SethColeman - 2/22/2017 7:39 PM
Rogne Brown and Chris Hight......both studs. Fished with both, recommend both.
beetlespin - 2/22/2017 5:16 PM
Chris Hight is great and he provides a happy ending
bassinbrian - 2/22/2017 6:29 PM
I would check around check locals, bait shops etc. Hired one 2yrs ago, great guy, very well known. Hired him before a tournament, thinking it would be a deeper bite (why we hired him) he assured us the grass/frog bite would win the tournament. Fished all day, caught 5, 3 shorts, 2keepers. Asked about the deep fish and he assured us the fish were in the grass and to lay on it tournament time, heck we even gave him a generous tip as he did work hard to try and put us on fish. Tournament time the first grass mat we fished found a ton of boats on it. Come to find out 5 boats had been took there by the same guide, same story next mat. Tournament took almost 30 lbs to win, deep fish on ledge, 2nd place was on a hump... so be sure you get what you want to pay for. Over $400 for eight hours and 5 fish.......maybe we should have insisted on fishing deep, but we trusted our guide. Expensive lesson learned
FishingwithRusty - 2/23/2017 8:05 AM
obviously Rogne has an awesome rep, Chris apparently has a fan base as well. Alex Davis spends most of his time on Gville but does trips on chick as well and i have been with him a couple of times, he's great!
you read the story above and as a former guide the biggest thing is to TALK with the guide, make certain they understand your expectations and can meet them BEFORE you schedule the trip! if youre just going fishing then it really doesnt matter as much but if youre wanting to learn a specific technique or pattern its important.
as for Derek's comments about guides taking all clients to the same place, not all guys do the same things. ive guided multiple people for prep for the same tournament and never took ANY of them to the same stuff, if the guide knows youre prepping for a tournament hopefully he's not showing you stuff that he's showed everyone else recently. as a guide there's not much better than having a client call you back to tell you they won or shouldve won based on what info you gave them, so if i knew a guy was prepping for a T i always tried to give/show them the best info to help them win. what they do with it is up to them. also as a guide you have to have an understanding of the comfort/confidence level of your clients in the techniques youre showing them. i spent 2 days with some college guys from fla in prep for a tournament that i knew would be won deep, showed them the winning schools of fish but they didnt have the confidence/comfort to do that and got beat, my time with them would have been better spent showing them the next best shallow option with a chance to win, lesson learned for both parties.
I had no idea! Thank you for opening my eyes. Lol I never said anything like that, but at certain times if year the patterns are limited what will work multiple areas. You do know there are ways to talk with people and respond without being a smart ass.... Right?FishingwithRusty - 2/23/2017 11:23 AM
you do know there are ALWAYS multiple patterns going on at the same time........right? one may be more likely to produce a winning bag but there are other possibilities. im talking about patterns NOT spots
derek81 - 2/23/2017 2:13 PM
I had no idea! Thank you for opening my eyes. Lol I never said anything like that, but at certain times if year the patterns are limited what will work multiple areas. You do know there are ways to talk with people and respond without being a smart ass.... Right?