Why do bass eat plastic worms




















I like to use a light hook that will make the worm sink very slowly in the water column. You retrieve will be slow when you are working the bottom. The lift and drop technique works great in this scenario. Why do bass eat plastic worms? Bass eat plastic worms for two basic reason.

They eat worms because they are hungry and the plastic worms look like a prey item to them or they eat them to protect their territory. I am convinced that bass hit bass fishing lures just to kill them as much as they do out of a hunger response. Big bass eat smaller bass. Otters and alligators eat any bass that they can catch. Wading birds eat small bass in the shallows. It is very hard for a baby bass to grow up to be an old bass because the chances are that something will kill them before they get old.

To thrive in the bass eat bass world that they live in they have to be ruthless and tough. During the spawn, a male bass will try and kill anything that gets near his precious nest and eggs.

So anytime a fishermen catches a bass near its bed, that bass hit that lure specifically to protect his nest and not from a triggered eating response. Other times of the year the bass is eating the plastic worm because it is hungry. Bass will eat birds, rodents, insects, reptiles, amphibians, and other fish species. They will eat just about anything that will fit in their huge mouths.

Lots of creatures will fit in those huge mouths. There are freshwater eels that the bass love to eat. There are leaches. There are snakes. Best Googan Baits. Best Artificial Worm Bait. Zoom Fat Albert.

Gambler Floating Worm. Strike King Zero. YUM Dinger. But once the fish have been exposed to lures day after day, they remember and become warier. Bass can see these colors well and make decisions with high selectivity based on these colors.

They seem and feel like a natural food so the bass is likely to suck it and hold it for a while before spitting it out. That times is valuable for the angler as it gives you opportunity to react in time.

Some plastic worms are even available scented, to attract even more fish attention. The legendary Stick Bait is the most popular and fundamental Bass lure ever. Curl Tail Grub. Square Bill Crankbait. What color worms are best for bass? Can you use worms for bass fishing?

What do bass like for bait? What colors do largemouth bass see best? What do bass feed on the most? What do bass need to survive in a pond? How deep should my bass pond be? Why do I only have small bass in my pond? How do I get rid of bass in my pond? How many bass can live in a small pond? That's a worm. Let's eat! But bass don't think like humans. They don't see what we see, hear what we hear, smell what we smell, feel what we feel, much less think what we think.

If they reason at all it is highly unlikely they reason as we do. They have their own mental equipment, not ours. So any interpretation of bass behavior should shy away from shrouding bass in human characteristics.

It's not that bass wouldn't eat them if given the chance, it's that worms aren't generally available. Worms and nightcrawlers are terrestrial animals not aquatic ones. For the most part they spend their lives burrowing through the soil. As fairly lousy swimmers they understandably don't make a point of frequenting the local swimming hole. A bass could go through its entire life without ever seeing one.

In a series of tests at the Berkley Fish Research Center we took medium-sized largemouth bass which had been reared in farm ponds using only formulated hatchery feed as food and presented them with soft plastic cylinders. To them, one piece of plastic should be about as good as the other.

But the bass didn't see it that way showing very little interest, even when the plastic pieces were tantilizingly close.



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