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Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/20/2013 in all areas

  1. Keep this in mind guys. Even know a swift bullet would end alot of problems, if we don't give this yard bird due process, we violate everything this country was founded upon.
    3 points
  2. Put other hobbies on the back burner ??? Are you freaking kidding me ? For about 10 years, I put my entire life on the back burner for fishing. I would probably be dead by now, of obesity, heart disease, stroke, suicide, etc, etc.... If I hadn't done a 180, 4 years ago, and started putting fishing (and every other part of my life) on the backburner, so I could go overboard with health and fitness. With my wonderful combination of ADD and OCD, I either don't do something at all, or I do it "off the scale" BIG ! All kidding aside, Zero balance is the story of my life. Peace, Fish
    2 points
  3. Through God all things are possible, may he bless you and your house. Mitch
    2 points
  4. I'll say the pflueger president before someone else does. Its 60 or less and a great reel.
    2 points
  5. I have a lot of different jigs, strike king, booyah, war eagle, etc. But having placed a couple of orders to Siebert in the last month, Mike makes the finest jigs I've ever seen. I think Siebert is my jig supplier from now on. Hootie
    2 points
  6. Kanasbassfisher08 and I fished Osage State Lake in the beautiful weather Thursday. We had white caps all day, 38 degrees at the ramp, 39 when we left. It drizzled on us until it started sleeting. The fish didn't seem to mind though. Water temps ranged from 47.9-50.2 and was fairly stained but not muddy. Neither of us had ever fished the lake so we just went on what we normally fish on small lakes early in the year. Most of our fish were on a wart or spinnerbait with quite a few on jerkbaits, and a few on jigs, tubes, and shakyheads. Lots of little fish but a few bigger fish to keep it interesting. This lake would be a blast with topwater when the water warms up and I'm excited to go back when it gets warmer out. Lots of rocks, brushpiles, shoreline weeds, stumps, and fishing piers. We caught over 50 bass and 2 wipers. I had the biggest one of the day 30 minutes after we got there on a tube next to a brushpile and she popped it and pulled really hard before I grabbed her. She went 5.22 pounds and was really happy to get back into the water and out of the cold air
    1 point
  7. Launched right at dawn this morning and fought gusting winds to 20-25mph all morning. Tried stalking the shallows for bedding bass in multiple spots, but the wave chop made boat position challenging and alerted the fish more times than not. Finally found a nice spot that I could cast to without spooking the fish and was rewarded with a fat 21 1/4" LMB. I ended up landing 5 on the day and a fat bluegill. Great day on the water albeit cut short by the severe storm rolling through.
    1 point
  8. Anodes are mounted on an outboards lower unit, and sometimes on the lower edge of the outboards mounting bracket. referred to as Sacrificial Anodes, they are simply a disposable metal block attached to your boats underwater metal parts, that will sacrifice itself (corrode) first in order to prevent the important parts of your motor from corroding, such as your lower unit. For Example, if two dissimilar metals are touching underwater, such as a stainless drive shaft, bronze bearings, and the aluminum housing of the lower unit, a naturally occurring transfer of electricity carries through the water from one metal to the other and causes the more active (softer) of the two metals to corrode. A sacrificial anode secured to the aluminum housing of the lower unit is now the most active metal in the system and corrodes before the aluminum of the lower unit. When the anode reaches 40%-50% of its original size, it is replaced to continue the protection cycle. Sacrificial Anodes are commonly referred to as “a zinc”; however zinc is not the only anode type that protects underwater metals, aluminum and magnesium are also used; your outboards manufacturer will specify the proper material for a given environment. In order for the Anode to do its job it must be able to conduct the electrical current from the water into the metal housing it’s protecting; in our case the aluminum of the outboard’s lower unit. As the Anode preforms its duty it will begin to “pit” and form a crust of oxidation that appears dull grey in most cases. The pitting process is normal and indicates the anode is doing its job. In some applications where the water is stained or muddy, the anode will form a coating of silica from the water. These coatings (silica and/or oxidation) have an effect to insulate the anode and inhibit its ability to conduct efficiently. Therefore anodes require periodic inspection and maintenance. The electrical connection between the anode and the outboard can be easily checked using an Ohm Meter; there should be zero ohms between the anode and the mounting surface on the outboard. When maintenance is required, the anodes should be removed from the outboard and all surfaces’ cleaned to bear metal; the outboards mounting surface should be cleaned to bear metal also. Cleaning is accomplished by a vigorous buffing with a stiff wire brush until all oxidation or silica is removed, and bear metal is seen. (see photo’s) Never paint a sacrificial anode, or the surface it mounts to. There needs to be a solid physical electrical contact between the anode and the metal requiring protection. If there is a break in this electrical continuity, the protection stops, resulting in corrosion of the important outboard parts. Generally these are the rules for each body of water: Salt Water: Use Zinc Anodes. Brackish Water (Salt and Fresh mixed): Use Zinc Anodes. Fresh Water: Use Magnesium Anodes. Note: The fresher the water, the less electrical current is transferred, requiring the more active anode. Magnesium anodes are ideal for fresh waters, as they are both economical and highly effective. They have excellent properties for corrosion protection in the higher resistive fresh water environment. Bottom line, Anodes need to be clean and tight to efficiently do their job, so when preforming seasonal maintenance........ Don’t neglect your Anodes. Notice the mounting area is cleaner that the rest of the anode but still oxidized Before & after cleaning. Wire brush can be found in painting or wielding departments of hardware stores. Don't forget to clean the lower units mounting points. IMHO, annual maintenance is fine, the big thing is to clean the contact points between the anode and the housing it's mounted to; if the contact point fails the system fails and your motor is unprotected. Remember, we're talking about a very slow but steady process that only takes place while the boat is in the water; it's faster in saltwater, and slowest in freshwater. EDIT 04/20/2013 15:18 EST - Added two pic's to cover items I missed above. Thanks for the reminder Jeff. This is the Trolling Motor's anode on my MototGuide This is the Trim-Tab anode on my Merc. I don't have the common vertical fin, just a flat plate. This was a real bear to get off, I don't think its ever been off for maintenance; in fact it is so heavily covered with oxidation I could not get a meter reading, and the wire brush couldn't cut through it, I had to use 100 grit sandpaper.
    1 point
  9. Acetone in a baby food jar for an occasional flush. 1 drop of Shimano oil. They don't need much. I used to overdo it.
    1 point
  10. I once believed the snakehead invasion was a serious problem for our fishery in South Florida. I guess everyone did at one time. I thought the snakehead would eat all the bass. It just isn't happening. On the contrary, the snakehead fry is being eaten by the bass. The head of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission Invasive Species Team, Kelly Gestring has also confirmed this in a recent interview. While the snakehead still has a negative reputation down here, the fish is here to stay. I made up my mind that I would just enjoy the snakehead for what it was: hard fighting, aggressive and a tasty fish.
    1 point
  11. I fished small waters almost exclusively as a kid and into college. In all the ponds, my best fish came fishing offshore not nearshore spots. Nevertheless, if you can talk to your local wildlife officer sometimes they will electroshock local park ponds and they can relay the results. What most of them find, at least from my experience, is lots of small fish with SOME HAWGS sprinkled in.
    1 point
  12. I have been fly fishing for more than 20 years for everything from steelhead in the little salmon river to bream in my pond. I get a great amount of satisfaction from catching any fish on a fly that I tied myself. I do not use my flyrod to try to horse a bass out of heavy cover. That is not what a flyrod is designed for. I have casting rods for that. In it's place a flyrod is great fun and very likely to be successful in highly pressured water where other methods are not. I would recommend starting with a medium weight (6 or 7) rod with line to match. As mentioned before on this thread, the reel is only to store line and a cheap one will work for that purpose. Buy the best line and rod your budget will allow and learn how to use it well. After you catch a few fish on it you'll probably wind up, like me, with several flyrod combos in different weights, and a fly-tying vice, feathers and hair patches, an assortment of hooks and other tying accessories. Catching fish with a flyrod is FUN!
    1 point
  13. Well ALMS has been going down hill for many years. Many factors play in to to why. The biggest to me has to be American motor sports fans. Followed by the market crash in 08. You all ready know my view on hard core NASCAR fans. So I will save that for a other day. ALMS though are not the only ones fighting to get cars to show up. There are plenty of series all over Europe that have folded or joined. So its just not Americans that are killing motorsports. Motorsports tends to go through these little spells though. In the late 70's to the late 90's. It went though some thing like this around the world. What did we get out of it. We got some of the most exciting motor racing ever. The group b Rally cars and the group c LeMans cars. In the end I think ALMS/Grand AM will be just fine. All the races are there for next year. So Sebring and Petite will have at lest one more year.
    1 point
  14. 1 point
  15. I can flip a jig, pitch a jig, swim a jig, and tie on a different color if necessary.
    1 point
  16. clear plastic shoe boxes with locking lids
    1 point
  17. Awesome Story http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mlb-big-league-stew/cincinnati-reds-todd-frazier-delivers-home-run-ball-180118487--mlb.html
    1 point
  18. #1 reason I wouldn't fish an ugly stick- weight. #2 it simply isn't as sensitive as even lower end graphite. I will guarantee you that you miss fish, you cannot, and I mean 100% cannot feel a lift bite on the drop on an ugly stick. The physics of the rod make it next to impossible. You may feel that you're successful with it, and that's fine, but declaring that it is sufficient for all presentations is simply ridiculous. Skill has its limitations, and you cannot replace those lost senses. A progressive taper rod like the ugly stick cannot account for so, so many things. You cannot feel the transition from one bottom type to another. You cannot feel the light tick of hanging on a stem of grass. You cannot feel the light push of a spot moving your jig to you. Skill alone cannot tell you those things, either. Is it necessary to spend $450 on a rod to feel those those things? No. Is it necessary to have a adequate feel and transmission in a rod to be able to feel them? Yes. If the Ugly Stick is so sensitive and so adequate, why does not a single angler on any major circuit fish them? Even by comparison to other modern rods they lack the most essential qualities to be deemed even a workable bass rod. So you're happy fishing them, fine. But to claim that an ugly stick will do everything a $150 to will do, and do it better is asinine. The laws of physics alone deny that claim. In limiting your ability to delineate structure and other items by fishing sub par rods that are incapable of transmitting those changes you limit your ability to increase in skill. You might be fine with moving baits on an ugly stick, but I will guarantee you you're missing fish on them when it comes to bottom contact techniques. That, or you have super human senses and reaction times.
    1 point
  19. Probably all of their profits I'd guess.
    1 point
  20. I will throw in a suggestion for the Shimano Symetre. I have 3, and have been very happy with them.
    1 point
  21. Let up what 2 hits both solo shots with the second one being a wall scraper. Hopefully lee can continue his recent success tomorrow.
    1 point
  22. If money is a concern then the President is the way to go.
    1 point
  23. My Team Starting Five 7'-0" St. Croix Triumph ML-F / Pflueger President 6735 (Spinning) 6'-8" BPS Carbonlite M-XF / Pflueger President 6735 (Spinning) 7'-0" Abu Garcia Veritas M-F / Pflueger President 6735 (Spinning) 7'-0": Abu Garcia Vendetta M-F / Abu Garcia Silver Max (Casting) 6'-6" Berkley Lightning Rod / BPS Enigma (Casting) (Bench) 6'-8" St Croix Mojo Bass M-XF / (Injured reserve - awaiting new spinning reel) 6'-6" Gander Mountain Advantage IM6 ( 2-pc spinning rod - good for road games)
    1 point
  24. Glad someone asked this question, been wondering this myself. I'm thinking along the lines of what Paul Roberts just posted. I've caught crappie using 10lb braid on a spinning rod so it obviously didn't spook them. Also I think around most vegetation the braid could be easily blended with its surroundings. I've never used a leader and always caught fish with all types of bait on braid.
    1 point
  25. Good stuff. I went out today as well, the wind was awful. Stalked four beds, but the bass were supremely stubborn and refused any and everything I threw at them. Didn't fare as well as you, caught a smaller bass, maybe 3/4 pounder. But the wind just kept getting worse and changed directions at least three times making what were lovely still coves, frustrating....
    1 point
  26. Well, as an owner of two Shimano Stradics, I will recommend the ... Daiwa Lexa 2000SH. Not trying to sound like a Daiwa schill, but dang, this is easily as smooth as my stradics, if not moreso. I'm super impressed. Over ebay you can find it for $100-110.... .02 Lots of great reels out there. I'm just really impressed with Diawa's entire Lexa line.
    1 point
  27. Here's how I've been doing it lately. It's just some Duct Tape, a two hole punch, and two binder rings. Best part is you can keep your soft plastics in their original packages.
    1 point
  28. My wife had a tight wiggling bait 24 years ago but after 5 kids it has turned into a wide wobble now. I love them both. And am glad she does not go onto bass fishing forums. Sorry I couldn't let that one go.
    1 point
  29. You will never know what works best under specific circumstances unless you are exposed to a technique and give it a try. Fishing by myself most of the time robs me of learning from others on one hand, but allows me to perfect a skill on the ther hand. I learned a long time ago not to force feed bass anything, they have a mind of their own. I have however also learned location trumps presentations; the right lure in the wrong place doesn't work nearly as well as the wrong lure in the right location, the right lure in the right location at the right time is the answer to being a successful bass angler. You will never know without trying. When I fished tournaments and caught a good bag of bass, I would think I have this won, however someone or several others figures out a totally different presentations and locations and also catches a good bag of bass and your catch is just average. Sometimes you only catch a few and win the tournament because knowone else figured out anything and that is bass fishing. My late fishing partner would say " fish where they are and if you don't catch anything, then fish where they are not"! Sounds nuts but sometimes works, fishing nothing water instead of bass looking water. Some of my best kept secret spots are nothing looking water passed up by nearly everyone, sanctuaries for big bass waiting for me to find them. Being versitle is a mind set. Tom
    1 point
  30. I have and caught quite a few on minnows fishing brush in about 12' of water. The times I've been I did better towards the west end of the lake. You have to be able to find the brushpiles though.
    1 point
  31. Heading to PA in the morning. Will be spending a week bouncing around Lake Erie chasing the Pre-spawn Bronze Bass with the man, the myth, the legend - Dwight Hottle. Did the same trip last spring (and this past fall). It was pretty wild. Several Big Fish & 2 PBs. Those trips went so well we hooked up with BR 00 mod (Jeff) and the three of us spent a week on Lake Baccarac in Mexico this past March. That was Epic with about 5 PBs. We're already planning the next one. A-Jay
    1 point
  32. The carpet doesnt always match the drapes
    1 point
  33. Got 33 packages of soft plastics for 29.99! Most of its rage tail stuff too
    1 point
  34. I have a Johnny Morris signature series, its a great reel, runs 160 new.. also willing to sell mine.
    1 point
  35. 1/8 oz darterhead, Yamamoto, smoke w/blk flake. My lone "panic box" item.
    1 point
  36. only on the back of a swim jig
    1 point
  37. You're just an old man with no dreams drinking water at your cubicle. What do you know? Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to look for this place they call Neverland. I hear the fishing is pretty good.
    1 point
  38. Player's choice. I always use a fluoro leader with large diameter braid except when fishing heavy vegetation. It may also help prevent cut-offs from toothy critters and rocks.
    1 point
  39. No kidding! So of you have thousands of dollars in just rods & reels
    1 point
  40. Wow... after seeing all that high end gear that some of you have, im wondering if im in the wrong line of work.
    1 point
  41. I like this thread as well And I too am reminded of a lake I fished when I was much younger and my Dad was still living. He had fished it with me the first couple of times and we seemed to struggle to find a dependable pattern during those outings... I told him that I was disappointed and didn't like fishing it as much as other more productive waters we regularly visited. He chuckled and said that if I just wanted to be a fish catcher, we could go to those other lakes and leave that one alone. But if I wanted to be a fish finder, I should continue my efforts on that particular lake... As it turned out, that lake had many off shore changes with good numbers of hungry fish and it helped me to understand mid lake fishing much better than the other lakes where the close to shoreline fishing was much easier. I caught a few bigger than average fish there as well but the biggest plus on that lake turned out to be the mid summer night bite, it was GREAT. If you decide to try it a few more times, the warmer water should help things alot and from your description of it, chances are the shorelines are pressured more so that mid lake areas and the christmas tree sets are possibly good targets for you seek out. But don't just look for those, search out other changes both natural and/or man made that aren't as obvious to the masses... Electronics would be a must, a topo map or google map could be a big asset as well. Good luck with whatever you decide and the main thing is Have FUN or Don't do it
    1 point
  42. All the places I know that hold snakehead have shown that they can live with the bass. I would also guess that being up in bucks county (I grew up there myself) that there are only certain species of snakehead that can handle the cold weather. I wouldn't worry to much and just fish....I know people who have caught largemouth and a snakehead off the same downed tree.
    1 point
  43. The drop off that they might be on doesn't have to be a big one. A drop of only a foot or two can be enough to hold bass. That being said, if the males are cruising for spots to make beds then the females won't be far from them. Try working the deepest water (again, deep might only be a foot or two deeper) closest to where you are seeing the males. Try working some soft plastics (craws/lizards) and jigs from deep to shallow in theses areas. If the males are cruising for beds then the females should be in a feeding mode to get ready for spawn. Hope this helps!
    1 point
  44. I also have been using jigs this spring. Best time to learn on them I feels as the fish will bite anything so you get confidence and learn what the bite feels like. I have started with 1/4 oz jigs in shallower water. The lighter jig is ALOT easier to learn on IME.
    1 point
  45. Thank you! Really appreciate it, Im working on resume now. It will take some time, but hopefully it'll get an opportunity.
    1 point
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