![ranch rush 2 farm layout ranch rush 2 farm layout](https://spainfasr775.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/5/5/125593559/215542426.jpeg)
Martens had five bass Sunday for 11 pounds, 1 ounce.******Enjoy this SPECIAL LITE version of Ranch Rush 2****** Former Southern California angler Aaron Martens, now living in Leeds, Ala., finished 12th, one spot before four-time Classic champion Kevin Van Dam. Horton had a 5-fish limit Sunday for 11 pounds, and Price caught five for 9 pounds, 15 ounces. Jamie Horton of Centerville, Ala., finished 21st, and Chris Price of Church Hill, Md., finished 23. Notes: Two Federation Nation anglers qualified for the top-25 and did well. It dropped to 57 degrees after the cold front came in, and that pushed the fish into the shallow water. He said he was getting the right bites and was going to the right places. Vinson said he was in the right area to win the tournament. Vinson said he mostly fished in 1½ feet of water. Using a NetBait Salt Lick (a Senko-looking bait), a War Eagle 5/16ths-ounce spinnerbait that he added a bigger blade to fish slow and a Baby Paca Craw along with a Bandit Square Bill crankbait.
![ranch rush 2 farm layout ranch rush 2 farm layout](https://bigfishgames-a.akamaihd.net/en_ranch-rush-2-saras-island-experiment/screen1.jpg)
I’m trying to make an accurate cast to stumps. The more I fish it the more I’m targeting the more quality fish. I think there is more area around there I can get bit. The sweet spot for me is 150 yards long, 50 yards wide. It’s a nice place, and I’m the only one fishing it. Any time you have bait in the area, that’s another good sign. They have everything they need and not have to leave in adverse conditions. “There’s deeper water, safer areas for them to go to, deeper water. “It’s a great spawning area, too,” Vinson said. All that and the bass were busting bait in the clear water that was off the main channel of the muddy Red. He said the area was the most diverse of any he found on the river, with lots of submerged vegetation, his main key, and lots of lay-downs, stumps and stickups, matted hyacinth and clean, clear water. That pushed the fish into shallow water, and when he landed a 4-pounder Saturday morning, first thing, he knew he was onto something. He found 61-degree water that had dropped to 57 degrees when the cold front moved in. “He was only 9 days old when I left to come to the Classic, but those pictures and the note every day on the phone kind of kept me grounded, kept me going,” Vinson said. The baby pattern almost worked for Vinson. 6, and when an angler fishes shortly after the birth of a child, that’s what’s known on tour as fishing “the baby pattern,“ and it usually translates to a win for the angler and his new family.Īfter keeping track of his baby boy’s early growth through daily pictures on the cell phone and texts from his wife, Vinson got to see mamma and baby Gaige Sunday after finishing second to Guntersville, Ala.’s Chris Lane in the 42nd Bassmaster Classic. Greg Vinson, 34, of Wetumpka, Ala., and his wife, Stephanie, had a baby boy, Gaige, on Feb. But one angler came here loaded with the best pattern of all, “the baby pattern.” All week here at the 42nd Bassmaster Classic, anglers talked of trying to find a pattern to fish, a consistent way to fool these hearty, stump-livin,’ hyacinth-lovin’ bass that run the muddy Red River.