papajoe222 Posted February 9, 2017 Posted February 9, 2017 I've gotten used to fishing for a few bites rather than numbers, but rather than downsize I concentrate more on precise, repeated presentations to a given target, especially during cold front conditions. Many times it'll be my fifth or sixth cast to the same side of a stump or dock post that gets the bite and it's rarely a resounding thump, so I need to be concentrating 100% or go fishless. It's not uncommon to go four hours without a bite, but I'm out there for the challenge as much as the fun, so I stick with it. 4 Quote
Global Moderator Mike L Posted February 9, 2017 Global Moderator Posted February 9, 2017 Cut R or a BB Cricket Mike Quote
reerok Posted February 9, 2017 Posted February 9, 2017 Mojo rigging a curly tail grub has saved the day a few times for me. Quote
ClackerBuzz Posted February 10, 2017 Posted February 10, 2017 not a lure but i have two retrieves that clean up year round, even on the tough days. i nicknamed them: 1- picking out a backlashing even though you don't have one. 2- bed fishing when there are no beds. they are simple and self explanatory yet incredibly hard to put into practice. they are definitely worth the effort, for quantity and quality fish. 2 Quote
Super User Jeff H Posted February 10, 2017 Super User Posted February 10, 2017 For many many years it has been a Producto 4" Tournament Worm on a 1/8 oz Charlie Brewer Pro Series Snagless Slider. Last couple years I started experimenting with drop-shotting 3" Slug Go's and other small minnow imitators and it's working real well. 1 Quote
dsqui Posted February 10, 2017 Posted February 10, 2017 I'm amazed more people havnt said asenko but if I really can't get a bite then I'm switching to a jerk bait it's a confidence bait for me. Plus I can fish it a million ways fast slow shallow deep suspending floating ok guess it's not a million but u get my point Quote
dmlucky45 Posted February 10, 2017 Posted February 10, 2017 Watermelon/Red Flake 5" weightless t-rigged Senko or Jig with craw trailer Quote
Super User Darren. Posted February 10, 2017 Super User Posted February 10, 2017 Well, not news to anyone who knows me, but I'll throw the same stuff on a tough day as a good day. I pretty much do "finesse" all the time. Senkos/knock-offs wacky rigged Trick and Finesse worms wacky/TX/mojo rigged Various soft plastics drop shot rigged 1 Quote
Super User Angry John Posted February 10, 2017 Super User Posted February 10, 2017 On cant buy a bite days i am going with a weightless plastic. A 4" cane thumper in watermelon red flake or black blue, and a small 4" lizard. Last bait is a 4" swim bait in the shad shape like the keitech easy shad. I dont fish much smaller than this except in extreme cases i have 3" easy shads for crappie that i will try. Quote
Super User scaleface Posted February 10, 2017 Super User Posted February 10, 2017 Usually if I cant buy a bite , I'm fishing in the wrong places . 3 Quote
Super User ww2farmer Posted February 10, 2017 Super User Posted February 10, 2017 The yum warning shot nose hooked on a drop shot rig was my #1 "tuff day" bait last year, I also like wacky rigging small 3" and 4 " um dingers on a drop shot, as well as scaled down craws/creature baits, like the small pit boss, or 3" chigger craw. I also reach for a 4" yum dinger, or finesse worm on a 1/16th oz wacky jig on tuff days. Shaky heads with a finesse worm are also a staple. If they are not biting well, all three of these options are on my boat deck. Then you have those bizzaro tuff days when they won't bite "normal" sized moving baits, nor finesse soft plastic presentations, but for some reason are willing to chase small cranks like KVD 1.0's and 3xd's or the small frogs like the little booyah pad crasher. Quote
Super User RoLo Posted February 10, 2017 Super User Posted February 10, 2017 A fishing guide who lives in our community is often under the gun to produce 'something'. One of Frank's tough-day favorites is a 4" Centipede on a 1/16 oz jighead. Roger Quote
3dees Posted February 10, 2017 Posted February 10, 2017 4" finesse worm on 1/8 oz. jig head. I have caught everything from big bluegills to a 45" muskie. I should probably fish it more, but I really don't like fishing with spinning gear. 1 Quote
Global Moderator Mike L Posted February 10, 2017 Global Moderator Posted February 10, 2017 On 2/9/2017 at 5:20 AM, papajoe222 said: I concentrate more on precise, repeated presentations to a given target, especially during cold front conditions. Many times it'll be my fifth or sixth cast to the same side of a stump or dock post that gets the bite and it's rarely a resounding thump, so I need to be concentrating 100% or go fishless. How often do we all do this? I know I don't . We pull up to a spot, give it a few casts and move on. Mike Quote
mwh33 Posted February 11, 2017 Posted February 11, 2017 Weightless 4-5 inch senko, zoom fluke, or t-rigged trick worm. Quote
colts11 Posted February 14, 2017 Posted February 14, 2017 Weightless Senko, or a dropshot in super clear water. Quote
Super User scaleface Posted February 14, 2017 Super User Posted February 14, 2017 These baits that work real well when the fishing is tough . They work even better when the fishing is good . 2 Quote
Super User J Francho Posted February 14, 2017 Super User Posted February 14, 2017 2 minutes ago, scaleface said: These baits that work real well when the fishing is tough . They work even better when the fishing is good . Maybe. I find the "slow day" bites come from EXTREMELY slow presentations, or physically demanding presentations. Things that come to mind are drowning a senko in 25 FOW, or chucking an umbrella rig all day for five or six good bites. I like those days when you can throw an "easy" bait - walking bait or popper, spinnerbait, Texas Rigged worm or craw, mid diving crank...but yeah, I'm pretty sure you're right. Though I'll probably never know if a Carolina Rig is good on a slow or a fast day! 1 Quote
Super User kickerfish1 Posted February 14, 2017 Super User Posted February 14, 2017 Texas rigged plastic rodent or beaver. Weightless Zoom super fluke. Drop shot jackall I-shad. Those 3 usually get bit on a tough day. If it is cold and dirty water all bets are off as usually don't much of anything. Quote
Super User scaleface Posted February 14, 2017 Super User Posted February 14, 2017 What if the reason youre not catching fish is because the water turned to mud ? Or the surface temp is 96 degrees ? Or the water is extremely clear ? Or weeds are too thick ? Or half the Bass master elite field is fishing your spot ? .... Quote
Super User J Francho Posted February 14, 2017 Super User Posted February 14, 2017 3 minutes ago, scaleface said: Or half the Bass master elite field is fishing your spot ? This is actually funny. Many years ago, on Smith Mountain Lake, this very thing happened. You'd think at a place that big, you could get away from it all....nope. Even after the cut, pros all over the "good spots." LOL, I guess that's why they're "good spots." 1 Quote
WPCfishing Posted February 15, 2017 Posted February 15, 2017 I always go back to a 6" black worm when the fishing is slow under any water conditions. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.