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Posted

If you had to choose a single technique to use all year in clear, inland lakes in Michigan, what would it be (Largemouth primarily)?  I ask because I am familiar with dozens of techniques, but not a "master" at any and I want to prioritize my learning.  Thanks in advance for your advice.

  • Global Moderator
Posted

Of all the techniques available to us anywhere in the universe, a t rig plastic has been and will continue to be the single most effective choice you could make. 

 

 

 

 

 

Mike

  • Like 5
Posted

I agree that the T-Rig would be the most versatile rig, but it's not always the best deal of the day. Yesterday, the crankbait "out performed" the T-Rig by a very large margin. 

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted
1 hour ago, PMac said:

If you had to choose a single technique to use all year in clear, inland lakes in Michigan, what would it be (Largemouth primarily)?  

Seems a fairly tricky proposition electing a Single Technique as an all season deal.

 However my personal submission is a jig.

1897306882_Jigs(2).jpg.76c9bcc51f6a5d2d56480f75005b9852.jpg

Good Luck.

:smiley:

A-Jay

 

  • Like 6
Posted
57 minutes ago, A-Jay said:

Seems a fairly tricky proposition electing a Single Technique as an all season deal.

 However my personal submission is a jig.

1897306882_Jigs(2).jpg.76c9bcc51f6a5d2d56480f75005b9852.jpg

Good Luck.

:smiley:

A-Jay

 

I second this. Its a d**n fish magnet. Can be fished slow or fast. At least you can stop yourself from being bored with a jig. 

Posted

I’d go big swimbait as they are highly rewarding to learn and are not widely used in Michigan I would imagine. 

Posted

If bite is hard a start "plinking", a drop shot around. Works well in the clear lakes I fish here in Connecticut.

  • Super User
Posted

A variation of the simple split shot rig called a slip shot or finesse C-rig will catch bass anywhere anytime. You can use 3" soft plastic reapers to 12" soft platic worms and any soft plastic creature. Versitile, the weight can be 1/16 oz to 1 oz, line can be whatever is your favorite and same with tackle used. The weight can be 1" to 48" above the hook.

Tom

 

Posted

I've had plenty of time to question my techniques and methods over the years, and this year I've found that sometimes going back to the first lure I ever learned, has once again proven its time-tested fish catching ability.....

 

The in-line spinner. 

 

Clear or muddy. Warm or cold. Windy or calm. The thing flat out CATCHES fish. Sure, lots of dinks, but that's more than I had been catching prior. 

 

I use a Blue Fox gold/gold/dressed size 2 for spinning gear, a size 4 for casting. 

  • Like 3
Posted

I have not enough experience to answer this question but it's looking so far like all techniques will be the best single technique after a few more days of entries in this thread.

 

It's like when I was looking, for the first time, to upgrade to a more 'professional' pole. All poles were the best depending on who owned it.

 

In the end, I'll be you end up just making up your own mind depending on what you might have had the most luck with or what you like to throw. 

 

Sometimes I just look at a swimbait or crankbait or whatever in the water and think. Boy that movement looks cool. I think I'll use this awhile. A few weeks ago I used my first chatterbait with a trailer on it. I just loved the undulating motion of the bait and tic-tic-tic feel at the end of my pole. I fished with it for a long stretch. Didn't catch a dang thing. I guess I found it more interesting than the fish did.

So, my recommendation is a chatterbait with a trailer. It may not generate any action but I'll bet you like the action of the lure. Just throw what you think looks good. Forget about what the fish thinks. After all what does he know about fishing...

?

  • Global Moderator
Posted

I have only fished inland Michigan for one week but a curly tail grub on a jig head and a weedless stick worm with no sinker were best for me. You guys have a lot of weeds in the water up there! 

  • Super User
Posted

My choice would be live bait :wink7:

 

My universal technique would be the Carolina rig. Catches fish and helps read the bottom for those that don't have sonar.

Posted

My first instinct would be to say jig, even though I'm not a terrific jig fisherman, but honestly, you can't say that it is a single technique.  Flipping, pitching, punching, swimming, snapping, deadsticking are all different techniques and those are just off the top of my head.

 

If you had asked for a single lure, I would go with jig, but for a single technique I would go with jig and spinner / spinnerbait.

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted
3 minutes ago, billmac said:

but honestly, you can't say that it is a single technique.

Exactly, not to mention the myriad of jig head styles.

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