Dan_0788 Posted October 22, 2020 Posted October 22, 2020 Im joining a club as a co-angler next year so I’m looking to add two new setups. I currently bank & backseat fish with these two: 7’ MH XF casting - this is just my all purpose throw everything rod 7’2” M XF spinning - mostly dropshot / wacky when on a boat Im in NJ so we fishing highly pressured waters. A good majority of the club fish are caught on finesse. Most things I’ve read only recommend 1 spinning setup but because of that Im thinking going 2/2. Currently considering: - 7’ medium spinning setup - Shaky / Ned / Wacky rig. This will allow my to keep my current spinning setup 100% dropshot. This can also multipurpose for jerk bait and small topwater if needed. - 7' M M casting - Crankbaits / RatLTraps / Topwater OR - 7’6” H F casting - Jig / Flipping / Frog. My existing MH casting setup would then cover everything else. T-rig, spinners, smaller jigs, etc. Any thoughts, advice or general co-angler tips would be appreciated! Quote
Super User jbsoonerfan Posted October 22, 2020 Super User Posted October 22, 2020 Well, I am a baitcaster guy so my opinion might differ from what you had in mind. I would go with a 6'8 - 7'0 M for treble hook baits. I prefer a shorter rod for jerkbaits and I throw them a lot so I would lean toward the shorter end of that spectrum. The next one I would add would be a 7' - 7'2 H rod for frogs and jigs. I don't like fishing a 7'6 or bigger rod when I am sharing the boat with someone. That is a lot of rod to not only be casting around but also just to have laying around and maneuvering in the boat. Quote
Super User MN Fisher Posted October 22, 2020 Super User Posted October 22, 2020 I'm a 50/50 guy - but I'd go with the M/M casting for the treble baits and agree with JB that a shorter H/F would be fine for flip/frog...I run a 7'0" H/F for those. I also do most of my jig fishing on a MH/F - only the really heavy jigs (3/4oz+) would go on the H/F...course my MH is rated to 1oz, so there is that. Quote
Super User Fishes in trees Posted October 22, 2020 Super User Posted October 22, 2020 If you can only carry four rigs: Assuming 2 bait casting & 2 spinning A - BC reaction bait rig B - BC jig/ worm/ pitching rig C - Shakey Head/ Slider rig (spinning) D - Wacky/ Neko/ Drop shot rig. (spinning ) Taking seasonal patterns into consideration there are times I might carry different rigs. A dedicated buzz bait rig/ separate spinnerbait/ chatter bait rigs / top water rig. Early spring I would for sure have a dedicated jerk bait rig. Sometime you might want a Carolina rig - I don't know. When I was doing BFL's I generally carried 6 rigs - 7 if I could make them all fit in my rod sack. I wold generally take 10 or 12 rigs to the tournament and after the tournament meeting I'd make decisions about which ones I'd take the next day. Quote
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