#1,197 in Sports & outdoors books
Use arrows to jump to the previous/next product

Reddit mentions of In-Fisherman Critical Concepts 1: Largemouth Bass Fundamentals Book (critical concepts series)

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of In-Fisherman Critical Concepts 1: Largemouth Bass Fundamentals Book (critical concepts series). Here are the top ones.

In-Fisherman Critical Concepts 1: Largemouth Bass Fundamentals Book (critical concepts series)
Buying options
View on Amazon.com
or
Used Book in Good Condition
Specs:
Height8.25 Inches
Length5.5 Inches
Weight0.8 Pounds
Width0.75 Inches

idea-bulb Interested in what Redditors like? Check out our Shuffle feature

Shuffle: random products popular on Reddit

Found 3 comments on In-Fisherman Critical Concepts 1: Largemouth Bass Fundamentals Book (critical concepts series):

u/5uper5kunk · 3 pointsr/bassfishing

The sadly out of print book series InFisherman Largemouth Bass Fundamentals are summary and used to be priced far more reasonably. I think the price on amazon fluctuates wildly, I got all three for like $10 each maybe 2-3 years ago and the last time I looked (maybe 4 months ago) they were still around that price. Otherwise, the InFisherman website has a lot of good articles with good illustrations so stuff like the difference between inside and outside weedlines are made clear. "In Pursuit of Giant Bass" is another great one and looks to be more available. I have also heard good things about "High Percentage Fishing" but have yet to pick it up.

I have yet to find any really good videos going over habitat/behaviour other then this great one about spawning, but I have not looked in a while. Otherwise I just did a lot of reading random bass forums. It's slow and there are many idiots out there but once you figure out who to listen too there is a ton of info out there.

u/rjw214 · 3 pointsr/bassfishing

Not a documentary but a book series - In-Fisherman's Critical Concepts, particularly the first book, "Largemouth Bass Fundamentals." The book was published in 2002 so is a bit dated but has a bunch of pertinent info with the most useful (to me) being bass tracking studies over fairly long periods of time. There's other information in the book that doesn't cover a full life cycle but, overall, it's the most comprehensive work I've seen that generally doesn't rely on what I call fishing bro-science.

The other thing you can do is chat up an ichthyologist or a fishery manager at a hatchery. I assume all states (provinces, territories, etc) have people who fill these roles and they LOVE talking about fish (seriously, get ready for a new best friend). It can take a few phone calls and a little bit of persistence but those guys and gals are a wealth of information once you track them down.