Senko under a float?
#1
Posted August 23 2009 - 02:11 PM
#2
Posted August 23 2009 - 02:50 PM
#3
Posted August 23 2009 - 04:27 PM
I was able to hook a nice walleye a pike and some sm/mouth bass fishing it under a float.
Kevin
#4
Posted August 23 2009 - 06:25 PM
stronger, smoother, silenter, reliabler....
#5
Posted August 23 2009 - 10:03 PM
Sounds like it would work well on a slightly windy day with a little chop on the surface. Then it would have a nice wiggle action if wacky rigged.
i'm gonna have to try this sometime, when line watchin is impossible...but i agree, and can definately see it workin wacky'd in the chop...also maybe using a slip bobber to keep it near the bottom as well...hmmm could produce...
i mean hell i thought the whole wacky thing was wacky...til i tried it and it caught fish
#6
Posted August 24 2009 - 07:23 AM

The bobber stops can be found at any sporting goods store - even WalMarts. They have the stop set-ups & small plastic beads in the package. You can find the cigar floats at Dicks; you can use all kinds of slip floats in this application, but after trial & error, I've pretty much settled on this one. It's about 4" long and the bright colors make it easy to see, even in a decent chop.
I've chosen Fireline Chrystal, as my main line, because it stays on the surface of the water, between the float and your rod tip. This makes slack retrieval much easier, as well as hook-sets. And, for me, it's easy to see! The glass bead under the float prevents the eye of the crane swivel from sticking in the bottom of the float. (There actually is a method behind my madness, believe it or not!) It also ads a little weight to help get your Senko down faster.
Do NOT use a barrel swivel! You know....the kind that are used with "snap-swivels". Use a quality crane swivel or ball bearing style only. These turn much easier than the barrel types. The Senko hanging below a bobber, has a tendency to turn....so you will need to avoid line twist, as much as possible. I really like to use the Spro Powerswivels, size #8 or #10. They work as well as any ball bearing swivel, but they are expensive and not easy to find everywhere.
You can use any hook you want; however, I would highly recommend you give this one shown a try (crush down the barb!). I've had excellent results with it. When the bobber goes under, you just start reeling her in! The leader between the hook & swivel is anything you want it to be. If I'm fishing fairly shallow in weedy/wooded conditions for LM, I'll beef it up to about 10# test - or more! But for open water SM fishing, the 6# test cited above is about as good as it gets.
Now....the most important part! How far up the line do you set the bobber stop? This is what I do. I find bait on the structure I'm fishing. Then I attach an ice fishing depth finder - the lead weights with the alligator clips molded into them - to the hook. I lower this boatside until it hits bottom. I adjust the bobber stop so that the float is about 2' underwater. This will be correct, for having your Senko presented 2' ABOVE THE BOTTOM. Got that? Simple...effective. Remove the depth finder, slip on a Senko. Cast it a short distance from the boat. The float will lay flat, until the Senko is at the end of it's travel. Now the float will semi-stand up, bouncing about and imparting a rather dramatic action to your wacky rigged Senko.
Lots of folks have a prejudice against bobbers. I guess they automatically associate it with live bait fishing, but it's quite different. You still need to present your Senko in front of fish and and you have to find them! I've posted here, previously, my technique of how I wacky rig these Senkos, so you can do a search on that. Hope this is of some help to some of you folks.

"A voyage in search of knowledge need never abandon the spirit of adventure."
#7
Posted September 01 2009 - 12:59 PM
PB SM 4-05
Tight lines, Alex
#8
Posted September 01 2009 - 02:10 PM
I contacted the mods this should be permanent if it isn't already..
Hey guys this should be a sticky or in the tackle box section permanent.
That's great info, I love fishing LM's, Spots, actually anything that swims that way.
Floats are great!
Tight Lines All!!!
A poorly maintained reel can cost you fish, just like a dull hook, frayed lines, and a poor technique can..-
"Casting A Country Mile Feeds The Head.. Accuracy Puts Fish On The Hook!."
"Accuracy is much more important than distance"
#9
Posted September 09 2009 - 10:42 AM
#10
Posted September 09 2009 - 12:20 PM
Sounds like it would work well on a slightly windy day with a little chop on the surface. Then it would have a nice wiggle action if wacky rigged.
I have luck on this set up also. A little wind gives it a great action.
#11
Posted September 16 2009 - 08:24 PM
#12
Posted September 17 2009 - 07:34 AM
Crestliner2008,
I contacted the mods this should be permanent if it isn't already..
Hey guys this should be a sticky or in the tackle box section permanent.
That's great info, I love fishing LM's, Spots, actually anything that swims that way.
Floats are great!
Tight Lines All!!!
Check it out!
First topic sticky in this section.
Crestliner2008,
Thank you!
-Kent
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#13
Posted January 14 2010 - 04:18 PM
It has kind of been an inside joke in our bass club because one of our members had won a tournament with this method, but he was catching largemouth.
Our last tournament this past fall was at Burt lake, after having terrible luck trying to catch anything i had pulled up on a weed flat in about 8 ft of water toward the end of the day, fish were surfacing everywhere but for the life of me i couldn't get a bite.
I was throwing a wacky senko on a wide-gap hook, and jokingly told my co-angler i might have better luck with a bobber!
I set the bobber so the senko would be hanging just above the weeds. On my first cast, not even 5 seconds after being in the water the bobber went under, and i landed a 5.08, i had laughed about it just thinking it was a fluke until i went from 0 lbs to just under 18 lbs within an hour! I would definitely suggest using a bobber with a wacky senko to catch some smallies!
#14
Posted January 14 2010 - 05:15 PM
I can vouch for fishing a wacky senko with a bobber.
It has kind of been an inside joke in our bass club because one of our members had won a tournament with this method, but he was catching largemouth.
Our last tournament this past fall was at Burt lake, after having terrible luck trying to catch anything i had pulled up on a weed flat in about 8 ft of water toward the end of the day, fish were surfacing everywhere but for the life of me i couldn't get a bite.
I was throwing a wacky senko on a wide-gap hook, and jokingly told my co-angler i might have better luck with a bobber!
I set the bobber so the senko would be hanging just above the weeds. On my first cast, not even 5 seconds after being in the water the bobber went under, and i landed a 5.08, i had laughed about it just thinking it was a fluke until i went from 0 lbs to just under 18 lbs within an hour! I would definitely suggest using a bobber with a wacky senko to catch some smallies!
Exactly how I use it to set the bait just above the weeds or structure, it works GREAT!
Wilkes Barre PA
#15
Posted February 02 2010 - 12:19 PM
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