throttleplate Posted June 10, 2022 Posted June 10, 2022 Last time out my line was gettin fouled with cotton like sheddings from cotton willow trees? Wherever it comes from it caused some big problems while casting and reeling in. My top guide would get clogged with the cotton and wasnt able to reel in the line without first picken it out. The little bits that made it through the guide would reel onto the spool and when casting would cause big issues you can imagine yourself. 1 1 Quote
MAN Posted June 10, 2022 Posted June 10, 2022 Have you tried inserting a sprugle cottonaway on the tip to shed it off the line? Quote
Super User casts_by_fly Posted June 10, 2022 Super User Posted June 10, 2022 Cottonwood tree. Common around the Great Lakes for sure. When I was living near Cleveland and they are in full bloom, the carp in the streams would inhale the seed pod clusters. Biggest carp I ever caught was on a white Clouser sight fishing a drift that they were eating the seeds. That fish ate a 4” clouser and it’s mouth was so big the lure was inhaled sideways and didn’t touch the lips. That was fun on a 5 wt (I went for smallmouth that day). mono is easier to clean off than braid but the only way to really get it all off it so keep sliding it towards the lure and eventually retie. 2 Quote
Super User FryDog62 Posted June 10, 2022 Super User Posted June 10, 2022 This was what I plucked out with tweezers after a tournament last weekend. Had to quit over an hour early because several of our reels and guides became unusable. 2 Quote
Super User OkobojiEagle Posted June 10, 2022 Super User Posted June 10, 2022 Patience, cottonwood season lasts only a couple weeks. oe 2 1 Quote
BigAngus752 Posted June 11, 2022 Posted June 11, 2022 One of my best lakes has a hotspot that is surrounded by these trees. This time of the year is a pain. Wind pushes fish against a bank along with the cotton. Here are a few things you can do: 1. Fish a bottom contact lure (soft plastic or jig) and hold your rod tip almost in the water to keep the line below the surface of the water all the way back to the boat. 2. Fish a bottom contact lure with a rod that has microguides. Each time you reel in stop as the tip guide starts to fill up, pick it clean, and keep reeling. 3. Move someplace else until the cotton season is over. Whatever you do, you have to be patient and dedicated and NOT allow that crap into the spool on your reel. Pick it before it gets to your reel. If you can't exercise this kind of discipline...move on until it clears. Sometimes I'm in the mood to be patient and catch the fish I know are there. Sometimes I move on. 1 Quote
Super User Bird Posted June 11, 2022 Super User Posted June 11, 2022 Deal with it every year but fortunately it means fishing is good. 2 Quote
Super User DitchPanda Posted June 11, 2022 Super User Posted June 11, 2022 Been absolutely dreadful here for a few weeks...should be ending soon Quote
throttleplate Posted June 11, 2022 Author Posted June 11, 2022 7 hours ago, MAN said: Have you tried inserting a sprugle cottonaway on the tip to shed it off the line? No, but i did just finish knitting 1/8 of a sock. 1 Quote
Dogface Posted June 11, 2022 Posted June 11, 2022 ? On 6/10/2022 at 5:34 PM, OkobojiEagle said: Patience, cottonwood season lasts only a couple weeks. oe Thankfully! 1 Quote
The Bassman Posted June 11, 2022 Posted June 11, 2022 This is the time of year that I need to condition myself to using leaders. Knots and fuzz balls sound about the same going through the guides. 1 Quote
Super User gim Posted June 11, 2022 Super User Posted June 11, 2022 On 6/10/2022 at 4:34 PM, OkobojiEagle said: Patience, cottonwood season lasts only a couple weeks. oe In a normal year, yes. Last year it went on for almost 2 months because it never rained here. A good hard rain will take care of it. If it ever comes. 1 Quote
Global Moderator 12poundbass Posted June 12, 2022 Global Moderator Posted June 12, 2022 Cottonwood trees are the devil!!!! 1 Quote
michaelb Posted June 12, 2022 Posted June 12, 2022 Not sure if i am spending more time picking or fishing this week. 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.