Everything posted by hawgenvy
- What Would You Like To See Invented For Fishing
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Lake Ida?
Security is really tight. I might be able to get you in one or another with me if you want, if you call me when you are in the area. I often bank fish after work in the evening for an hour and a half, or for a couple of hours in the evening on the weekends if my wife loosens the leash. I have some good spots. If you're interested, message me when you are in FL, or soon before, and I'll give you my contact info. I like your persistence. You are really determined to catch bass on your vacation, as opposed to pursuing chicks on the beach. Apparently you are as crazed about bass as the rest of us.
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Most Terrifying Fishing Experience?
Okay, I'll admit this wasn't terrifying, but it was freaky, especially because it happened this evening. I was bank fishing at a golf course pond with my cousin and her husband. From atop a five foot wooden wall, I pitched a brush hog out over some shoreline pickerel weed and into the stained water an inch past the weeds. A bass struck it so fast and hard it took me totally by surprise, and when I set the hook it was like setting it into a moving freight train. The fish pulled the rod right out of my hands and my rig flew down into the thick pickerel weed below. As I stared at the rod in open-mouthed disbelief, the rod started moving further away as the fish pulled on the line. This was a Dobyns Champion 734c rod with a Shimano Chronarch reel, not a rig I would give away without a fight. The rod thankfully then got deeply wedged in the weeds and was stuck there, as the fish strained at the 65 lb braid that was tamped down by a drag tightened all the way. The fish pulled this way and that, and actually jumped a couple of times trying to shake the hook. My cousin, meanwhile, was struggling to get her lure unstuck from some lily stems, so I ran past her to her husband and grabbed his rig which was armed with a shaky head jig. I pulled some ottery looking creature off the hook, and was soon grateful to learn that a shaky head jig dangling from a rod is a perfect instrument for retrieving a downed fishing rod. I snagged the jig hook on one of the line guides and reeled in my rod. Well, the darn fish was still on! I successfully landed it, 4+ pounds of very impressive largemouth muscle. Of course, I tossed him back. You know, I'd never before had a rod pulled out of my hands, and hope it'll never happen again. I truly admire that powerful fish, the first one that almost hurt me back.
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When Does The Bass Fishing Pick Up In Fl?
Mostly watermelon or black/blue flake on a 3-0 or 4-0 weighted swimbait hook. Usually it works best wiggled across the surface like a toad, but lately they're eating it only on the fall, near cover. Seems to attract big fish.
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When Does The Bass Fishing Pick Up In Fl?
Yes, I definitely fish golf courses when I can. Gambler baits are great. I go through a lot of EZ Swimmers, esp around sunset.
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When Does The Bass Fishing Pick Up In Fl?
Had a dozen 2 to 4 pounders -- and lost two huge ones -- today in the evening. Caught them from the bank (practically all I do is bank fishing) on a green Brush Hog. Tried senkos, toads, swimbaits and jigs, and all they bit is Brush Hogs, pegged T-rigged. I did better than I expected given post front and gibbous moon. Too bad I'm now out of Brush Hogs!
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Rod Or Reel...where Do You Invest Your Money?
Fairly even; to me, for bass fishing, the rod may have a slight edge. Any technological/mechanical item of exceptional high quality and durability gives to the user a great and lasting pleasure that is hard to put into words. The sublime pleasure of lightweight power and smoothness. The beauty of perfect fit and finish. The pride of ownership. Admittedly, the mere perception of quality greatly enhances the effect, and such pleasing effect often exceeds the utilitarian effectiveness of the device. So, go for it.
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What Would You Like To See Invented For Fishing
1) Soft plastic baits that have a much firmer compound just at the head so it won't slide down from the hook eye -- for T-rigging or on a spring keep, or on a jig's trailer keep. This really sounds doable. 2) Also, in order to keep T-rigged plastic baits from sliding down the hook, there ought to be a tiny mechanical rivet gun that snaps a tiny plastic peg through the hook eye and plastic bait but is short enough to stay just inside the bait (or else protuberances would pick up green yuck). This could be easy too. 3) Develop a hook with a quick and easy (and light and cheap) way to detach or compress the hook barb to enable painless and injury free hook removal from fish or man (or angry girlfriend). This is not an easy one. 4) A good mechanism to hold my second rod when I'm bank fishing. Sounds feasible. 5) A holder to securely hold my iPhone on my head to make it a helmet cam. (There's probably something like that out there somewhere. Yes, I know, I know I'll look stupid wearing it. 6) And I really want one of those drone subs to see what's down there. I know those Florida summer bass are hiding somewhere! (Eventually my drone's going to drag a bait, too! - Ha! Of course by then they'll have a law against drone fishing.)
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Latest Tackle Purchase Thread (Bait Monkey Victim Support Group)
I've only been bass fishing intensively for about a year, but I seem for some very strange reason to have accumulated many boxes full of plastic creatures, swimbaits, senkos, ribbon tail worms, frogs, toads, flukes, crankbaits, jerkbaits, spinnerbaits, buzzbaits, spooks, poppers, and propellered torpedos. I use the senkos and soft swimbaits mostly; the other stuff patiently waits its turn. I have enough rods: M, MH, H, in both casting and spinning setups, braid on some, fluoro on others, mono on one of the spinning reels. I keep telling my wife, don't worry, I finally have enough stuff. No more boxes from TW on the doorstep. But, you know, I certainly MUST learn to use a JIG better: "...the most versatile big bass bait. No tackle box should be without a selection of jigs." So, I ordered a dozen assorted jigs with bags of matching trailers and got 'em in just last night. Today I tossed two different craw-trailored brown and green jigs fifty times with no bites. I wanted so badly to tie on a T-rigged senko or cast a swimbait. I started to sweat, to shake, but I persevered, resisted the urge. Kept with the jigs. Changed colors, changed trailors, but kept with the jigs. Finally skipped one under a low bridge and nailed a powerful 5-6 pounder that unfortunately popped off just before I could grab her. Okay, jigs probably could work pretty well. Though the first batch of them cost me over $60 bucks. (Naturally you have to order $50 or more for free shipping, but then you'll surely want to pay extra for second-day shipping). Now I'm thinking about a dedicated jig rod, heavy/fast, about 7'3" and superbly sensitive and paired with a nice, fast, strong, light baitcaster reel spooled with #15 fluoro. I know my wife will be ticked off, we can't afford this stuff. But you GUYS understand, right! I NEED a jig rod, right? Whoa! Whoa, what was that? A determined little sharp toothed monkey just zipped across my bedroom! The monkey's going to bite me hard, again -- soon; I just know it! Hmmm, you know, just maybe I have a problem...
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An 8Lb Fish....
8 lb bass average length should be 23.55 inches, according to the tables.
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An 8Lb Fish....
I recently read an interesting past article on the Bassresource site called "Are my Bass Overpopulated," by Dave Willis and Bob Lusk. It contains two tables, one metric and the other in inches, that compare length and weight of LMB. They can tell you how fat or skinny your bass is, and therefore how well fed the bass in a given pond are. The article and tables should precisely answer Chris S's question. http://www.bassresource.com/fish_biology/overpopulated-bass.html (By the way, I wish the Bass Resource articles had the published date listed. How do you know if an article is new or from 20 years ago? Especially when it comes to technology, it would be nice to know.)
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Small Swimbaits
Primetime, I find it amazing that you can so coolly and offhandedly characterize a dozen or so baits that all fall within the category of "swimbaits under 4 inches for bass fishing." I am honestly impressed. You might be some sort of incredible small-swimbait prodigy. Maybe there's a prize for that, or at least a store coupon? (Golly, I'ld contribute.)
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Yum Dinger 7" Not Available
I am grateful, Whitwolf. I will definitely, and soon, buy some packs of Zoom Magnum finesse worms in various colors during my next costly spree at T***.com. My wife, as you might imagine, so looks forward to the series of brown boxes that show up on my doorstep, filled with incomprehensible plastic bits. I will reassure her that the great Houdini himself, as well as the Whitwolf of Morgantown, have inspired this lucky purchase. I will explain that bass must be caught in great numbers repeatedly, and released thereafter, generally with only minor physical and psychological injuries, and that this box will assist me greatly in that very useful and healthy enterprise.
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Small Swimbaits
I'm addicted to Gambler EZ Swimmers, though they are a little longer (they are 4.25") than delineated in the criterium. I nailed this 6.0 from the bank about five hours ago and a 5.1 fifteen minutes later. Both caught on a dark blue EZ weightless burned across the surface in shallow open water. After a stressful day at work, those fat ladies made my day!
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Any One Try The Salty Sticks By Keitech?
I haven't tried the Keitechs and don't plan to, given the poor reviews as far as durability and the fact that I probably have 2,000 plastic baits stockpiled in my garage. However, I am intrigued by two great sounding concepts in the manufacturer's description: a salty core sealed by a surrounding layer that protects the salt from dissolving, and firmer plastic in the nose to keep the bait in place on the hook. I hope these features can be realized successfully and affordably in future plastics.
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Small Swimbaits
Gambler EZ Swimmer (darker colors) weightless or weighted hook, and Lake Fork Magic Shad (white) with belly-weighted hook.
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Yum Dinger 7" Not Available
Bassontheline has them, and I truly appreciate the link, but I can't bring myself to pay the ridiculous shipping fee of $20 (standard shipping) for 4 little bags of worms. Will prob buy some Zoom Magnums. I have never tried them but they do look delicious.
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Yum Dinger 7" Not Available
Thanks for the tips, guys. I heard from Stephen at Yum also. They discontinued 7" due to poor sales. Still available here and there till stock runs out.
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Yum Dinger 7" Not Available
Every once in a while I toss out a T-rigged 7" Yum Dinger senko-type stick bait. It's big and fat so it tends to attract the big mama LMB, like this 4 pounder from just after sunset today. I intended to order some more 7 inch Dingers. But TW and BPS don't carry Yum Dingers at all, and the Yum site has only 4, 5,and 6 inch Dingers. Oh, well. I have an email to Yum asking about the sevens. Meanwhile, anyone know of any salted stickbaits as big and fat as the 7 Dinger?
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Neighborhood Lakes?
Was fishing a neighborhood lake by a public street near my house in Boca Raton, FL. The security guard asked me to leave, but he said I could cast out one more time. That one more time got me an enormous 7 lb, 1 oz bass. I was surprised I didn't get arrested for screaming "yes!" and "whoa!" repeatedly, like I'd just won the lottery or something. Anyway, I was determined to get back in to the lake. A little on-line research with the Palm Beach County Property Department showed me that where I was fishing was open for "recreational use," so I went back again. When the guard approached me, this time I was ready with powerful information. I emailed the link to him which he forwarded to his boss, and he hasn't bothered me since. But neither have I caught anything over three pounds since then. But I know my 7 pounder is even bigger and is in there somewhere. And some nearby "no trespassing" signs keep away my competitors. But not me!
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Big Channel Cat Surprise On Topwater While Bass Fishing
Thanks! I'll try that!
- Bank Fishing In S Florida Late Fall
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Big Channel Cat Surprise On Topwater While Bass Fishing
That cat was a lot of fun to catch, a great fight and a big surprise. I am wondering if I should go back to that shallow pond and throw out a hook with liver or a hot dog or crawlers on it to try to nail another channel cat. Or use that smelly goo they sell for catfish bait. I guess I just toss my line out to the middle, have a seat, hold on tight and try not to fall asleep. If I don't get one soon enough, it's back to bassin'.
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Big Channel Cat Surprise On Topwater While Bass Fishing
Thanks for sharing those great photos, Bluebasser. Love your homemade swim jig. And those cat monsters! Impressive barbels -- and that fantastic beer belly! Looks kinda like this guy that lives down the block... I was reading that their entire outer skin is covered with taste buds (chemo-receptors). That's feasible, I suppose, because they lack scales.
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Big Channel Cat Surprise On Topwater While Bass Fishing
Thanks, guys, for the info. That's amazing, Bluebasser. I thought cats just sniffed along the bottom for dead fish and chicken livers. Glad to learn and experience new things today -- especially the adrenalin rush from the big cat bite!