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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/20/2011 in all areas

  1. With all the hype, high pressure sales, and the desire for magical mystical lures or techniques anglers have been deceived into believing the Texas Rig is an old antiquated technique that should be shelved like Jitterbugs, Tiny Torpedoes, Johnson Spoons, and Inline Spinner baits. The lure that had the biggest impact on American fishing started in the late 1940s in a basement in Akron Ohio. That's where Nick and Cosma Creme cooked up the perfect combination of vinyl, oils and pigments to produce a molded worm that not only looked and felt soft and alive, but also stayed that way when exposed to air over time. 1949 would be the official birth year of the now famous Creme worm. But we’ve been told that today’s modern “Trick” worms bare no resemblance to this old tired chunk of plastic. We have even been convinced that the “Super Mystical” Punch Rig is not a Texas Rig because they have added a skirted bead between the weight and hook. We’ve been convinced that flipping & pitching if far more productive than casting your Texas Rig out and finessing it back to the boat along the bottom feeling for nooks-n-crannies and twig-n-limbs. We’ve even forgotten that the plastic worm is the only lure made that a BASS CANNOT REMEMBER! That is, a bass will continue to strike a worm even after repeated catches, whereas a bass will "turn off" to other lures, spinner baits and crank baits etc. after wearing them out on them. That’s why you cannot continue to catch them on your honey hole with the same lure over and over. Bass will stop eating that which will eradicate them. Not true with the plastic worm, however. Although we all know bass will prefer a different bait at different times (i.e. "the pattern") you can always go back to the worm to catch them. I guess y’all can label me Ole School since I refuse to give up on the #1 most productive lure and technique ever invented.
    2 points
  2. Melted and molded, cooled then fished. The plastic worm is a bait that can never be dissed. Its colors, and shape, and size never end. The longer in the water, the more fish for you friend. There's your poetry Francho.
    2 points
  3. There are no reel specs that match any particular rod. About the only thing relevent there would be weight and profile. These traits help you balance the setup. Basically you just want it to feel good in your hands. There are many whole threads about "balancing" a rod or combo so I won't get into that here. Reels have different line capacity and gear ratios that can be used to fine tune presentations. Right out the gate you can keep it simple. 6.3:1 is a standard gear ratio for all around use. Again, a search here will provide hours worth of reading about ratios and IPT (inches of line retrieved per turn of the handle). Invest in a quality reel and take care of it and it will last a life time. Shimano, ABU, Daiwa, Quantum and BPS all have quality reels in the $100-$150 +/- dollar range. Post for feedback on any model you're interested in and I'm sure you'll get lots of feedback.
    1 point
  4. Sounds better than the Gibson guitar factory raid because of imported wood
    1 point
  5. Made the switch to apple products and have never been happier.
    1 point
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