I have never heard of that effect and have not experienced it either. I have used several brands of sonar units with readouts as Flasher, LCR, and Paper in water temps from 38 to 95. As a guess, you may have low battery power, damaged cable, or bad transducer.
The only time I get "bird nests" with braid is when I don't check to see if the line has slipped over the forward edge of the spool when the bail is being closed. It can happen a lot when the bail is closed on loose line. Sometimes on a windy day it will happen also.
Fishing on top of a canopy of vegetation is quite common. If a bass is in the area no matter what type bait it is, they can find it. Just move your lure slowly and pause frequently. Usually a sunny day is better for that presentation. The use of hollow surface lures like a frog or mouse is the usual method, but just about anything that disturbs the vegetation will work.
Nice suggestion HPBB (NOT), and being the president of a bass club too!!!! You are admitting to being an unlawful boater and suggesting that someone follow your lead. You are basically a poacher by using illegal methods to take game fish.
The higher pound test braids are normally used for very heavy vegetation/timber presentations or when fishing for very large fish like 40#+ catfish and stripers in fresh water and ocean species. 65# is very popular with the top water frog fishing at Guntersville.
Having "been there and done that", I would recommend that you get the largest one you can afford up to the rated HP of the boat. Certainly any size gas motor is better than electric for getting around faster and saving battery power for fishing. A larger motor operated at a low throttle setting is going to use less gas than a small motor operated wide open trying to go the same speed.
I carry a few Daiwa Goldcast reels for the inexperienced anglers that may fish with me. Good drags, higher gear ratio than the 33, and tangle free. I change the line to 14# braid also. The line pin also rotates to limit line abraison.
I fished yesterday on a lake in Va.. The air temp was 51 in the morning and 78 in the afternoon. The water temp during the day went from 48 to 54 degrees depending on wind direction. I started off trying the usual cold water presentations using jigs and Silver Buddys presented to fish I saw on my LCR. They did not work so I started using summer tactics with wacky rigged finesse worm, crankbaits, and hula grubs. All of those worked in depths of 8' to 22'. I just had to stay on creek channel edges or steep drops close to the channels.
Ethanol gas. Lots places in the country only have E-10 gasoline and it may or may be posted on the pump. I did some web searching and found these products that may be better or equal to the marine Stabil.
http://www.mdramazon.com/
There is a transducer made for shoot thru in aluminum boats. It is called Alumaducer and marketed by Vexilar. http://www.vexilar.com/pages/accessories/accy_transducers_au.html
You cannot get to the hot side from the cold side by boat. There are three dikes separating them. You can fish some warmer water on the cold side at dike three which is the water outlet to the main lake, near the dam. The only craft I can think of that may be able to cross over is an airboat or float plane.
You can do it cheaply also. Some of my rods have balancers that I made. I got some plastic chair leg tips from Lowe's that were close to the diameter of my rod butts. I then bought some lead egg sinkers in 3/4 oz,1 oz and 1 1/2 oz. I put the sinkers on a concrete floor with the hole verticle and whacked them with a hammer until they were the diameter of the inside of the chair leg tips. Then I inserted one of the weights into the chair leg tips and slipped it on the rod butt to check for balance. Most of the time the 1 oz. was the correct size. A wrap of tennis racket handle tape keeps them in place.
The idea of balancing your outfit is for two purposes. First is to prevent the muscle fatigue in you arm that occurs trying to hold up the weight of the rod ahead of the reel. Second the weightless feeling of a well balanced rod helps detect light bites as even the slightest resistance of a fish can be felt as your arm muscles are not tensed trying to overcome the rod tip weight. I balance my rods so that the rod tip rises when held lightly. Even though you add weight to the overall rig, it feels lighter when done properly.
Get some PVC that will fit over your fishing seat pedistals (short folding seat type) along with two 90 degree fittings and one Tee. Cut two lengths to the height above the deck that your cover will allow. Install the two pedistals, place the two pieces of pipe over them. Then install the 90 degree fittings on the two pieces. Measure the distance between the two and cut a length of PVC to that length. Then cut that lenght in half. Put those two pieces together with the Tee and place that assembly into the two 90 degree fittings. Then cut a length of PVC to go from the Tee to the floor of the boat. Do all this without glueing any parts together. You can glue some of the parts together later if you want to. What you will have is a frame with center support to handle just about any weight and won't have any sharp edges to damage your cover.
Here are two choices for heated gloves----
http://cozywinters.com/heated-gloves.html?source=go&gclid=CKi03-G99o8CFReQGgodxEXrlQ
http://www.schooluniforms.com/heated-gloves.html
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.