Skip to content

Turtle135

Members
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Turtle135

  1. Found an off shore hump with a log laying over the top. Sat there for over an hour just bumping the jig up and over that log.
  2. Lew's SuperDuty. What I have found is that these are pretty bullet proof. Designed for deep diving crankbaits and A-Rigs they stay tight and solid with normal presentations.
  3. A jig with a craw trailer is pretty much my go to presentation. I find that it produces larger than average sized bass in the pressured waters I fish. For my fishing in Maryland that is a lure I throw "into" cover. Fish it like you are trying to lose it. Early season my cover would be laydowns. Then as the season progresses (into post spawn and beyond) aquatic vegetation becomes the preferred cover. I fish a lot of green pumpkin jigs in lakes that have a sunfish, perch and crayfish forage base. I suspect many of the bass I catch see that green pumpkin not as a craw but as a struggling sunfish or perch.
  4. Good deal! I have run up to Storm three times in the winter when everything was frozen solid in Maryland. A little bit of wind goes a long way on that body of water and I can't imaging what it was like with those wind speeds! Was there on a clear cold day with a fishing buddy. Couple of hours in and we were wondering why we were being pelted with hail. Whatever was coming from the smoke stacks that day was freezing and falling on us.
  5. I looked at the manual for mine. I do not see an option to change that font color. Yours is black, right?
  6. They are correct regarding the Humminbird needing the Zero Line Card ($ 99.99) as the unit will only record 8 hours of AutoChart Live Data. From the Humminbird site: "The Zero Lines Map card will give you years of record time as well as the ability to share maps with your friends". As an interesting side note, the first thing I did was chart some of my "A" spots on my two local reservoirs. One map made it clear by the bottom contour why it was such a productive spot almost year round. On another spot, I have no idea from examining the contour why this area holds quality bass. Go figure!
  7. Just fyi, "All GPS-equipped G2/G2N HELIX models give you AutoChart Live". My Helix 5 on my kayak has AutoChart. So I paddle around and map my lakes, pretty cool feature!
  8. Just an update. I may have only milked one weekend out of this pattern this year (usually get 3 weeks). Water temperatures dropped like a rock down to 53 degrees. I could still see some sort of forage fish on the Humminbird down in the 25 - 30 foot depths but I was not marking the large predators at all this weekend. Some other details on this pattern. These bass that I catch when this pattern is on are larger than average size fish but they are never the biggest in the system (those bigs come later in the year on a jig when the water is in the mid 40's). When the wind is really howling it makes for some of the fastest action of the year. If you can hold your position and get a lure down to them they do not discriminate on the presentation.
  9. My take is that it is an advantage to understand as much about bass and forage behavior as possible. Stay ahead of the bass, the quicker you can find them the better. Plus I am rather fascinated by the science behind the behavior.
  10. Great looking Pike, that one is built like a bulldozer!
  11. I had a sit inside kayak back in the 1990's. The seat comfort problem I experienced was not lack of padding on the bottom of the seat but the fact that the "seat back" was so low. They keep the seat backs low on a sit inside kayak so that you can still install a kayak skirt (aka: spray skirt, cockpit cover). What gave me relief was dropping a portable stadium style seat right on top of the existing seat which gave my lower back the support it needed.
  12. 40s - jig 50s - jig 60s - jig 70s - jig 80s - jig or a 10" - 12" ribbontail plastic worm 90s - jig or a 10" - 12" ribbontail plastic worm
  13. That should be the next innovation for the Wildy OS Pod. A little crank that allows you to raise and lower the puck just enough for the side imaging to function.
  14. I have the Hummingbird Helix 5 with GPS and down imaging on my Tarpon 130x. I thought long and hard about side imaging but the peace of mind of having the puck completely protected (fish finder mounted in the OS Pod) was what I had been craving for years. My transducer arms that I used on my Ride 115 had a tendency to collect weeds and hang up on laydowns at the most inopportune time. As far as screen size goes I would consider is the 7" if your budget allows. On my 5" it is fine until you want to display multiple views at the same time.
  15. I pretty much only use Netbait Paca Craws (mostly the baby and the tiny sizes) and Netbait B Bugs (in both sizes).
  16. Interesting fall phenomena on my two local hydrilla reservoirs. Every fall I keep my eyes open for bass to start stacking up out in 25 - 30 feet of water. I had speculated that what pushed them deep is the grass dying off and burning up the dissolved oxygen, forcing the bait and the bass out of the grass. This year I am not so sure that is a valid theory. The grass started dying back early October (just like normal, due to reduced daylight hours) but this year the water stayed unusually warm. I looked all October but never marked any fish out that deep. This past weekend I am cutting across the mouth of a big cove and my fish finder lights up in 27 FOW. The water temperature just this week finally dipped down to 58 - 60 degrees. I normally see that water temperature sometime in October. I dropped a lipless crank down to the marks and caught six 2-3 pound largemouth and a couple of large crappie over the next 90 minutes before they stopped biting. There are still some small 12" largemouth in the shallower grass mats. These lakes have no shad so I never see that migration to the creeks. Forage fish in these reservoirs are sunfish, yellow perch, crappie and crayfish. Now I am wondering if this pattern is more driven by water temperature and the thermocline pushing deeper and deeper as we head towards the fall turnover. Perhaps that newly exposed bottom presents a feeding opportunity for forage baitfish? Anyone else experience a similar fall pattern on their water?
  17. When that happens I take them out of the package and lay them straight and separated on a clean surface. A day or two of air drying and they will come back to normal.
  18. You can get a schematic diagram for your reel here: http://www.abugarcia.com/AbuGarcia-reel-schematics.html and it looks like you can order a part if you need one here: http://www.abugarcia.com/AbuGarcia-parts.html
  19. Zoom Baits Z-Craw?
  20. I would throw a jig but that is my answer for all conditions! What really matters is what has been going on with the water temperature. Until you get those colder nights the water temperature in a large body of water can be stubborn and hold onto most of her heat.
  21. If you have a kayak Chopawamsic Creek is worth getting the permit. Good largemouth bass fishing and the dreaded Northern Snakeheads are present.
  22. Hmmm, according to Tackle Warehouse Trilene Big game is monofilament, Trilene XL is a copolymer and Trilene XT is monofilament. On Berkley's site they all come up under the monofilament sub category (they do not have a copolymer sub category). I always thought all three were just plain mono.
  23. .31mm (millimeters) is the "diameter" of the line that they list for Big Game 10 pound test. Most of the tests I have read show Big Game breaking several pounds heavier than rated when looking at the 10, 12 and 15 pound test versions of that line. This is generally a good thing for most bass fishing situations and a bad thing for someone chasing a line class world record.
  24. Take a look at the diameter by pound test. Trilene XT 12 pound test: .38 mm Big Game 12 pound test: .36 mm Trilene XT 10 pound test: .35 mm Big Game 10 pound test: .31 mm Trilene XT is touted as one of the stronger lines on the market. I believe that is largely due to the fact that XT's actual break strength is much higher than what they list on the package. Comparing XT to other mono lines of equal "listed" break strength you will almost always find that XT is a much thicker line. That thickness likely increases XT's abrasion resistance. I fish with Trilene XT all the time but if you spooled up a reel with Big Game that had the same diameter I doubt I could tell the difference between the two. I am just very familiar with XT and I adjust the pound test up and down for the conditions (cover type, air and water temperature, how deep a particular crankbait will dive, etc.).
  25. I fished out of a Tarpon 100 for four years. It was the first sit on top kayak I ever owned. Great boat, I caught my PB smallmouth out of that kayak. The Tarpon 120 and 100 are two of the more popular kayaks in Wilderness Systems lineup. A lot of recreational paddlers also use them. I think the reason Wildy does not list them in their fishing kayak line is because some of their fishing specific kayaks have extra features specifically for fisherman (like the OS Pod for a fish finder and molded spots for micro power poles). The Tarpon 100 has the SlideTrax rails on the front and on the back tank well. These will allow to you mount extra rod holders, fish finders, camera mounts, etc.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.