Jump to content

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 08/07/2015 in all areas

  1. So Chicken Little says the sky is falling (I don't think my NRX has the specification data on the blank). Then we get about 60 posts of Henny Penny, Ducky Lucky, Goosey Loosey, and Turkey Lurkey jumping on board and saying YES, the sky is falling. Meanwhile, the OP has disappeared and we still don't know for sure if his rod REALLY is missing the data. Geez, you usually only see this type of thread in winter. Everyone should go fishing or something...
    10 points
  2. The #1 key to consistently catching bass is between your ears not between the folds of your wallet!
    8 points
  3. For you guys/gals that are newer to bass fishing, I want to give you a little input. You absolutely do not need to have the best fishing equipment on the market to catch a bass. Instead of spending beyond your means, just get the best that you can afford. Most of the equipment made nowdays is pretty decent so you will be just fine. JT Bagwell @BagwellFishing
    6 points
  4. Not a perfect day, but I ain't complaining. Hootie
    6 points
  5. One piece rod offers better feel Zebco 33 Platinum, 4.1:1 gear ratio, 5 stainless bearings, aluminum frame, continous anti-reverse, mirco fine drag control all for $35
    5 points
  6. As a few on here know My wife and myself bought an older home and have been working on one project then another for over a month now. I haven't fished in a month and a half and I decided enough was enough and for a few hours this morning and I went fishing. It wasn't what one would consider a stellar morning but merely being out on the water was stellar to me. Anyway, I boated 5 fish, all caught on Zoom magnum finesse worms In black. They soaked overnight in clear JJ'S magic. We finally had some rain(It's almost drought conditions In this part of NC)last night and while the water was a little stained It didn't seem to affect the fish. I caught all 5 right on the bank in less than a foot of water. There was nothing of size with the biggest going two lbs. but durn If It wasn't fun!
    3 points
  7. Son & I caught over 60 a piece on frog. This was the biggest 5.5# according to the Boga Grip scale. I'll remember that day for a while. Hope my boss don't recongnize me.
    3 points
  8. Coty and I fished Melvern yesterday from about 5am until 3pm. We caught fish from the time the boat touched the water (Coty actually caught one off the ramp before the boat was in the water), until the time we took it out of the water. Best places was any flat bank with bigger rock and wind blowing into it. A Strike King 1.0 type crankbait was great, had a bunch on a tube, some on a Ned, spook jr, should have had several on a Bull Shad but only landed a couple of them. Biggest fish of the day was my 3lb 2oz 18" smallie. We both had a bass slam plus we had 8 walleye, a white, several drum, and a bunch of sunfish. Great day on the water with over 100 fish caught for sure.
    3 points
  9. Rods came today - Fed Ex. TBC70MHMF Sweeper Spinnerbait 7' Med. Heavy Mod. Fast 12 - 20 3⁄8 - 3⁄4 4.3 oz TBS71MF Plastics 7' 1" Medium Fast 6-12 3/16 - 5/8 4.0 oz Really sweet. I'm headed to the lake. A-Jay
    3 points
  10. Until you get this under control do not throw any really expensive baits!!!!
    3 points
  11. This is a relatively easy problem to solve. It's best since you're in your early boating career to stick to shallow fishing. Boat control and positioning is IMPERATIVE when fishing offshore, so keep it simple. Before the sun gets over the tree lines, pull into small pockets and throw topwater. This time of year I really have success with a spook style bait or a buzz bait. Try different shoreline cover like grass, docks, rocks, lay downs, etc until you find where you are catching more fish. This will help a ton later in the day. Basically, you're gonna stay shallow all day. As sun gets up, usually you experience a small lull in the bite as the fish adjust to the brighter conditions. Since the fish aren't crazy about being exposed in the bright light, it's a no brainier on what to attack the rest of the day.....shade. Fish the shady side of docks, bridge pilings, laydowns. Basically anything that casts a shadow, no matter how small. Bass sit in the shade pockets and ambush prey as it comes by. Bring your bait right next to the shade line or flip a jig or weighted soft plastic right into into the shade. Eventually you're gonna trigger a reaction strike by doing this. I like using a streamlined plastic and heavy weight to get that pitch to shade to fall faster. The faster the fall, the better chance of the reaction strike. Another thing to look for is wind. Even a tiny ripple can get an entire area of fish fired up. It adds oxygen to the water, can cool it off a bit, and create minute amounts of current. All of those things are huge in warm weather fishing. When you find banks with wind, approach it the same way. Root a squarebill crankbait or spinnerbait to keep it simple. Make sure you're running then around shade lines and keep the bait moving quickly. It's all about that reaction strike. If they aren't interested in the hardbaits or spinnerbaits, try a soft plastic jerk bait or senko. That small change can be huge. Once again, on the windy banks, attack the shade with the jig or soft plastic once you hit those shade lines with the moving baits. Another scenario is shoreline grass. If you find quality grass (not that slimy scum grass), but solid, green grass. Attack this with a frog or toad and then work the edges with soft plastics. If you find anything out of the ordinary on that grass line, fish this extra hard. Usually this means the bottom either has an indention or small point and this will focus the fish on that particular area. When you fish a pocket and you're backing out, always always ALWAYS take your boat, line up where the pocket comes to an end, and make a cast to the end with a crankbait that dives a bit deeper (6-12') and make some casts right down the center of that sucker. This little trick will get you tons of extra bites. What's going on is that when the lake is down, and it rains, it carves out a small ditch in the pocket. The fish hold on that ditch and will move up to feed and then move back into the ditch. Seriously, this little technique catches fish year round. Lastly, if you have cloud cover all day and some wind, that topwater bite is gonna stay strong. It won't concentrate the fish like a sunny day will, so you're going to have to expand the areas you fish. Bass tend to roam around on cloudy days so if you are fishing a flat, they could be everywhere, so this is when putting the trolling motor on high and covering as much water as possible is key. Once again, taking note of which cover is near when the fish strikes. No matter how hot it is, there will ALWAYS be shallow fish that are catchable. I hope this helps and gives you a starting point. Please feel free to ask anything else. No question is to basic. We're here to help you catch more fish
    3 points
  12. 3 points
  13. Had all the rods out of the boat for respooling/re-rigging, lined up some of my favorites for a pic. I just got the Orochi recently, I have a feeling it will eventually turn into more but boat upgrades are keeping the tackle monkey at bay for now . Something else that came through my tackle room recently, this is a wedding gift I got for a very good friend of mine who is a die-hard Abu guy...It was verrrrry hard to not just hold onto it and pick something off the registry . This thing is sweet!
    3 points
  14. Today I took my next door neighbor out in the boat. This is the first time we had fished together. Toward the end of the day, he hooked a musky on 6 pound mono. She was way too big for my net. Her body length was 2 1/2 times the diameter of a 21" net. Which works out to 53". Anyone have any idea what it might have weighed ?...............watching his technique while fighting that fish was inspiring. He back reeled and kept tension the whole time. It was like watching a master. Had it been me, I would have probably have broken her off during the first or second run. After what seemed like an eternity, I got her head in the net but there was just too much of her. She flopped out leaving the small bass bait hung in the netting. We didn't even get a picture.
    2 points
  15. I fish where the fish are----at the top and above the strongest sonar returns of the thermocline and below the warmest water. The thermocline reflects sound (sonar) due to the water density change caused by rapid temperature change.
    2 points
  16. True, its more about how you look than what gear you are throwing... I mean if your not wearing a jersey you probably aren't catching any fish. Don't leave the jersey at home guys.
    2 points
  17. One of the few Havoc baits I have not been impressed with. Like Bluebasser86, I could only get them to "back up" with very light line and a tiny hook, not my style. I'd just rather put a nail weight in a 4" yum dinger and get the same action with my regular dock skipping gear.
    2 points
  18. And as is so often the case - I have never needed to show one to anyone - ever. But I'm ready . . . . A-Jay
    2 points
  19. Some people just shouldn't have nice things
    2 points
  20. A single SDJ is the best knot FOR ME with fluoro.
    2 points
  21. There was a popular saying back in the day. It wasn't coined in reference to fishing gear, but it still applies: "Buy the best you can afford, the cheapest will disappoint you and the more expensive is only beneficial to the person selling it,rarely to the person buying."
    2 points
  22. .....what member this mess belongs to?!? Dwight, you can't play! Word is, there are 39 rods missing from this pic!
    2 points
  23. i have a tundra long bed with a 8' bed , that said i have rods that are 8'6 and 9' , i went to home depot and bought a 3'' x 10' black pvc pipe , added a cleanout (a screw cap ) and an end cap , think it cost me around $25 , buy the 10' pipe and then you can cut it down to your needs ,
    2 points
  24. Put on three brakes and turn your dial to 6 and tighten your cast control knob so that your lure barely falls. Also, are you throwing to lite of a lure? If so, throw a heavier lure. What you are experiencing is called growing pains and some, like me, still have the occasional overrun and then I make adjustments but you should know that braid is notorious, for me at least, of over running and stopping in mid cast. BTW, after a couple of months, if you haven't ready done so, you might want to clean your spool bearings.
    2 points
  25. If that motor is anything like me, it needs a good, strong cup of coffee in the morning.
    2 points
  26. The M/XF is a rod they suggest for weightless soft plastics, topwater, wacky rigs. I have it in LTB casting and it's a great rod. I've used it for weightless plastics, shakeyheads, lighter trigs no problem. I wouldn't expect the Avid to be noticeably stouter then the Premier. You might want to look the MH/XF in the Avid for the bottom contact lighter trigs but I'm not sure how well it will work throwing chatter baits. Tackle tour did a review of that taper in the Legend Xtreme shortly after it was redesigned. Also depends on what kind of cover you're fishing. I'm sure you could manage with the MH/F but I'm not sure it will load that well. If you can get over the handles the Rages are on clearence in the st Croix bargain room for 89 with free shipping, same blank material as the Avids. Cheap way to find out what works for you.
    2 points
  27. If you're 7ft tall it would be a sick jerkbait rod
    2 points
  28. I have never had a 6xd sink, or even come "out of tune", and I have owned, and do own a TON of them. You got a dud. The only SK bait that I have had be a dud out of the package, out of the 100's I have are a few Red Eye Shads that took on water.......SK replaced them, and then some, I think I had two that were bad, and they replaced both, plus gave me two more extra's for the trouble, and a free hat.................good enough for me.
    2 points
  29. 2 points
  30. Remember a couple weeks ago all the hype over the FG knot, with the strong advocates, the doubters, those who would never think they could tie one efficiently? My experience since then has been this: I finally got a good one tied on my braid to FC setup on a micro (3mm) spinning rod, and have fished the setup 3 days, with that rod being used a lot. The knot goes through the guides perfectly, better than any other knot I have tried, and today it looks like new. Since that discussion I've brought a spool of braid and a length of 20 pound mono to my recliner, and have practiced the knot while watching TV. It keeps getting easier and more reliable with more reps tying the knot. I'm getting to the point where I think I can tie a good one in the boat quite quickly. Bottom line: It's a great knot, and with reasonable practice it can be tied efficiently and reliably. And, there is one thing it can do that I've not found any other knot can do, smoothly and reliably go through 3mm micros and do it time after time without fuss, getting beaten up, or mysteriously coming undone. I guess that's a number of things. great knot, worth the time and effort to get it down pat.
    1 point
  31. Today happens to me my bday and my mom sent me a couple nostalgic photos to commemorate.... one of which was a long lost gem that i hadn't seen in ~20 years... string 'em up!
    1 point
  32. I have a MF premier series spinning that throws all of the above really well. I can't imagine the same weights would be a problem with a good baitcasting reel. Extra emphasis on "good". A Chronarch 50 would pair up with it well.
    1 point
  33. I have a MH XF Rage that I use for jigs, T-rigs, C-Rigs, etc typically around 1/4oz or heavier. It's a great rod, but I would go medium weight if you're planning on fishing most shallow rivers. The MF or MXF 7'-7'2 would be an ideal stick for throwing light t-rigs, tube jigs, flukes w/weighted hook, finesse jigs, etc.
    1 point
  34. You sound like I did here was my post and all the responses. Maybe some of it will help it seems very similar. http://www.bassresource.com/bass-fishing-forums/topic/160177-line-issues/#entry1809116
    1 point
  35. My 8 yr old grandson Aiden caught these on the Zebco & Abu Gracia 5' 6" med heavy rod.
    1 point
  36. I'm a big fan of the spiderman spin caster for the 6 year old I take out although the batman rod did out fish the spiderman rod 3 to 1 the other day. On occasion when a finess presentation is needed we use the Barbie combo with great success. We stay away from The expensive Japanese combo Pokémon because we are not that advanced. I don't go crazy with the youngsters really just passing rods down as they get more advanced. Salt and fresh water are 2 diffrent animals.
    1 point
  37. I caught more fish out of my Kayak yesterday than I have caught in tournaments co-angling on nice glass boats all year. ... it was a good day
    1 point
  38. Sadly, all I can tell you is Beavers against the hay grass was most productive for me. I caught a few on black and blue chatter bait near hay grass. Very few little ones on a drop shot deep. Zero on that 10xd deep. One on a fire tiger Norman crankbait. Zero on a jig. Zero on a T rig worm big or small trick or not. Zero on a black buzzbait. Zero on a gun fish top water. Still learning I guess. Good luck.
    1 point
  39. Congrats Again & Good Luck btw - I fixed that last sentence for you . . . A-Jay
    1 point
  40. First of all, The Rig is not very effective this time of year. Best in spring and fall. I like mine light: outside arms Gamakatsu 3/0 EWG/ LFT Live Magic Shad/ no weight. Inside arm: Johnson Silver Minnow. Fish it anywhere you would fish a deep diving crankbait. My preference is running the trolling motor at about 1 1/2 mph and long-lining The Rig. Casting is challenging for Team Depends.
    1 point
  41. Fish the same places that have produced fish for you when fishing from the bank and think the opposite way around because the place that produces fish when fishing from the bank will produce when you fish from the boat. A boat offers you mobility and the opportunity of reaching places you could´t reach from the shore. You need all the fancy stuff ( like depth finders ) to catch fish from a boat ? not really, or at least not in my eyes you "must" have them, they help but they are not an absolute must, I caught thousands of fish without the need of a depth finder because where I live and when I began fishing there were no such thing as depth finders ( heck not even paper graphs ). Electronics, if used and interpreted properly can make you a more efficient "fish locator" which not necessarily means you´ll catch more fish.
    1 point
  42. Try to eliminate water. You have a fish finder , that should show you the thermocline in the summer. Water deeper than that , eliminated.
    1 point
  43. Easy.. Led Zep in 77 Jimmy Page was incredible. Followed by Bon Scott & ACDC in 78 Metallica in 97 Worst was Hank Jr. He was so drunk.. It became heckled and was awful.. Aerosmith was standout in 76 paid a buck & .2 cents to see.. Very good show.. There are many I've seen, those are the ones that stand out to me.
    1 point
  44. *insert Beaver joke here*
    1 point
  45. A bit off topic, but I'm wondering why you're limiting yourself to lines that sink. There are only a few applications where a sinking line makes a noticeable difference. Topwater (negative) and weightless soft plastics (positive) are two that come to mind. Also, why copolymer? Fluoro is great for applications where sensitivity is a concern, but braid is more so and there are abrasion resistant monos that equal, or better many copolymers. Personally, I don't get caught up in all the merchandising claims of copolymers. Something is always sacrificed when combining or coating one material with another. I go with whatever line is best for the application and that includes fluorocarbon (yuck) for deep cranking.
    1 point
  46. Since I haven't followed the tournament trail for a long time and I know there's always those that do and don't think the sonar affects bass. Years ago, it was very common to turn off the sonar while sitting over the top of a school and fishing straight down on them. I know I've tried it several times, sometimes there is a difference, other times not. I've had several times were I would catch several fish and the bite stop, but still see the fish. Turn off the sonar and the bite starts again. Now, if it was the turning off the sonar or just a coinsidence, don't know. As for TM noise, I think there's more hype than reality to just how much it affects bass. I know many times when fishing ponds where the bass rarely, if ever hear a TM, I've gotten if shallow water with the TM, turn it off and use the paddle and immediately start seeing wakes on the surface where a fish is getting out of there in a hurry. The TM seems to rarely bother them, but start using a paddle and and you are constantly seeing them getting out of Dodge as far as 25-30 feet away.
    1 point
  47. Suffix is some good stuff.
    1 point
  48. I wear a vest and stuff the pockets with plano boxes. I have weights , hooks , jig heads small spinnerbaits , small buzzbaits . They have to be able to fit in the little boxes. A couple of cranks , topwaters and a whole bunch of different soft plastics ithat I stuff in a large back pocket. I take 1 baitcast combo.
    1 point
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.