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  1. I'm feeling a little nostalgic with tears running down my cheeks . How about a thread that shows our loved ones enjoying this great sport .. My grandoa on left . My dad with some MarkTwain lake channels and blues Mom , landing a carp My uncle still fishing after neck surgery. My sons first bass .
    8 points
  2. It's a dreary, rainy, chilly day so It seemed like a great day to head to the local boat/tackle shop with the grandson. It's a given that a little time goes a long way with him so I make these visits somewhat short and try my best to look at things that he will like. That being said, had I bought everything he liked I would have spent $50,026.00. He seemed to love the Skeeter boat with some bells and whistles and a Spro BZ1 rat. While I admire his taste in boats and baits I do believe my wife would have had a coronary. lol Instead we walked out $23.00 lighter and he was happy. The one thing to always remember Is whatever the task, whether It be fishing, tackle shops, or anything you are passionate about they are little folks and for the most part have a very low attention threshold. Keep it fun for them and whether it's 10 minutes or an hour know when to leave. I'm hoping he remembers these times fondly but If not that's just fine.
    8 points
  3. Bass were sketchy today but who cares when one like this latches on to your jerk bait.A KVD yellow perch 200 gained the interest of this fellow/gal. The hit felt like a smack on the hand with a baton. The first time I saw the tail go by I`m thinkin state record LMB,Man I wish.Caught in a non tidal pond WT 45deg. I didn`t dare try the small net I carry so we did a 6 min battle til she came along boat side. It was def a two hander. I know stripped bass so I put this one at at least 30 lbs. A few photos and back to the water it went. I may never top that one for fresh water.
    6 points
  4. when fishing really only one thing to remember. treat or speak to others as you would want them to do to you . something my dad always told me. include this in every aspect of your fishing day ,and you will definatly have a better day. for example you see an elderly man on the water or maybe loading his boat ,you notice a military hat on him. be respectful , thank him or help him. just because! this doesn't guaranty you will catch more fish. but at the end of the day you will feel you had a great day. tight lines to everyone this year. thanks for the great info you guys provide. I do appreciate it! lonnie
    5 points
  5. Hard to find pics that are not of bass My kid My dad My brother RIP and a special thanks to Glenn, and 00Mod (Jeff) for getting it autographed My grandpa Me dad and gramps in 1986 My kid and dad with a double on KY Lake Me dad and brother in law
    5 points
  6. Gave away ALL my Keitech replaced by the Rage Tail Swimmer:
    5 points
  7. Caught this 7 pounder on a large berkley grass pig. I let it hit the bottom and as soon as I lifted my rod tip she was on - must have landed right in front of it. Caught the speck on a chug bug during a nice topwater bite, same day different lake.
    5 points
  8. I just use the thin Plano box I think its 3701. I use Gorilla glue and make the dividers permanent. then I use the shelving material that is kind of rubber like from Walmart and coat the inside of the lid again using Gorilla glue. Mine has been this was for over a season with no issues. None of my hooks or terminal tackle ever mixes. I think I saw this idea posted here or maybe on the internet somewhere.
    5 points
  9. I'm not sure if this will actually help anyone or not, but I thought I'd share a few things I've learned over the last few years about organizing fishing takle from the perspective of a non-boater. When first starting tournaments as a non-boater, I researched as many articles I could find about organizing tackle. Some of them seemed helpful at first, but I found that most of them are geared toward boaters. This makes sense, of course, since they have a boat literally full of lures, plastics, and other assorted tackle to have to keep organized. But almost that entire boat is available for storing that much tackle. With the design of the modern bass boat, you can have five full size boxes of crankbaits, two or three boxes of spinnerbaits, eight or nine boxes of jigs and worms, and so on.. But when you're a non-boater, you simply do not have have the luxury of much square footage to work with. You not only have a tiny bit of room available, but you need quick and easy access to all of it. And it has to be as unobtrusive as possible for you and your boater. But at the same time, you need to be prepared for absolutely any style of fishing that may be thrown your way. You're not necessarily always going to know what kind of fishing you're going to be doing at any given minute of a tournament and you'd better be prepared for the unexpected to come up. Those well-laid plans for beating the bank may change completely when they open the dam to generate power, the wind starts blowing 40mph, turning your clear water bay into chocolate milk, or a storm comes in and your planned ledge fishing suddenly turns into a run up the river to get out of the wind and elements. So what does a non-boater really need for keeping tackle organized? I originally thought it would be a good idea to have one single, large-size bag that holds absolutely everything. So I purchased one of those Bass Pro Shops tackle bags which holds six 3700 boxes and has big pockets on each side, plus a big front pocket. Big mistake. On the plus side, it holds a ton of tackle. On the negative side, it holds a TON of tackle. Soft plastics are heavy. Really heavy. Add crankbaits, chatterbaits, jigs, senkos, buzzbaits, swimbaits, drop shot weights, hooks, and all the other terminal tackle, and that adds up to a massive load of stuff all packed into one container. It's heavy enough that just picking up the bag and putting it in the boat can be a struggle. No big deal if the boat is tied to the dock and you can just step in. But often the boat is going to be parked on shore, leaving you access to only the bow, where your boater has a dozen or so expensive poles strapped down to the deck. If you don't feel like wading into the water and soaking your shoes and pants, there's not much room for hefting that bag past the trolling motor and onto the deck without landing it on one or two of your boater's poles. If you want to ruin your and your boater's day before it's even started, breaking one of his eyelets before takeoff is a great way to do it. The other problem is the expanded size of those large bags when the side pockets are full. Often (but not always) your boater will have one of the rear compartments empty for a non-boater to store a tackle bag, rain gear, drinks, etc. If they do, make good use of it. Unfortunately, the large bag almost never fits into one of those compartments unless the side and front pockets are completely empty, which they never are. And it would defeat the whole purpose of having them if they were. To make matters worse, you're going to need access to certain things quite often during the day, and if you have to keep opening the compartment every time you want to grab another soft plastic, you're going to waste a lot of time that could be better spent fishing. So... after dealing with the annoyance of one annoyingly large tackle bag, I decided to change tactics. The new, ubreakable rule is that the main tackle bag MUST be small enough to fit into the rear compartment, but still allow for easy access to its contents. This effectively limits it to four 3700 boxes, plus one smaller box that tucks into the back/outisde of the bag. Here are my individual boxes and their contents: Box 1: Jigs & Punch Rigs Includes all Craw style jigs, Bitsy Bugs and jig trailers, plus punch weights, punch skits and hooks. Box 2: Chatterbaits, Swim Jigs, Swim Jig Heads, and various colors of Swimbaits. So far I haven't had any problems with the swimbait tails taking a 'set' from being stored like this, but I may have to move things around if it does occur. Possibly leaving them in bags and keeping them in the soft plastics tackle bag. Box 3 Topwater Solid and hollowbody Frogs, Buzzbaits, Spooks, Poppers, Whopper Ploppers Box 4: Crankbaits, Spinnerbaits, Lipless Crankbaits, Jerkbaits, Wakebaits This is the interesting one, as I used to bring a 3700 size box filled with spinnerbaits and buzzbaits, and another 3700 box filled with crankbaits. I rather quickly realized that I'd use one or two spinnerbaits throughout the entire day, and maybe 2 or 3 crankbaits at most. Almost all the rest of this space was completely wasted. As a non-boater, you're not going to be going through one or two dozen crankbaits and spinnerbaits in an 8-hour tournament, so why bother bringing so many? What I found that I needed is small, carefully-chosen selection for multiple situations, which could all fit into one single 3700 box. - Top left is deep crankbaits, five of them in various colors - Top right is large squarebill crankbaits, five or six colors - Middle left is thin squarebill crankbaits, and next to it is Lipless crankbaits. - To the right of those are smaller squarebills - Bottom middle is filled with wakebaits, jerkbaits, and one large segmented crankbait. The bottom left and right corners took a little bit of work to fit in some spinnerbait holders. I sacrificed the large spinnerbait box I'd previously used, pulling out the 'rack' that holds the spinnerbaits in place. Cutting the rack into thirds, the outside portions still contained the tabs that hold the rack in place at the sides of the box. These tabs fit into the slots that make up the box separators, while the cut end of them (which do not have tabs) can either be left loose, or simply cement/epoxy the bottom of the rack in place. Now those two mini-racks hold 7 white spinnerbaits and 7 colored ones. Enough to cover pretty much all situations and depths, while taking up very little room. Box 5 is a smaller one which contains only Senkos and an O-Ring tool & nail weights. It fits neatly into a pouch on the back of the tackle bag. With all that in the main tackle bag, that leaves a second, smaller bag which remains with me, sitting on the floor at my feet while the boat is running, and on the seat while fishing. It contains the soft plastics I use the most, separated into bags of bags with the biggest possible labels on them Because this bag remains easily accessible, it also contains: 1) My most-needed/important small stuff for the day (Pliers, Scale, Line Clippers, Culling tags, Culling beam, Attractant, etc.) 2) A small box containing my most-used terminal tackle. I may need to get into this dozens of times a day, so it needs to be compact but organized. 3) A small box of drop shot hooks and weights. Drop shot is a co-anglers best friend. I can't stress that enough. Does anybody else have tackle organizing tips to share? If so, it would be interesting to see. Especially for non-boaters with limited room.
    4 points
  10. Our local lake is about 6 ft down, and when the weather is nice, we like to take the kiddos out to explore the shoreline. Shortly into our walk today, we came across an INCREDIBLE stump and roots that had washed up in the last flood. As my wife talked about how nice an addition it would be to my mom's eclectic flower bed, all I could think was OMG, BASS CONDO! Into the truck it went. Our property backs up to a small pond, but we don't own the property the pond is on. I have permission to fish there, and do so routinely, but I've never explicitly asked permission to bury fish houses (although, I might know where to find last year's Xmas tree). That being said, sometime after replying to CrustyMono's bullet weight thread, I made my move. The stump is heavy... like 60 pounds heavy. I had little doubt it would sink, but just to be safe, I strapped 40 pounds of bricks to it. I made the cold dark trek with the 100lb, awkwardly shaped habitat down to the pond. My plan was to get the thing in 3-4ft of water. A good toss of about 10 feet would get me that, and I was pretty confident I could do that. With a good grip, I walked down to the mushy bank, wound 'er up, and let it fly! The mechanics of the throw were great... but considering one of the roots I was holding onto snapped under force, Motel Fish only made it about 2 feet from the bank. Crud. It's cold. I don't want to go out there! But I have to. I'm committed now. So I take off the coat, shoes, wool socks, and pants, and brace myself. **** the water is cold! And I forgot how stinky this shin-deep, black, mucky clay actually is. With my lunker home in hand, I make my way out. Knee deep... brrr... toes starting to go numb. Oh boy, up to the family jewels... oooOOOOOOOOh boy. I can do this... I CAN DO THIS! A 7 pounder will LOVE this thing! Out to my stomach, losing feeling in my feet but sensing my opportunity is near. I take one last look at my surroundings and mentally mark my waypoint, and let go. It floated. So what do you think, Mom? Like it?
    4 points
  11. What got me started thinking about lure colors and how fish see them was Jason Lucas back in the early 60's. Jay wrote a chapter in his book and related a story about Eppinger lures a Daredevil spoons and have repeated this a few times on this site. Eppinger changed paint supplier and their lures sale went down hill fast. The complaints came from everywhere across the country and Canada. The problem was the red paint, they changed back to the original red paint supplier and solved the problem. The original red apparently looked very different under ultraviolet light. Apparently game fish of all types could see the difference. How bass see colors is unknown, all we can do is speculate. Greens including green pumpkin has been poor choice in most clear SoCal lakes, however can be good at times like post spawn. Green Weenie was a color combo that got started in SoCal hand pours 20 years ago, forgotten color today. To the best of my knowledge junebug dark purple with green flakes got started in Florida over 20 years ago and still is popular. Bass anglers maybe more fickle about colors than bass are judging from the hundreds of colors we try to feed them. Tom
    4 points
  12. My Son & I on the rocks at sunset in NJ. A-Jay
    4 points
  13. The Veritas 2.0 rod that I bought for $50 at Amazon came in today. Imagine my disappointment when I opened the inner shipping tube and discovered they sent me a 4-piece instead of a 2-piece. Wait, no one makes a 4-piece. Oh, I see, my order got mixed up and Amazon sent a couple junk rods meant for someone else. Are they even for spinning? Well, yes they are. Are they ABU Garcia? Right again. So what rods are they? Why, they're a pair of Veritas 2.0 7' M/F. Wow. I should have ordered a car. (Yes, I have to send one back. It doesn't really belong to me.)
    4 points
  14. We need to what ever it takes to get (grand)kids outdoors instead of staying inside with video games and iphones. Whitwolf, you really needed to get the Skeeter, after all, it is for the grandson.
    4 points
  15. I turned the bath tub into a lure testing tank. Anybody ever try a neko rigged Senko before? It looks pretty interesting. Also a neko rigged tube bait caught my interest too. Worms of course look great, the kind like a Reaction Innovation flirt worm have a nice fluttering tail. Anybody else try anything crazy on a neko before?? I'm ready to give this rig a fair shot this season.
    3 points
  16. Theres my old fishing buddy on the left . My grandpa and Mr. Sims in a photo dated from the 60's . Good ol boys . The fish were caught at the grain terminal , a local hot spot for carp fishing . These fish were eaten and enjoyed very much . Its the way I was raised . I wish I had those old rod and reels . I do have a split bamboo casting rod that was his . I had it re-glued , finished and new eyes added . Its one of my most cherished possessions .
    3 points
  17. Don't be afraid to think outside the box. I switched to mostly Pflueger and Okuma after years of fishing mostly Shimanos. I spend less money, and the reels perform great.
    3 points
  18. Cold, muddy water early in the year is black and red jig time. Don't know why, but I know it works.
    3 points
  19. It would be great if everyone could just be nice to each other in everyday life.
    3 points
  20. Out of all the things that could "impact" someones life, I believe an asteroid is the least of your worries. That being said. After the dust settles, fill up the crater with water and stock it with fish.
    3 points
  21. Recent favorite of mine. Shimano Crucial 6' 8" M/XF paired with a Curado 71XG. Awesome little setup.
    3 points
  22. my t rigged worms and lizards are either 3/16 or 1/4 bullets depending on the wind.
    3 points
  23. Try a different browser. Chrome is my goto.
    2 points
  24. I have one heck of a time fending off all the scantly clad young women who hang around the lake in the summer...............no really, trust me,...........it's a problem.
    2 points
  25. PHEW! Don't know what you'd be punching for with 10oz, maybe crawdads? I would expect an obvious difference in shape, maybe even diameter of the line hole, between a 2oz weight and a 3/8. But I wouldn't expect a difference in a 3/8oz "punching" weight and a 3/8oz "worm" weight. It's probably packaging/branding more than anything. If you're not fishing heavy cover, you usually won't need more than a 1oz. I buy tungsten for 1/2 - 1oz weights, and stick with lead below that. 3/8, 1/2, and 3/4 are most used weights.
    2 points
  26. It will work the 7' H/F weighs 3.9ounces Okuma Helios has a 7'6" H/F if the extra length isnt an issue, the weight is only 4.2ounces and at walmart its $134 https://www.walmart.com/ip/Okuma-Helios-7-Medium-Cast-Rod/34742964#about-item On site under ACTUAL COLOR choose Multi color then under CLOTHING SIZE pick the 7'6"1H I have a 7' M/F and 7' MH/F they are very nice rods.
    2 points
  27. Hey, I could use that free month of Prime. I'd spend most of it downloading free (Prime) books. OP. Nice to see another honest member. Karma will pay you back.
    2 points
  28. Depending on water depth a scared crawfish can come close to the surface. Now obviously we are talking 5' or less! They will also takeoff from the bank skimming along the surface before diving.
    2 points
  29. we got both our grandkids NC lifetime fishing and hunting licenses for their first birthday. great deal
    2 points
  30. My grandkids love to climb over the boats and four wheelers at BPS. They will note the various animals; check out the aquarium; have lunch or dinner in the restaurant; but they are not interested in anything other than the boats and four-wheelers. Still fun to take them to BPS even if they are not interested in fishing. Of course, they are 6 and 4 so not being interested in fishing is not unusual at that age. Give them a few years and I am sure they will want to join me for some fun time on the water.
    2 points
  31. even though they are not made any more but you can still find with research is the Decoy Hydra-tail
    2 points
  32. 2 points
  33. Good Luck on your search - I will not watch that human. Not a fan. A-Jay
    2 points
  34. Guessing your looking for something cheaper than a hudd but the same quality as a hudd. Doesn't exist. Look on forum market sites and ebay for a slight discount, if your lucky.
    2 points
  35. Sending one back is the right thing to do, you are so right. However, call them and they might just say keep it, I have seen it happen.
    2 points
  36. As typical with Bass Pro employees, they know very little about Humminbird stuff. You cannot share mapping with the Helix 7 CHIRP SI GPS G2N. Yes you need a map card in both if you want map data. Humminbirds can read Lakemaster and Navionics digital mapping. Mix or match. The connection between units is Ethernet and that will allow you to share sonar data, GPS data, sensors, and Ethernet accessories that are compatible with the Helix 7 G2N series. Yes that unit has built-in Auto Chart Live to create HD contour mapping. If you have no use for a commercial map product, it is certainly no use in purchasing any. You may want to purchase the Auto Chart Zero Line card though as you can save your Auto Chart Live data to that card. The units have a max of 8 hours of memory for mapping.
    2 points
  37. I caught this 2ish-lb large mouth tonight when I was on the phone with @road warrior lol.
    2 points
  38. Just tell your wife your Grandson bought himself a new boat and is going to store it in your driveway I remember when I was really young I wasn't really into fishing yet. I enjoyed it for small amounts of time fishing with worms and bobbers. What I really enjoyed was kayaking with my dad trying to catch frogs and turtles. I could spend hours doing that with him and that's kind of what got me hooked on being on the water. Honestly my addiction to bass fishing was mostly self-acquired, my dad enjoys and nurtures it too but I'm not sure how much he would do on his own if I wasn't into it myself. I think the important thing for young kids is to just expose them to the outdoors in as long a dose as they'll let you. Could be 20 minutes, could be 2 hours, could be 2 days (camping). If they learn to appreciate it then, they'll probably pick up at least one lifetime hobby they really enjoy from it whether it be hiking, camping, fishing, hunting, etc.
    2 points
  39. Throw a weightless t rigged craw in the gaps of lily pads & in sparse grass. Or the edges of thick grass. It'll make a believer outta ya. ?
    2 points
  40. It's theses dang teenagers with there rock and roll and long hair. Don't have no respect I tell you.
    2 points
  41. Sort of know where you're coming from. I have two young grandsons that I've been getting them more involved over the last couple of years. During the winter I build up a nice care package for them with Trout and Bass stuff. They live pretty close to me so we can take trips to Cabelas, BPS, Susquehanna or even to the local Wally to pick up stuff. They really dig it. I really dig it. I have them covered real well with UltraLite rods and tackle for trout and panfish. It's fun.
    2 points
  42. get 1 pack of 1/2oz and 1 pack of 1/4oz and try them out first before you waste money on other sizes
    2 points
  43. Thanks for all the replies! I didn't have any luck, but my nephew caught a decent little guy on an 1/8oz jig head with a berkley power grub. (This kid could catch a bass using a rock)
    2 points
  44. My girlfriend walks through the front door slowly when she gets home because she's afraid of getting hit with a flying jig.I fish in the house all the time lol
    2 points
  45. How can you be not friendly and happy when you are fishing.
    2 points
  46. Always wave to other boaters, bass fishing or not. What goes around comes around.
    2 points
  47. Deep cranking benefits from a 5:1 18" ipt give or take, up to that point it's all about preference.
    2 points
  48. I got this stuff today. Ordered it from jpangler in Japan on Saturday night and rcvd it Wednesday! Kazu from JPAngler also replied to 3 separate emails of mine within minutes.
    2 points
  49. Not in my neighborhood he ain't. But the lady down the streets got a huge pair of hands on her for a woman. Yea and he's got a vacation home there to prove it. I got my own priorities. #1. Learn to Salsa dance. #B. Find the source of the smell in my cupboards. #%. File that restraining order against Jennifer Aniston. #Iforgot. Shave my sister's back.
    2 points
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