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One of the first things we learned about fishing is that most of the fish we want to
catch love cover or structure and they spend most of their life living around this cover.
A good rule of thumb in bass fishing, crappie fishing or even bluegill and catfish
is to fish the heaviest possible cover you can find.
This is the Honey Hole Shrub
that allows us to create
our own structure and fish habitat
and in turn catch more fish and bigger fish.
As you can see it's a dense structure with over 140 feet of tubing
These limbs act as a collection point for plankton and insect larva or eggs
that feed baitfish. The shrub is five feet wide and over two feet tall and gives you
lots of room for baitfish to hide in and it never wears out!
You'll never again need to sink brush year after year after year.
The Honey Hole Shrub is a piece of cake to put together - there's no glue
so it's also really environmentally friendly.
I like to put the shrub in two or three feet of water - maybe four or five.
I just scatter a few of them down the bank or I group three or four of them together
in a pocket or a cove. This is a super place for baitfish like fathead minnows,
shiners, or shad to spawn.
Once your shrubs are in place and holding fish, they're pretty much snag free. You can fish just
about any bait, any lure you want in the shrub and you will not hang up.
You'll notice the shrub has lots of limbs. That actually makes it look like a shrub designed by
mother nature herself.
I install the shrubs from the shoreline. I just toss it in shallow water and let it sink.
If you really wanna grow trophy bass and big slab crappie,
you'll need a lot of forage or baitfish
The Honey Hole Shrub
will really increase the survival and the size of your baitfish population.
Small investment for the return you'll get in baitfish production and reproduction
year after year after year.
And you will catch more and bigger fish.
In deeper water you can use the maximizer kit. It extends the limbs out
another three feet
or just put in a few Honey Hole Trees. This tree
is six feet tall, seven feet wide and it really provides lots of cover.
You know, I love building lakes - growing big, fat healthy bass, super
big slab crappie. I use the Honey Hole Shrub and Tree to do just that.
Big cover, big bass, big crappie - now that's what I'm talking about!