural presentation but unique weights like the Jenko Creature Weight can actually give the bait a swimming action.

And with a 1/4-ounce weight, you as an angler have to slow down and fish a lot more methodically which can be ideal in high-pressure situations like spring cold fronts, angling pressure, spawn, clear water, post-frontal high pressure, and more.

Lots of good information and fish catches in this one.

Fishing Gear Used:

● Lure: http://wired2.fish/MBB
● Weight: http://wired2.fish/CreatWeight
● Rod: https://wired2.fish/JenkoHighRollerCastingRod
● Reel: https://wired2.fish/HyperMagSpeedSpoolCastingReel

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15 Comments

  1. Snap! Ive always used a 3/4 ounce weight for flipping and pitching. Now i know why i havent been catching much lately. Ill try using the lighter weights from now. I been flipping and pitching now for about a year and i love learning new techniques to improve my game. Thank you for being a great source of learning

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