THE LATEST NEWS
2014 Classic Flash Back
Tackle Tuesday

This weeks feature is the Strike King Denny Brauer baby structure jig with a Rage Craw trailer. I’ll throw this anywhere I would use a regular jig. My favorite feature is that it’s a compact bait but still has a really stout hook.
1. Application- this is a great bait for tough fishing conditions or when you’re fishing a lake with smaller size bass.
2. Modifications- it’s great right out of the package but you might trim the weed guard if you’re fishing around sparse cover.
3. Recommended Tackle-
Power Tackle PG144 7ft.
Seaguar Invizx 12-15lb.
Shimano Metanium.
Good Fishing! KC
Card joins FishSens Technology Pro Staff

FishSens Technology is pleased to announce that Bassmaster Elite Series angler Brandon Card has joined its pro staff. For the 2015 season, Card’s boat will be equipped with a SondeCAM from a new line of underwater cameras developed and manufactured the Ohio-based company.
“I’m really excited to be the only pro on the Elite Series that has this technology,” Card said. “To have this underwater camera that can plug directly into my Lowrance, that gives me one more step above the the rest of the field.”
FishSens Technology’s family of underwater cameras interface with fish finders to display live video on screen. The line includes the SondeCAM, the SondeCAM WQ and the SondeCAM mini — all built in the company’s state-of-the-art marine fabrication lab in Fairborn, Ohio. The cameras are available at www.fishsens.com.
“It’s great to have Brandon on board,” said Trevin Fondriest, SondeCAM product manager. “He’s a true professional who really understands how to read his electronics and can use the camera to its full potential.”
As a member of the Pro Staff, Card will also contribute informative articles on his bass fishing techniques, tips and tricks to FishSens Magazine online. He’ll join the FishSens team at their booth at the 2015 Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo from Feb. 20-22 at the TD Convention Center in Greenville, South Carolina. The Expo runs in conjunction with the Bassmaster Classic tournament on Lake Hartwell.
Bassmaster Elite Series Angler Brandon Card joins FishSens Technology Pro Staff
FishSens Technology is pleased to announce that Bassmaster Elite Series angler Brandon Card has joined its pro staff. For the 2015 season, Card’s boat will be equipped with a SondeCAM from a new line of underwater cameras developed and manufactured the Ohio-based company.
“I’m really excited to be the only pro on the Elite Series that has this technology,” Card said. “To have this underwater camera that can plug directly into my Lowrance, that gives me one more step above the the rest of the field.”
FishSens Technology’s family of underwater cameras interface with fish finders to display live video on screen. The line includes the SondeCAM, the SondeCAM WQ and the SondeCAM mini — all built in the company’s state-of-the-art marine fabrication lab in Fairborn, Ohio. The cameras are available at www.fishsens.com.
“It’s great to have Brandon on board,” said Trevin Fondriest, SondeCAM product manager. “He’s a true professional who really understands how to read his electronics and can use the camera to its full potential.”
As a member of the Pro Staff, Card will also contribute informative articles on his bass fishing techniques, tips and tricks to FishSens Magazine online. He’ll join the FishSens team at their booth at the 2015 Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo from Feb. 20-22 at the TD Convention Center in Greenville, South Carolina. The Expo runs in conjunction with the Bassmaster Classic tournament on Lake Hartwell.
Follow Brandon on his Facebook page.
.themify_builder .text-17489-0-0-1.module-text { }
Coachin’ Corner: Can your bait Disappear?

Coachin’ Corner: Can your bait Disappear?
.themify_builder .video-17483-0-0-1.module-video .video-content { }
.themify_builder .video-17483-0-0-1.module-video .video-title { }
.themify_builder .video-17483-0-0-1.module-video .video-title a { }
Powroznik buys $395 of Warmth at the Bassmaster Classic

The Bassmaster Classic has no entry fee, but Virginia pro Jacob Powroznik spent $395 to improve his chances at its $300,000 first place prize. No, “J-Proz” didn’t spend it on fishing tackle; he spent it trying to stay warm.
A nearly frozen wet precipitation was falling in the Bassmaster Classic boat yard as Powroznik unpacked from a shopping trip to a local outdoor retailer. His nearly four-hundred-dollar haul included a portable propane heater, wool neck gaiter, wool socks, three pairs of gloves, a pile of peel n’ stick body warmers, and six bottles of propane for assurance that he won’t run out.
“The heater buddy alone was $154, but I figure it’ll be well worth it, not just in the tournament, but out here working on tackle in the boat yard too,” said Powroznik.
If meteorologists are right, Powroznik is going to need all the propane he can get. This will likely be the coldest Bassmaster Classic in history. Forecasted sunrise temperatures for Day One of competition on Friday are for around 10 degrees, and the high temp on Friday is supposed to be well … freezing … 32 degrees.
While weather will be as much the headline as the fishing this week, Powroznik doesn’t seem fazed by it. “I duck hunt 60 days each winter around the Rappahannock River in Virginia, so I’m extremely used to cold weather,” said the burly 5’ 10”, 279-pound, Bassmaster Rookie of the Year. “The key is to keep your hands warm, and your neck warm, and that neck gaiter is a really key deal,” he added.
“I think the thing that worries me most about this Classic is not the weather, but instead, somebody randomly finding the mother load school of potentially winning fish,” said Powroznik, citing that on reservoirs like Hartwell, where blue back herring are the predominant baitfish, that unpredictable feeding and schooling occurs.
As far as lures he thinks will dominate this cold weather derby, the man who is built like a fullback or pulling guard is thinking football. “I’m not saying it’s going to be the winning lure, but if I had to pick three or four lures that nearly everybody in this tournament will have tied on, I’d say a football jig, a football jig, a football jig, and a football jig,” joked Powroznik, who actually had one Quantum EXO reel rigged with a vertical jigging spoon for Hartwell’s 47 degree water.
“It’s gonna keep getting colder this week, but I don’t really see that affecting these bass too much,” said Powroznik. After his $395 shopping trip Monday afternoon, J-Proz isn’t looking to be affected much either.
Follow Jacob on his Facebook page.
The Bassmaster Classic has no entry fee, but Virginia pro Jacob Powroznik spent $395 to improve his chances at its $300,000 first place prize. No, “J-Proz” didn’t spend it on fishing tackle; he spent it trying to stay warm.
A nearly frozen wet precipitation was falling in the Bassmaster Classic boat yard as Powroznik unpacked from a shopping trip to a local outdoor retailer. His nearly four-hundred-dollar haul included a portable propane heater, wool neck gaiter, wool socks, three pairs of gloves, a pile of peel n’ stick body warmers, and six bottles of propane for assurance that he won’t run out.
“The heater buddy alone was $154, but I figure it’ll be well worth it, not just in the tournament, but out here working on tackle in the boat yard too,” said Powroznik.
If meteorologists are right, Powroznik is going to need all the propane he can get. This will likely be the coldest Bassmaster Classic in history. Forecasted sunrise temperatures for Day One of competition on Friday are for around 10 degrees, and the high temp on Friday is supposed to be well … freezing … 32 degrees.
While weather will be as much the headline as the fishing this week, Powroznik doesn’t seem fazed by it. “I duck hunt 60 days each winter around the Rappahannock River in Virginia, so I’m extremely used to cold weather,” said the burly 5’ 10”, 279-pound, Bassmaster Rookie of the Year. “The key is to keep your hands warm, and your neck warm, and that neck gaiter is a really key deal,” he added.
“I think the thing that worries me most about this Classic is not the weather, but instead, somebody randomly finding the mother load school of potentially winning fish,” said Powroznik, citing that on reservoirs like Hartwell, where blue back herring are the predominant baitfish, that unpredictable feeding and schooling occurs.
As far as lures he thinks will dominate this cold weather derby, the man who is built like a fullback or pulling guard is thinking football. “I’m not saying it’s going to be the winning lure, but if I had to pick three or four lures that nearly everybody in this tournament will have tied on, I’d say a football jig, a football jig, a football jig, and a football jig,” joked Powroznik, who actually had one Quantum EXO reel rigged with a vertical jigging spoon for Hartwell’s 47 degree water.
“It’s gonna keep getting colder this week, but I don’t really see that affecting these bass too much,” said Powroznik. After his $395 shopping trip Monday afternoon, J-Proz isn’t looking to be affected much either.
Follow Jacob on his Facebook page.
.themify_builder .text-17475-0-0-1.module-text { }









