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Showing content with the highest reputation on 10/26/2018 in all areas

  1. Hows it going guys! Yesterday, we were at Jordan Lake and I caught my first 10lb Bass with the infamous black and blue jig I thought I come here and share the photo. Im pretty excited... if you cant tell.. LOL What an experience.
    12 points
  2. Finally got my first fish on a chatterbait
    8 points
  3. Another good with with the jerkbait and jig ! To many to take pics of but got a nice photo of the biggen of the day. She swallowed the jig whole , thunk!
    6 points
  4. So a few of us Government employees (different agencies) decided to put together a "Use or Lose" tournament on the Rappahanock River. All of you who are or ever have been employed by Uncle Sugar know we can only carry over so much annual leave every year. So, we decided to put together a little TX to help burn off some of that excess leave. Figured we would do it in the middle of the week to avoid any crowds and the losers all had to bag up at least $20 worth of baits each to give to the winners. Little did we know there is a bigger TX scheduled this weekend out of the ramp we used so there were a lot of boats prefishing. Conditions were not great to say the least. Cold, 20-25 mph winds, muddy water, and iffy tide compounded by a lunar massive outgoing tide. We ended up 2nd and caught them on a number of baits....Little John cranks, Senko, Ned rig and jigs. I will say that I caught the 3 biggest on the Senko and it was a tough way to fish. Weightless in the wind and current makes it tough. Just to show how important boat positioning is, we fished down a bank with the current and never got bit. This particular bank has been good to us so we decided to turn around and fish upriver against the tide and current. 2 of the three big fish came off that decision. I was thrilled to get a Virginia Citation Smallmouth as part of our bag. We got beat by 4lbs because we could not cull out our 2 squeakers. The winners had an almost 6lb kicker. Was a fun day to be out and I'm setting up for my first Crappie trip on the Potomac tomorrow. Water has cooled off enough that they have moved up.
    6 points
  5. Finally got this pic from my buddy. He snapped it over the summer on our trip up to Maine. Turned out to be my PB smallie. Caught at 40ft in water that had 30ft visibility. It was awesome being able to SEE the fight almost every step of the way.
    6 points
  6. "Find the bait, Find the bass" approach is generally geared toward larger bodies of water which allow the bass to further spread out, it doesn't necessarily apply so much for a pond. Just stick with your basic fall approach, topwater at first and last light, crankbaits/jerk baits, and soft plastics
    4 points
  7. i'm still a kid...still go to creeks and forget all about sophisticated bass fishing...and enjoy His creation and catch fish... good fishing...
    4 points
  8. The wind shifted out of the north today . High blue bird skies . Water temp 54 degrees . I caught 42 bass on a spinnerbait with 10 over 15 inches . 2 were four lbers .Here is one of them . The first two hours I only had three fish but man they turned on after that .
    4 points
  9. Last week I was fishing on a cold wet day when I got a backlash on a jerkbait and my rod popped out of my hands overboard. Of course I had the autopilot going and the rod I grabbed to snag it with before it when down too far got tangled with the rod next to it. Basically everything that went wrong did. However, this story has a happy ending, the lake I was fishing is super clear so I went back up yesterday since it was finally a calm day, I cruised back and forth over the area but didn't see it. We fished for a while and went back over to the spot when the sun was higher but a slight breeze was making it a little difficult to see in the water. As we drifted over the area looking on the downwind side of the boat my dad spotted it in the first two minutes. We tossed out a marker buoy and ended up having to tie a big spoon on the end of my aquaview to snag it out of 16ft of water. Even though the fishing wasn't that great yesterday getting my rod back made my day.
    3 points
  10. I hibernate (take a lot of naps) and dream about fishing.
    3 points
  11. The whole moderate action to keep trebles from ripping out is well over played on the internets. I feel the moderate action aids in better bait action after deflection when using deeper divers. In the case of shallow cranks, like square bills, or for traps, I like a fast action. This so I can recover and react quick to when the bait hits weeds or wood. In other words, you'll be fine. Now, do I think you need a true med-mod? Absolutely. One of my favorite sticks for tossing lighter, diving cranks is a 7' MM stick. But for what you listed, you got it right.
    3 points
  12. Well 8 months later I finally caught one!! I was snatching it through milfoil, water temp was 66. I will definitely be fishing it more this way, @Bluebasser86 was kind enough to make me some more since I currently only have the 1. I'm hoping to get some bites in spring also when there is no grass
    3 points
  13. Conveniently shaped too. ?
    3 points
  14. I jumped into this discussion late. Wish I would have mentioned that 3000 size Shimanos have a bigger handle knob. Higher end Shimano reels have removable knobs and can be changed out. I use left handed PG II baitcaster knobs (BNT4240) on my 2500 FA's.
    3 points
  15. I went to the creek today and I was able to catch about five small bass on the Rebel Wee Craw and also caught a couple of small bluegills on a hook and splitshot with a piece of worm on it. Thank you for all of the advice, next time I go I think I will try an inline spinner.
    3 points
  16. You just wait til the water cools down. That Flat75 will flat catch them in the late fall and early spring when the water is so cold that they won't bite much else. .
    3 points
  17. Naw...he's just replacing the porta-john that was on the bow so its more of an upgrade. ?
    3 points
  18. @J Francho: You must have a truly amazing boat to install that! I gotta stick with an empty bottle on my yak. Sigh!
    3 points
  19. i remember those days as a kid. we would catch small grasshoppers and june bugs, whatever we could find. some of those fish were so little they would just steal our bait, but every now and then you’d snag one.
    3 points
  20. Yeah, but I bet he got the spider, anything else is just collateral damage.
    3 points
  21. Hello people, The reel arrived today! ? I can say it is lighter than I expected and it is really cool!. There are two things which surprising to me, one was this reel is unprovided of the anti-reverse lever (what is not a problem for me since I always have activated the anti-reverse when I am fishing) and the second is it is not needed to lube the roller of the pick-up (in the manual says is not necessary due to sealed system). I feel the drag is really precise and smooth; and very very power, taking into account the size of the reel. I want to test this saturday drop-shotting in a small lake near to my home, I will tell to us my experience. I put here a pic of the reel, I charged with 18lb Sufix 832 braid and a 8lb fluorocarbon leader. Regards,
    3 points
  22. This past weekend was the end of the year tournament for our little Thursday night group. It was scheduled to be at Milford Lake near Junction City, KS which is one of the best smallmouth bass lakes in the state. Mother Nature had other plans, dumping nearly a foot of cold rain and even some snow in the area a week before we arrived, raising the lake over 9' and turning the water to coffee with cream color, dropping the water temp over 10* in the process. To say the bite was trying in practice was an understatement. @gardnerjigman and I got there Thursday morning full of excitement and hope. Those feelings died and were nearly gone by the end of the day, having boated 2 drum, 1 small wiper, and 1 non-keeper smallmouth. Being the tournament director of sorts for our group, I broke the bad news, but 3 more boats were arriving the next day and we were hoping that something would be found and at least show that some fish could be caught. By noon the next day, with all of our combined efforts, a drum and 1 white bass had been caught, I'd caught both of them on back to back cast on a deep crankbait and only one other boat had even seen a fish. An emergency meeting was called for lunch at the cabins and we all decided to eat our money we'd spent on the cabins (which was relatively little), and fish a couple lakes closer to home in hopes of better fishing (it couldn't have been much worse). Day one we fished Lake Shawnee in Topeka, KS, a 400 acre lake with big largemouth and smallmouth but lots of pressure. This day was no exception as there was another small club fishing and several weekend anglers in boats and kayaks, close to 20 total on the water fishing. At take off, everyone zoomed down the lake while GJM and I idled 100 yards to the back of the launch cove and started fishing the shallow water in the back of the cove. The water temp was showing to be in the high 50's and I'd noticed lots of shad in the back of the cove. The bitter cold air temps said slow down and fish main lake, my instincts and Garmin was telling me to find shad eaters up shallow. 5 minutes into the morning as I was fishing my homemade shad colored bladed jig around shallow clumps of grass, a fish blew up on a shad inside a broken pond dam that use to be a water park on the lake. I fired a cast into less than a foot of water, the wake of my bait was intercepted by a much larger wake and I quickly had our first solid keeper of the morning in the boat. We caught 2 more small keepers in the back of the cove, and I missed solid feeling fish in the middle of a big laid down tree on a jig. The next back end of a cove produced 2 more small keepers to give us a limit in the first 1.5 hours. That really let us relax and just fish. I had one spot in the back of a big, flat cove that everyone overlooks, but it's very hit or miss. We had a limit so we thought it was alright to try it and see what happened. We ended up culling out all 4 of our small fish in that cove, first with a jig fish in a lay down. Then 3 more in the very back on bladed jigs, only one ended up still in our bag by the end of the day. We bounced around a lot from there, catching quite a few fish but all small. For some reason the east side of the lake seemed to be the better side for quality bites. The missed jig bite from the morning was bugging me, so we ran back to the tree. First pitch, almost the exact same result, thump and nothing on the hookset. I flipped right back in and pinned her this time. Kind of a big head, skinny body fish, but still our biggest of the day and the overall big bass of the day. Only about 45 minutes left at that point, we thought we might as well bounce around to a few more lay downs and try to cull one more time. There's not many lay downs, so it's kind of a rough pattern for the guy in the back, so GJM tried to make the best of it and picked up a Ned rig to try to win the big trash fish pot for the day. One of his first cast he set the hook, but instead of the slow thump of a big drum, there was instantly a solid smallmouth streaking across the top. The last minute Ned rig miracle culled out our last fish under 2 pounds and gave us 11.12 pounds for what turned out to be a brutally tough day. We were the only team with a limit, and in the lead by 4.5 pounds going into the second day. Day 2 was on a much bigger lake, Clinton Reservoir in Lawrence, KS, which is about 7,000 acres. It's not well known for it's bass fishing but the population is doing pretty well, both largemouth and smallmouth and good sized versions of both. Knowing we had a good lead, our number 1 concern was to get 5 fish before we worried about getting anything bigger. With that in mind, marinas are great places to catch bass so we started right in the marina to fish a few places I'd caught them before. This morning started much like the day before, maybe 5 minutes into the day, I ran my spinnerbait down a wave breaker dock and caught our first solid keeper of the morning before the other guys were even to their spots. A few cast later, I really shocked myself by catching another small keeper on a crankbait. Further back in the marina, on what was really a nothing bank, GJM got his first bite of the morning and put #3 in the boat on a spinnerbait. 50' more we were in the very back and I caught #4 on a beaver next to a stump, which would prove to be our only bite on a slow moving bait of the day. As we rounded the secondary point, I caught our smallest keeper of the morning, but we had #5 in the boat just over an hour into the morning. We hopped across the cove and GJM culled out that little one with a slightly larger fish before we jumped out into the already churning main lake, that's when I knew we had really made the right call. I was hoping to find some of the quality smallmouth I'd be finding in small numbers down the lake, but those banks were crawling with big, hungry white bass that would not leave our spinnerbaits alone. As we worked down a usual flyover bank that I decided to fish because it has a few lay downs and stumps with a channel swing, I pitched my spinnerbait next to a lay down and thought I had hung up instantly but had actually thrown it right on top of a hungry fish. It tried hard to get back in the tree but quickly had a nice cull in the boat. Just around the point from there are 2 boat ramps with slide in docks that I love fishing on all our lakes because the fish seem to love hiding by and under them. First pitch with my spinnerbait next to them, I caught the twin to my last fish that fought like it was twice it's size. It was about 11AM at this point, and this would prove to be one of the last bass I would catch for the day. It seemed the white bass hit the banks in mass and I could catch nothing else. I did finally catch my first ever wiper from Clinton a spinnerbait which won us the big trash fish pot for the second day in a row. The next little boat ramp launch area we stopped at produced two fish, GJM caught both of them, one was a dink, the other was our last cull of the day. I was nervous at weigh in, knowing how tough this lake is, it still has the potential to produce 25+ pound bags. As it turned out, there had been a total of 2 bass caught by the other boats. One was a very nice 4.96 pound fish, which was funny because we were motoring to the spot with 20 minutes left when they came around a corner and were obviously going to get there first so we left it to them, and that's when they caught it. So as it turned out, all my worrying was for nothing as we could have stayed home and still won, but we ended up with 22.97 pounds over 2 days and won by over 13 pounds. Sometimes you just make all the right calls and then fish clean on top of it, and I feel like we really did that both days. Felt really good to end the tournament season on a high note.
    2 points
  23. In my previous outing summer patterns were still lingering like a bad hangover. Almost no bait balls, much less bass feeding on them. Low activity. Hot temperatures. Then I had to keep the boat in the garage to do some work on the trailer. After two weeks I finally was able to take her out again. What a difference those two weeks made. Water temps dropped from 73 to 67. My graphs, previously lifeless, now showed a ton of activity. Excited to be fishing shallower, I pitched my jig outside a weedline at a cove opening and the rest is history. A friendly kayaker helped take this picture for me: Picture actually makes it look smaller, but I promise you it's a 8.09 lber. Just a tad skinny. If I had caught her with a full belly.... Been fishing in California for 4 years and I could not break 7 lbs. Slightly embarrassed, but sometimes people think huge bass just jump in your boat out here. Lakes here get a lot of pressure. On to double digits! Some areas in the country have people already winterizing boats. Quite the opposite here. We're at the end of the fall transition into fully fledged "fall" fishing. Bass are getting more active and I managed to pull out some 3s and a 4 in addition to the 8. Can't wait to capitalize again.
    2 points
  24. So it’s 38 degrees here in New York with a low for 33 tonight decided to get some jerkbait fishing in today. Caught about 12 in a few hours , they were all caught with a loooong pause between 5-10 seconds. Was almost back to the canoe out in spot and decided one more cast and twitch twitch BOOM just heavy so I knew this was today so best. Took my time and got her in the boat. A nice 5 pounder .. now i took a look inside and noticed a tail sticking out ! It didn’t look like a bluegill and I didn’t wanna pull the fish out of its stomach, she was obviously eating up for winter. So I tossed her back and decided eh one more ! Usually I would end on that but I just had a gut feeling. Idk if anyone remembers but a few months ago I asked if perch could be a main forage .. I have never seen bluegill here but I thought I saw a perch.. well I casted back to the exact same spot I caught the 5 pounder and what do you know! A giant perch ! Looks like I found out what they are eating
    2 points
  25. Dang. Im just glad summer's finally over .
    2 points
  26. I've been starting to feel the depression set in for that last 2 weeks. I've pulled out some of my tackle trays and have been scanning the web for tackle deals. Yup, its over for this year.
    2 points
  27. I know what you mean. It was chilly here today. The temperature only got up to 75 degrees. ?
    2 points
  28. Well the dude that was supposed to buy this thing backed out, so I guess it’s fate. I just wont take it out with me until I get it down a little better. at least practicing will help some with the fishing itch this winter if nothing else. Looks like I’m headed to wal mart to buy some more cheap mono and some plugs. ill keep this thread updated and maybe I can post some videos for everyone to critique my form?
    2 points
  29. For this one, they estimated based off a photograph. I can't say whether it's 3 lbs. or 6 lbs., but it isn't 9 lbs. I've heard so many shore anglers talk about "ten pounders" they caught. Happens at nearly every spot I frequent. One time I hear a guy on his phone screaming he caught a ten pounder. The fish is on a rope. When he gets off the phone, he starts bragging to anyone that passes. I told him nice bass, but it's not 10. He's like, it has to be. Pull out my scale, and it's barely over three. Told him it's a great fish for the spot. Probably ruined his summer. Showed him the picture below, and asked him how big he thought it was. He said that has to be a ten pounder. The scale was waffling at the 5 lb. mark.
    2 points
  30. It's interesting that so many areas across the country have been slow fishing when this is the time of year things start to pick up after peak summer water temperatures. I was on the SC DNR website and all of the fishing reports on the lakes that I checked stated that the bass fishing was extremely poor compared to past fall activity. But I won't be deterred. I think I'm going to call it an early day and fish for a few hours this afternoon.
    2 points
  31. Actually, my Hobie has a "relief port" if I remove the Mirage drive.
    2 points
  32. The bass in that pond swim around with those big shad all day everyday and are not intimidated by the size of them. Instead, they eat them every chance they get! If you own any heavier rod and reel combos, show them something that looks like those gizzard shad with a big swimbait or glidebait. Plenty of cheaper options nowadays like Savage Gear’s 3Ds or River2Sea’s SWaver. Throwing big baits seems odd and takes patience-until you catch a toad! Good luck out there EG!
    2 points
  33. 2 points
  34. In the spring, during the spawn, it’s usually no problem to target them from the shore near damns, rocks, or cover. The rest of the season is probably a different story as they tend to spend a lot of their time suspended over deep basins of main lakes.
    2 points
  35. @Gundog: Would love to have that luxury ... but would be tough to fish from a kayak turned submarine. Been there, done that for eight years in the Navy.
    2 points
  36. Most are pretty easy. These are a pain. The twitching bar adds a lot of complexity.
    2 points
  37. Pick several lures that will effectively fish the cover and terrain that your lake has to offer and use them all . Dont let the cooler temps intimidate you . Bass are likely to be awaiting prey to ambush so covering water with a spinnerbait and crankbait are good choices . Earlier this week first day of a cold front I tried crankbait , plastic craw , buzzbait and spinnerbait . I caught 1 on a buzzbait and 41 on a spinnerbait .
    2 points
  38. I have retrieved several rods for guys over the years. All you have to do is take a metal sap stringer and open the snaps. Tie a cord to it and toss it out. Slowly drag it over the area until you hook the line or the rod. Mission accomplished.
    2 points
  39. @Tim Kelly I seen this in the news! This is why you dont use a blow torch lol!! ?
    2 points
  40. Nice. LOL Spotting a rod in 16' of water. I have trouble even imagining water that clear. I couldn't even spot a bus in 16' of water around here.
    2 points
  41. Caught a couple of these in The Gulf not very big but a cool catch!
    2 points
  42. I think I've thrown a total of two casts at laydowns while using a chatterbait. I had to buy a new chatterbait twice. My favorite cover to fish with them is submerged vegetation, it's closer to a swimjig than a rattle trap as far as getting caught in the grass goes. They handle fine around rocks as well in my experience, there just aren't many places I fish with rock cover. Just throw on your favorite 3.5 inch swimbait as a trailer and your good to go.
    2 points
  43. 75 black also chartreuse/blue i wish that had a chrome.
    1 point
  44. It's a fact that fresh water is most dense (heavy) until it reaches 39.4 degrees, then it gets less dense (lighter weight) until it freezes at 32 degrees. For this reason water freezes on the surface, not on the bottom of lake. Climates that don't freeze or get colder then 50 degrees still create thermoclines and turn over. Not all lakes develop a thermocline do to current, aeration devices or wind mixing the water column. Thermocline is basically a 4 to 5 degree warm water temperature change to colder water within a few feet and can be anywhere from a few feet below the surface to 30' or 50' deep in some lakes. Cold fall air temps slowly cool the warm surface water and the colder cooled surface water sinks until the heavier cold water out weighs the deeper warmer water and turns over sinking to the bottom. The turn over creates a mixing of the water column top to bottom. This often bring bottom decayed matter to the surface and can smell like sulfer or rotten eggs for a few days. Bass being warm water fish are affected negatively from the sudden change in water temps, usually about 2 weeks to settle down. Tom
    1 point
  45. Mine too. I catch more fish in October than any other month of the year thanks to the Rattletrap. Some big ones too.
    1 point
  46. Use a downsized bait and light tackle. More than likely there will be some sort of bluegill, perch, or trout in the stream. We had something similar where I grew up in Connecticut. It would be shallow in some areas and deeper pools in others. One of the deeper pools was at the back of our property and as kids we used it as a swimming hole. One day I went out there wearing a swim mask to go look around under the water. While I'm under the water I turn around and there's a 6" fish just a few inches from my mask. I nearly pooped my pants, then went running out of the water. I never did fish there, though. We had a few ponds nearby with tons of yellow perch and fished those instead.
    1 point
  47. I go frequently but can never find items on sale other than Xmas or spring sale.
    1 point
  48. I pour the 1/4 oz Poison Tail a lot. Although m mold is a little bit worn, the Mustad 91768 will fit in there no problem. Also the Mustad 4/0 32886 fits in there as well. On a brand new mold you may have to take the hook and place it in the cavity, close the mold halves together and take a hammer and lightly tap the halves together until they close tight. This, is because the hook eyes might be slightly bigger. But in no way does this cause any problems with the mold, and you will not get any flash. Also use Frankford Arsenal mold release on your molds. Makes it really easy to pour and release your head once the lead fills the cavity.
    1 point
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