What Do These Inshore Fish Catches Have In Common?
- By: Luke Simonds
- on
- Found In: Fishing Secrets, Fishing Tips, Inshore Fishing
Fishing has been pretty awesome recently (you’ll see in the video below), but it hasn’t always been that way.
For years I went out early and wasted the first part of my fishing trip.
I wasn’t having all that much luck, but I thought I just needed to spend more time on the water.
And then, I finally realized what I was doing wrong.
I changed my strategies and started catching more fish (and bigger fish!) in less time.
I was having more fun on the water, spending more time actually fishing, and I just about stopped getting skunked.
Check out the video below to see how I made this change.
What Do These Fish Have In Common? [VIDEO]
Related links:
Conclusion
Are you in the same boat I was a few years ago?
Are you wasting precious time on the water each fishing trip, not actually fishing?
If so, check out the Inshore Fishing Manifesto where I reveal the three breakthroughs that brought my fishing game to the next level.
I created it because I wish I had it years ago, and it’s totally free for you to download.
Click here to get the Inshore Fishing Manifesto.
P.S. know someone who needs the Manifesto, too? TAG or SHARE this with them!
FREE GUIDE
“The Inshore Fishing Manifesto”
The 3 Must-Know Breakthroughs To Consistently Catching Inshore Slams Faster Than You Ever Imagined.
Grab Your Free Copy Here
Related articles:
Related categories:
STOP WASTING TIME ON THE WATER!
Do what the “SMART ANGLERS” are doing and join the Insider Club.
Here’s what you’ll receive today when you join:
- Weekly fishing reports and TRENDS revealing exactly where you should fish every trip
- Weekly “spot dissection” videos that walk you through all the best spots in your area
- Exclusive fishing tips from the PROS you can’t find anywhere else
- Everything you need to start catching fish more consistently (regardless if you fish out of a boat, kayak, or land).
Would like to know if you have any thoughts on what color braided line to use? When sight casting the fish usually sees the line first.