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everythingthatswims

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Everything posted by everythingthatswims

  1. They have a detectable smell to me, but it is definitely more tolerable than gulp. Big plus--- there aren't any juices to get all over whatever fabric or rod handles come within striking distance
  2. Was this where I think it was? I caught a bunch there on a jerkbait!
  3. I only had a cold front mess up the fish one time this summer, it had been 85-90 degree highs every day, then it got down around 50 overnight and the following day had air temps in the 60s. That coupled with bluebird skies shut them off. Besides that, I find that typically in the late summer into the fall, cold fronts get them amped up. You may have to adjust, but fishing can be really good! And as always, deep fish aren't influenced as much, so you can always target them if you think a front has the bite messed up.
  4. Yesterday, my friends and I drove a good bit to a new lake with the intention of getting away from the storm that was hammering our area with rain (rain isn't an issue, but when air temps are in the 50s with pouring rain, your hands don't work well). The goal was to catch a mixed bag of bass, as the lake we fished is home to all three species. We didn't catch a ton of fish, but we had a few quality bites, and one that made the trip 100% worthwhile! Between the three of us, I would say we caught about 15 smallmouth, 6 or 7 largemouth, and one spotted bass. We caught the smallmouth on bluff walls with a ned rig, a couple out deep on a jig, and some on walking baits. The largemouth were caught on top, a jig, a spinnerbait, and one on a 6xd. The lake has very steep banks with some good wood cover, and the better fish were definitely on laydowns, even the brown fish! Most of our bites were on wood or brush up shallow, but we did catch a handful of fish out deep on brush piles, including the big Kentucky spot! The highlight of the day was when I caught my new PB smallmouth, she measured in at 21" long, and weighed 4lbs 15oz. I have fished a lot of lakes that have big smallmouth, so to break my PB on a little lake in WV is pretty special. She blew up on a super spook jr and missed it, but luckily she came back a few seconds later! Once smallmouth get up around the 5lb mark, they are definitely in a league of their own. This is only the second smallmouth close to the 5lb mark that I have encountered, and I was just as shocked by this one as the last! You know it's a big fish when it dwarfs a 3lber Also, I found that this fish was also caught in April, it is a great example of how C&R can give the opportunity for more than one person to get a shot at the same high caliber fish!
  5. Had a fun day on the lake yesterday, I got finished up with class at noon and obviously headed out shortly thereafter! I caught a couple largemouth in the grass, then I went out deep and found some crazy stuff with my electronics. There were unbelievable amounts of baitfish, and when I saw fish near the bottom underneath them, I knew it was gonna go down. I caught smallmouth, walleye, and pike on a Berkley Dredger 25.5, it was a blast!
  6. Big walleye = top predator. She's gonna do what she wants!
  7. When I was little, I caught a 6-7lb bass that ate a bluegill I was reeling in. I was pretty experienced in letting a big bass swallow the bluegill when this happened (it happened quite often). The difference this time was that I was using a size 12 Aberdeen hook, which can't hook a bass that size if it's already in the bluegill's mouth. Somehow, when the bass ate the bluegill, the hook pulled out of the bluegill's mouth, went through the gills of the bass, and wedged itself on the edge of the bass's gill plate (like how the hook on a bungee cord is only held in place by pressure) . Weird fish stuff like that just happens to me, @A-Jay calls it mojo, I'm not sure what to call it!
  8. I hear you on this one. Watermelon seed vs watermelon red flake from zoom look very similar but I swear the red flake catches more.
  9. I'm not a huge fan of night fishing either, too disorienting (I couldn't tell if I had a fish or my buddy's line when this one bit, and then we had a horrendous net job). This outing started as an evening trip, but my friend and I decided to stay a couple hours after the sun went down. There is a piece of offshore structure that consistently produces big fish, and we had to give it a shot!
  10. PA Fish... T-rigged ol monster, 3/8oz brass weight with a glass bead to make it go clackity-clack in the dark. Pulled it into some stuff and shook it around as I slowly brought it over whatever it is down there. I actually didn't think it was a fish, even after I set the hook! Ol' girl was heavy.
  11. Braid and leaders may be a touchier subject than c&r when it comes to bass fishermen, it gets us in the feels. Justin Lucas made a video talking about braid and a leader for flippin and people went nuts over it, he said he knew they would though!
  12. What I forgot to mention in my post is that I am talking about spinning tackle in terms of braid and a leader, since the OP was talking spinning gear. All of my spinning rods have 10lb braid, and I will fish 6-12lb fluoro leaders depending on the application. The only time I could see myself using straight FC on a spinning reel would be very deep drop shot fishing, the big boys in Waddington were in a situation where that could make a difference over braid to leader, fishing in 20-50+' in strong current. FC has much less resistance on the water since it sinks and is dense, so you have better contact with the bait. Problem is, FC has a bad attitude when you put it on a spinning reel! I use straight fluoro and straight braid on all but one of my baitcasters. I would say 80-90% of my baitcaster fishing is with FC. Rarely do I fish with braid, when I do I am probably frog fishing, or dropping a texas rig in heavy vegetation. I will put on a mono leader for topwaters with treble hooks, but that is just to keep the line out of the hooks. I never use braid with a leader for things such as a t-rig/jig, always straight fluoro somewhere in the 12-20lb ballpark. When I have tried jig fishing with 50lb braid to 20lb fluoro, I break off too many fish on the hookset. That being said, the best jig fisherman I have ever fished with (he kicks my butt OFTEN) fishes exclusively that setup. He and I have very different hooksets, and that is why the braid works for him and not for me.
  13. Lots of work for little pay, and jobs are hard to come by. I wouldn't stand out much in that field either. With a marketing degree I think I will be able to set myself apart from those who will be looking for the same jobs as me. Not to mention the connections I have made and am making in the fishing industry.
  14. There have been plenty threads about this, and you will always have people on both sides of the argument. In clear water, a fluorocarbon leader makes a difference because of visibility, but there are many reasons besides visibility that they are important. Sensitivity is huge, braid to a leader is more sensitive than straight FC or mono (mono leader on braid is less sensitive than FC, surprises me with that short of a piece of line but it is). The leader also gives the bait a better action than straight braid, since braid floats. Lastly, you will have a much better hookup ratio with braid to a leader over mono, because of the no stretch. I would LOVE to go head-to-head in a clear body of water against one of the guys who says bass can't see braid
  15. I have spent the past month putting my Revo SX through the wringer, and it has held up well! From what I can tell, it is a great reel for just about any application you can think of. I have a 7:3:1, and have used it for swimbaits, spoons, jigs, a Carolina rig, and some topwater. I have been fishing 15lb fluorocarbon on it, I picked a versatile line so that I could use it for a variety of baits and techniques. The reel casts extremely well, I have mainly used it with very low brake settings, and light spool tension. With a 1/2oz football jig, I am hitting 40-50 yards if I want to. I haven't tried anything extremely lightweight, but the reel isn't designed for that anyway. It has performed very well down around the 1/4oz range. The brakes can be adjusted to have a lot of influence on your casts. If you do that, distance definitely goes down, but it is almost impossible to backlash the reel, which could be useful in high winds or for an inexperienced angler. The reel has plenty of power, I caught my biggest fish of the summer (a 6lb largemouth) on it and had no problem convincing her to away from the standing timber with it. I also used it to whoop some very mean smallmouth on Bassmaster Live ! The only flaw I have found is the drag. It was extremely smooth to begin with, but now it is mildly sticky. It is still better than many reels I own. I am not sure why baitcaster drag systems don't perform very well, but among the sub $150 reels I am familiar with, they tend to get sticky in a short period of time. With that being said, drag isn't too important with many baitcaster applications, but if your drag does get tested and it is a bass on the other end, it probably isn't a baby!
  16. I actually just made the switch to a marketing major. I never could have predicted it when I entered my freshman year with no boat and zero experience even driving one, BUT it seems that my life has headed in a direction where that degree will help me a lot more than the one I had been pursuing. I no longer see myself with a career as a fisheries biologist or something similar. I will always be a total fish nerd (and I will surely miss getting to study them), but considering the opportunities that lie ahead, compared to what I have heard from those in the field of fisheries management, the change was necessary.
  17. Never a bad day when you get all 3!
  18. No problem! I love re-living it, and I get to re-analyze some stuff too. Plus, I'll have a bunch of stories I can go back and read when I'm an old salt.
  19. Recently, I competed in a tournament on Milford Lake, out in Kansas where @Bluebasser86 resides. I could talk for quite some time about the tournament itself, but I think most of you know enough about it already, so I won't go into detail about the format. I will say, those were some strange smallmouth out there, they didn't read the smallmouth rulebook. We only had one practice day, so our competition days were also used to dial in the lake further, because one day can only teach you so much about a place. Much of this post is going to be about how I adapted to changing conditions throughout the week, I am really proud of my decision making and how well things panned out. I am working on treating each tournament day somewhat like a day of fun-fishing, where I would never try to force something even though "it worked the day before". I think we can all learn to be better tournament anglers and fishermen in general if we are willing to go with the flow a little bit while out on the water. I have kept an open mind and adjusted lot this year during tournaments, it has helped tremendously. (and yes I know I'm not even close to the first to say this!) Competitors are allowed to talk to one another about the lake, so my tournament partner Casey and I shared information about our practice day. We both spent about half of our time shallow, and half of it out deep. I started on the north end of the lake, and spent about 3 hours there. I didn't catch a single bass, but Casey found some topwater smallmouth action on the south end by the dam where he started, so I headed that way. We both assumed that the smallmouth would be in the 20'+ range this time of year, but we spent a considerable amount of time fishing deep without a single fish to show for it. It seemed like most of the (catchable, for us) smallmouth were in less than 10', topwater seemed to be the best way to catch them because you had to cover a lot of water, but if you did locate an area with some concentrated fish, a ned rig and football jig were good ways to get them to bite. Our practice day was fairly windy and overcast/rainy, so the topwater bite produced well. Casey was catching his fish on a whopper plopper 110, and I was using a super spook. We determined that the best fishing was in areas with large rocks, some type of point either main lake or secondary, and immediate deep water access. Rock transitions in particular would produce bites, but you would also catch them away from those areas. The best topwater bite during practice was after 12:00, but it was windy and rainy. I only caught 6 smallmouth on the first day of practice, which ran from daylight until 5:30, and only one of them was on a topwater. I didn't spend much time with the topwater, but Casey caught so many on it that I decided to make it my main game plan for the first day of competition. I made one really good discovery, a main lake point with all of the right stuff. It had good chunk rock that transitioned to gravel on the creek side of the point, and had a small flat in the 3-7' range, which then dropped off into 20' past a bluff that was about 10 yards out from the point. I caught one small fish on a ned rig, and a few casts later a 3lber on a football jig. Oddly enough, both fish were up on the flat, not off of the bluff like where you would think a summer smallmouth would be in 80 degree water. This further solidified the idea that we had about the bass being relatively shallow (at least when they were feeding) I left the spot after catching the nice fish, and decided I would start there on day one. Day one of competition was a night and day difference in terms of weather conditions. It was fairly calm, but still overcast, so I assumed the topwater bite would be stellar. I started on my main lake point and caught a 3lber on probably my 5th cast of the day with a super spook, I was pumped about what I assumed would be a great day of topwater action. I ran some secondary points in the creek that produced fish in practice, and it was pretty dead everywhere I went. I went back to the main lake point and caught one more keeper before we had our half-time, this time on a super spook jr, a downsize that ended up being a very good call. Despite what I thought were "ideal" topwater conditions, Kansas bass are so used to the wind that they get pretty lazy if it isn't blowing. It makes sense though, bass are very in-tune with their environment, so when something that is usually consistent changes, they are going to be sensitive to it, and it is all relative. I decided to start on that point again after halftime, and hooked a solid smallmouth on the small spook, but it jumped off. I was using 14lb mono, and after jumping that fish off I switched to braid with a leader, these fish were being very timid about eating the bait, and when a fish barely touches a hook, the braid helps it stick even if you don't react in time with a hook set. 5 casts after losing the first fish, I hooked one about the same size and got it in the boat. I caught a small keeper shortly thereafter on the spook jr, and then had 4 different blowups on consecutive casts in a small area (still on that same point). I picked up the ned rig and made a few casts into the area, picking up my 5th fish for the day. Since we only had to beat one fisherman, I decided to back off of the point, he had only caught one fish that morning and I knew he wasn't doing well. I ran some new water but didn't discover a whole lot. I ended up advancing while Casey did not, he stuck with the topwater all day and didn't have much to show for it. Had the conditions been the same as practice, he probably would have crushed them, but the fish were in a completely different mood. That main lake point was the only thing that saved my butt, I caught all 5 fish off of it that day. Day two was much better for me in terms of conditions, we had lots of wind, and it was overcast. I started on my main lake point again, prepared to throw topwaters, but that was definitely not going to happen! My trolling motor was barely staying in the water! I threw a crankbait for a few casts with no love, and decided to rig up a jerkbait. I hadn't caught any on it in practice, but it made sense to throw with all of that wind pounding the point, I figured there were probably some jacked up baitfish twirling around up there after getting smashed into the rocks by a wave. Whether or not any of that was happening, I did boat a keeper on the jerkbait fairly quickly. This was a huge confidence boost, because I hadn't been able to get any other reaction bite besides a topwater, and this gave me a different approach if there was too much wind on an area. I headed back into the creek, and fished all of the same stuff as the day before. I had to shift back and forth between a super spook and an evergreen shower blows 125 (pencil popper). There was enough chop in some places that the spook couldn't stay on the surface, and that is why I made the switch. However, the spook still seemed to be the best bait if it was calm enough to keep it on the surface, so I used it when I could. I was getting a decent number of bites, but they were being typical smallmouth and blasting the topwater into the air most of the time. When I did manage to get a hook in one, they were quality fish (over 1.5lbs, not the 13, 14, and 15oz fish that many other anglers were catching). I had one secondary point where two fish swirled on my bait and didn't get hooks. There was a decent amount of wind there, so I picked up the jerkbait and fished back through the area, picking up my best fish of the day, a 2-6, right where I had a fish chase the topwater. Again, big confidence boost! We had our halftime and the guy I was fishing against didn't have as much weight as me, but certainly wasn't out of it, and he had caught them well the day before. I was feeling great about the conditions, but it was hurting the way he was fishing, which was what I had hoped for with the weather shift. I went back out and ran the same stuff as the morning, picking up another fish in the 2.5lb range, this time on the super spook. After that , I had another fish swirl on my spook in the same place that I followed-up with the jerkbait that morning. I gave the fish about 5 minutes, then headed back down the bank to where it was, and bam-- caught it on the jerkbait, right where he was when he missed the topwater. That put me over 10 pounds, so I left the creek and looked for new water. I upgraded by an ounce but that was all, I didn't need it anyway, I advanced to the final round with about a 2 pound lead over my competitor. Day three was VERY calm. I started on "my" main lake point, and could instantly tell that things had changed drastically. During the first two competition days, the hybrid striper and white bass were thick on every bank, you could constantly see them chasing baitfish, and had to catch about 10 of them for every one smallmouth. I didn't have a single one of those buggers chase my topwater, and I did not like it at all! I fished the secondary points that produced on day one, but had zero takers, the lake seemed dead. I started running new water and got into some sub-keeper sized smallmouth on top, and finally caught one that weighed 13oz, but that was it. We had our half time an hour early because of a thunderstorm. I knew my competitor would be ahead of me before coming into the weigh-in and I prepared myself for it. He had been fishing solely with a spinning rod, and calm conditions played to his advantage. When our weights were revealed, I was 9 pounds back, and I knew he wasn't going to slow down. I hoped the storm would be followed by wind, but that didn't happen. I knew I had to make a big change. I started again on "my" point, and caught a 2 pounder on the small spook, but that was it for topwater. Part of me wanted to run my secondary points again, in hopes that the storm changed the fish's mood, but I knew I had to slow down and catch the fish that lived on that point. I had seen and caught quality fish each day there, I just had to figure out how to catch more of them. I picked up the 1/2oz football jig that I caught one fish on during practice, and caught a good fish on my first cast! I had a limit within the next 5-7 casts, and proceeded to have one of the craziest flurries of bass catching in my life. Within an hour, I had passed the biggest bag of the event by over a pound! It felt like it was all coming together, and I was feeling like it was "my time". I continued to catch fish on that point, until things slowed and I was only catching fish around 2lbs, when I needed a bite around 3lbs. I opted to leave and let the spot rest for a while, then come back for the remaining hour of fishing time I had. Upon my return, I caught two fish on the jig, but neither would cull out a smaller one. I switched to the ned rig, and got two more bites, but again, no cull. I really thought it was my time, but I ended up getting beat by 4 ounces. I didn't lose any fish, and didn't make any regrettable decisions. We both smashed them and unfortunately there can only be one winner, I just got the short end of the deal. The only thing I would do differently if I had a replay is to stay on that point for the whole time, but those fish were pretty sensitive to pressure, so I still think giving them time to rest was the right call. I had a blast out on the water, and was blown away by all of the support I got, especially from BR! Hoping to get another crack at it before my time at WVU is up! The one thing that ruffled my feathers was how many locals wanted to come up to the college competitors and tell us how much "stuff" we were "missing". For one day of practice on an unfamiliar lake, I think we had a pretty good showing, we were all dialed in on similar stuff. It's easy to talk about how much is being overlooked while you are parked in a chair watching it on a t.v. screen
  20. I fished with Dave this winter on the hot side and we had a good time catching up and telling fish stories! And yes, that was my very first time on a bass boat, you are THE MAN for giving up your seat and letting me go! I learned a lot that day!
  21. I sent something to a friend at BASS, I'm not sure if it will get published or not, but I will let you guys know in the event that it does. If not, I'll post it here! What I just wrote isn't the usual analytical tournament recap that I do, it is purely about my final day, and now, and what I'm feelin! Heavy stuff for sure. I think I will probably do an analytical write-up of Milford, just because it was so unique and cool, but I'm gonna need a little time before I'm ready to do that
  22. Write up is coming, don't worry!
  23. As long as @Raider Nation Fisher is front and center It is a unique format for sure, but the only way I fish against Casey is if we both advance all the way to the final day, and at that point it would mean the boat is coming to WVU which is what we want!
  24. My "home lake" at school is worse than anywhere I've been before in terms of pleasure boats. Even weekdays are bad. It's not a big lake, and our proximity to Pittsburg means that a lot more people than there is room for have boats there. I think the fish are used to it, I watch boats drive over top of the stuff I am fishing constantly. If it happens every day, the fish may adjust accordingly, but it probably doesn't shut them off. You can't get upset with them though, they don't know they're doing anything wrong and probably think that fishing consists of a bobber and worm. What baffles me is how pleasure boaters stay away from large, open areas on all lakes, and prefer to drive circles around each other in the tiniest necked-down areas of the lakes, or back in creeks.
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