One of the most important pieces of equipment in my boat at times is my Promar Net. When are you are out hunting trophy bass with swimbaits, you need to be ready just in case you hook that one fish you’ve been after. My good friend Rob Belloni, once again provided me the insights to go ahead and get right with a Promar net, and it’s been a great asset to my fishing. You need to have a net onboard that is ready, in position, and well integrated into your fishing systems, because whether you fish alone or fish with a partner, a good net can mean the difference between being a hero a zero. I travel with 2 nets. One is for tournament fishing and one is for trophy hunting. They are both made by Promar, and each have been excellent tools in my fishing and I gladly recommend them.
The LN-501 B: The Bigbait Net
When it comes to bigbait fishing, you are fishing for big fish, with big heads and bodies, so the super wide basket of the Promar L-501 B is a great choice. Big fish just fit into the net easier. You’d be suprised how many bass fishing nets are not made to handle fish over 7 pounds really well. I mean, it is physically hard to get the fish into the net. You want a big basket where you can swim fish into the net and have a big sweet spot where you want the fish to go. The Promar LN-501B is a halibut landing net, so its got this huge basket (30″ Wide) and a 54″ handle that match up nicely with all things big fish and big bait. You need can handle the net alone or your partner can reach way out with it and scoop up a biggun’ for you. If you watch our DVD, Southern Trout Eaters, about 85% of the fish that I catch in that film are self netted with the Promar L501 B and you can get a good feel for how I go about playing fish and then swimming them into the net as quickly as possible when I get them near the boat.
The Promar ProMesh Series Tournament Net
The Promar PreMesh Series Landing Nets are excellent bass tournament style nets. They have a retractable handle on them, which makes them easy to store while onboard, and a modular design means you can separate the handle from the basket (you can do this with the 501B too). I have been using the LN-652 for the last 2 seasons, and really like the net. Great compromise on a net, which means it’s still a big net, much bigger than most, but not as big as the 501B, and it just stores and fishes great on tournament day. It has a 48″ retractable handle and 24″ basket.
If you’d like to see a great clip of the Promar ProMesh LN-652 in action, check out this clip from a trophy brown trout hunting expedition, by clicking here. You will notice how well even the LN-652 does at handling big fish (that is a 27″ brown trout) and how well the net serves as a makeshift livewell and releasing tool. Here are some pictures from the catch too:
1 comments
Eric Meyhoefer
Matt –
Took your advice and bought a Promar next; just came in the mail this week. I fish the bank a lot as well as fish from a small boat, so I bought the promar LN-704 Collapsible net. It has a hoop size of 26″ x 28″ , with a 46″ extendable handle. Very solid for something with moving parts. Was also surprised how light it was for such a well built product. Would strongly recommend it for anyone needing a space saving net.
Matt –
Took your advice and bought a Promar next; just came in the mail this week. I fish the bank a lot as well as fish from a small boat, so I bought the promar LN-704 Collapsible net. It has a hoop size of 26″ x 28″ , with a 46″ extendable handle. Very solid for something with moving parts. Was also surprised how light it was for such a well built product. Would strongly recommend it for anyone needing a space saving net.
Thanks again for such an informative site!
Eric