Lets go out on the lake,and ill show you how we sink brush to improve fishing.We have tried it all, and other methods work but i think this way is the easiest.
Man I'm a little late to the party but you didn't tell me something that I didn't even think of doing when are will come Monday morning thanks for the video you're calm and easy way of speaking and the information that you provided. Thanks a lot
i have been fussed at for being on a brush pile before the guy said its mine not yours i said i was here first but we can fish it together he still cried n carried on i got tired of it and left but i did speak my mind about it. me n my fishing buddy made a big pile 2 months later it was gone i think he pulled it up and moved it have not made another since but i am now thanks for the tip it will be used soon
Great video! In your next video can you show us what the new brush piles look like after they’ve fallen to the bottom and how you mark them in your electronics? Can you also show how you navigate back to it when you’re starting your day toward the brush?
We use cement blocks on all the Christmas trees we have sunk...here in Florida. Just head to any building sight where they are using block...it amazing to me how much is thrown into the dumpsters onsite. Its free... for the taking. Builders always say yes...take them !! Just a suggestion...to save you $$$$.
Nice video! I've never sank any on my local lake (not supposed to) but there are tons of piles on the lake. Might have to go and do a little night fishing and add a few of my own. I know about 60+ different ones and they all get beat up pretty regularly on my small lake.
@Bert Clayton so those fish that belong to the lake become "your fish" when you attract them with an artificial structure? Where were those fish before you drew them to what you consider to be "your" property? Us bank anglers are fishing public shoreline and you guys are out there using sonar and building structure to draw fish...lol
Thats the way I do it, but you need to tie you some drink bottles in the tops of those limbs, make them stand up in the water, they will take to it better. hold more fish.
Your a good ole boy that does it the easiest using what is available not hauling, premade cinder block pvc methods, which would last forever.I would guess fish would be more attracted to natural limbs as trees fall in the water? Any comments or studies?
they will last longer than you think, however we do "freshen" them up every once in a while.hardwoods last longer than pine so the time you have to fish one depends on the composition of the pile.thanks for the comment.👍
guessing the bags are made of plastic? Would be good to think of a bag that is biodegradable so we don't have a bunch of plastic on the bottom of the lake no? burlap would be great. Then we have guys saying we should be tying plastic water bottles to the piles... I guess I'm the "tree hugger" of bass fishermen.
I know it doesnt belong to me once I drop it in the lake but it sure pisses me off when “poachers” are on my piles, they let me do all the work then stroll their lazy asses out there and catch fish off of my hard work
If you think of it from their perspective, they just find something on the display and fish. Also, before you came along those fish were somewhere else...so now you're hoarding all the fish at your brush pile lol.
No way he had permission to do that on that body of water. Also that brush was not in the water dude, it was 3 feet over the water so you did trim someone else’s tree.
public land the government most likely owns the property as flood zone. Most dnr across the country dont care about the placement of brush piles. Many make them out of large pipe perforated plastic pipe and pvc with the bottom pvc pipe filled with concrete on the bottom. As he stated once it's in the lake its public property. It's also unlikely that his brush piles will be the only ones put in the lake. Give your dnr a call before doing so just to make sure it's legal for you to do so.