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haydenf96

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Everything posted by haydenf96

  1. Thanks guys! This was really helpful
  2. As a general rule of thumb, I set the hook upwards on single hooked baits, which is mostly soft plastics. On lures with treble hooks, mostly reaction baits, I sweep hook. I was wondering how you set the hook with a soft swimbait? Do you hook to the side or set the hook up?
  3. I use a 6'6" medium with a fast tip and 10 pound mono. I use a little heavier line than most, most of the cover on Roosevelt Lake where I fish is trees and brush piles. I need a little heavier line to pull fish out.
  4. No it is on the side with a mount
  5. Thanks! Will the power cord work from the X70A?
  6. How easy would it be to remove the old one and install the new one?
  7. Just bought a 1995 Procraft 210 dual pro and the console has a lowrance x70a. Will the current cables work for a lowrance elite 7? Kind of a noobish question and I couldn't answer it myself researching it online.
  8. Just bought my first bass boat, a 1995 Procraft 210 dual pro with a 225 mariner. But I had a little 14 foot portabote with a 9.9 hp engine. Caught loads of big fish with that thing and was great for the small 30 acre pond I lived on at that time.
  9. haydenf96 replied to tbone1993's topic in Fishing Tackle
    Put the swimbaits on a jig head and cut the visible hook
  10. 5 A-Rigs and swimbaits
  11. Everything!!! I just cant stop..
  12. This is from Joe S. not me. But it is brilliant and I love it. Dont give me credit for it. But if you need any help pm me. Joe S.- Here's a little piece I put together, The jig is my favorite lure to fish because of it's versatlity. Representation, First let's start with what a jig represents underwater, I believe the most Popular use of it is to imitate a Crayfish but they also can imitate baitfish as well. Jigs come in many different shapes, sizes and colors etc. The most popular crayfish imitators seem to be the good old skirted jig usually tipped with some sort of plastic or pork trailer. Speaking of sizes, shapes, colors, I'm only going to really get into the skirted jig with a plastic or pork trailer as this is the bait I primarily use, and use it as a crayfish imitator only. Sizes, There is a very large size range available, I mainly use 3 sizes of Jigs in my arsenal or depending on manufacturer the closest weight to these sizes 3/8 oz , ½ oz and ¾ oz. I will mainly use a 3/8oz when fishing really shallow. The presentation has more time to be subtle because of the lighter weight than just crashing on the bottom in the shallow water. 1/2 oz. Jig This is my go to, if there was only one jig weight aloud in my box, this would be it. I guess you could say the happy medium. I fish this 99 percent of the time from a regular bank down to 15 ft and anything in between. The only time I go to a 3/4 oz. Is if I need to get through some thick weeds, the wind is really blowing or I am fishing dep but want to fish it faster than normal. Colors, I don't get crazy on colors when it comes to jigs. I have 3 colors that I have a ton of confidence in and those are Browns, Greens, and Black. It seems the jig has excepted rules on what colors for what conditions were faced with, green or brown, natural colors for clearer water and black or darker colors for murkier water or night time. I do follow that to a point but not because of the rule but because I have confidence in throwing those baits in those conditions. Ive caught fish in clear water with a black jig and fish in murky water and at night with a green jig so what's that tell us. Color is confidence in my book. Trailers/Chunks These come in many shapes and sizes, Most of them are made to represent the pincher end of the crayfish which are either threaded or simply hooked on to the jig. I go rather simple in this area as far as selection. I mainly use 3 colors in 2 sizes, Green, Brown and Black in 2 or 3 sizes I always match the color of the trailer with the jig, (just a confidence thing) I will normally start off fishing with a 2 trailer in tournaments, I feel the smaller size may get me more bites in order to get my limit then I may upgrade trailer size to go after larger fish, but there is no rule here either, as I have caught fish over 6lbs. on 2 trailers and fish less than 12 on 3 trailers. As far as the many styles and brands of trailers, my selection is simple I use my own, I feel they give me the best chances of catching fish and here is why: When a bass hits a jig they will normally engulf the whole lure, Jig and trailer. It only takes a split second for that fish to reject the bait if it notices anything artificial about it. When I make my trailers I add a lot of crayfish oil to the plastic prior to cooking then once poured they go through a 2 stage salting process. Once you get a fish to bite them they are hard pressed to let it go because there is so much taste for them. Because there is so much craw oil in the plastic it makes the baits very soft which helps release the oils and salt when the bait is bitten. (Shameless Plug I know, but the truth as well) The Bite! I have been fishing a jig predominantly for the last few years and have probably experienced every type of bite possible, but then again maybe not, sometimes you don't feel anything at all, then sometimes they almost rip the rod out of your hand, and then you have everything in between, you must always be ready to set the hook. It is a must to be a line watcher when fishing a jig because you may not always be in direct contact with the lure, and the little twitch in the line that you didn't see could have been a 10 fish or the fish of a lifetime. One thing I really like to do is know the depth of the water I'm casting to, I feel this is very important, a ½ oz jig on 15lb mono sinks at about 1ft per second. So I know if I'm casting it into 12ft of water and the line stops sinking when I count to 6, something sucked it in, reel in any slack and set the hook. This is where I believe salts and scents are very handy, normally when I'm fishing a jig I'm fishing some type of structure, rocks, wood, grass, etc. with the equipment on the market you can pretty much feel everything the lure bumps into, when first getting into jig fishing I might have questioned myself was that a fish or a rock, don't know for sure. But now using my own baits and good equipment as well as a lot of time fishing the jig, I have the confidence in them to know that when I feel that little bump, I can pause and wait a second or two to see if there is any activity or lack there of on the end of the line before ramming the hook into a nice bass, or a stump. Equipment: For fishing these type and size of jigs, I use a 7' Heavy action bait casting rod, I feel this is very important and will not use a Jig on anything lighter, for a few reasons, 1.) These jigs normally have stout hooks that require a decent amount of force to get good penetration. I don't want to take the chance of losing a big fish because my rod didn't have enough power to drive the hook home, 2.) You have the weed guard to deal with as well when setting the hook. 3.) A lot of times the bass will really clamp down on a jig to crush it making it harder to move the jig on the set to get a good hook set, I noticed this especially with small mouth bass. As for the brand of rod that is personal preference but I think you should get the best you can afford in this area or the added sensitivity. For a reel, I prefer High speed reels 6.1:1 or 6.3:1 and a decent amount of line retrieval per handle turn. I like this because I can pick up any slack really fast as well as keep up with the fish if it is charging towards me. This is another brand preference issue, I prefer smaller profile reels so I can palm the reel and rest the line going into the reel on my pointer finger for extra sensitivity. Line I mainly use 15 lb test mono line for most jig fishing, I don't really go any lighter than that, I will go heavier for certain situations depending on a few factors, structure or cover that I'm fishing, or even the size of the fish I have a chance at catching will dictate the size. In really clear water I will use fluorocarbon line for reduced visibility. And if I need to go above 20 lb mono for any reason I will switch to a braid for line diameter purposes. You can use any of the three all the time, these are just my preferences and how I utilize each for certain situations. This is not intended to be a know all of Jig fishing document, these are the ways and equipment I personally like to use and have confidence in for the situations I face,(Notice the title) there are so many variables in fishing that could call for a different tactic from the lure type and size, to the tackle and line, it would be impossible to list them all. Some techniques I use... When I make a cast I let the bait sink, you must always watch your line, a lot of times they will hit it on the initial fall and your line will either twitch, stop before it should, or start going sideways, when this happens reel up the slack and set the hook. If the bait makes it to the bottom I will wait about 3 or 4 seconds and then drag it about 6-8 inches (Right now he's just cruising on the bottom), then pause, after 3-4 seconds drag again, and repeat this. Once I feel any obstruction, I pause then shake without dragging, I feel this simulates the crayfish trying to burrow under whatever obstacle it just bumped into. Then I give it 2 quick very short snaps, this would simulate the crayfish fleeing from a predator, then let it hit bottom and repeat the whole process. A lot of times right after the pause when you go to drag again it will feel heavy, set the hook. Hook sets are free, If you haven't fished a jig a lot , it takes time before you can get a really good handle on determining fish bites from obstructions. Practice makes perfect and when in doubt set the hook. That's for mostly open water hump style fishing and beating a bank. In cover I like to throw it in the nastiest stuff possible and shake it around then repeat casting to it (pretty much pick it to pieces.) Don't ever think there is such a thing as to shallow, I use to cast to about a foot off shore till a guy on the back of my boat beat me bad, the fish were in that spot right on the bank, now I cast to were I'm pretty much hitting the shoreline.
  13. I had 3 teasers, they might have hit those. I was thinking a duller color nit a bright white and a little smaller baits.
  14. SoI had a tournament, (This was a while ago) and I was throwing an A-Rig to suspended fish off of drop offs. The drops were from 8 to 40 feet and the fish were in 20 feet. The fish would just chase the rig to the boat. I had a few smacks on it that felt like trains but only 1 fish. What would you have changed? I was using pearl white money minnows. This was on Roosevelt Lake AZ in November.
  15. Just fished the WON bass High School tournament. I am in the same situation, coming from MA it is a lot different. Drop shot is the main key I have found. If you fish Roboworms in Morning Dawn and Aaron's Magic those are good basic colors. Also where do you fish?
  16. Got it today. 60 pages in and I have learned so much!
  17. Go out on a dock and at the end cut a hole and check the thickness
  18. Top water- spooks, Pops-R, buzzbaits Finesse- drop shot above the grass, split shot rig, shakey head, weightless, Swimbaits for some bigguns spinnerbaits- pretty much a given,
  19. Thanks, It is on Roosevelt. I narrowed it down to a white spinner bait and a white chatterbait. I am thinking a spinner bait.
  20. So I have a fishing tournament tomorrow, and fun trip Sunday, the lake is 67 degrees and turned over. My partner found fish in 10 foot of water chasing shad. I am bringing 5 rods for each trip. I have a A-Rig tied on in case fish suspend, A drop shot, a jig, and a topwater. I have no idea what to throw on the other rod. I can't seem to decide between a spinnerbait, chatterbait, or a Redeye shad? What do you guys think?
  21. Spinner baits and DS are key on TTL
  22. Hey BAM If you are ever in Central MA, specifically around Webster Lake area, hit it up with this kid Kamil, he knows the lake better than anyone i know
  23. I do this all the time, I take one presentation or lure and just work it all day. I used to live on and near several lakes so I would do this nearly every day

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