Everything posted by Junk Fisherman
-
Have you quit fishing before?
I fished with my dad as a youth but lost interest in my teen years but I started back up heavily around the age of 20. When I went through a divorce in my late 20s I lost interest in fishing for a couple months. Coaching softball in the spring for 3 years left me hardly anytime to fish. Those have been my only stretches were I didn't fish.
-
Drop Shot On A Baitcaster
Yes- I use a light baitcaster combo for dropshotting and it works quite well. I use a medium action Dobyns 742C rod and a Zillion reel. Since my main sinker weight is 3/8th ounce, castability is never an issue. I started using the combo since I pitch a lot of breakwalls and the baitcaster is preferred for pitching but I'll often use the baitcaster for dropshotting in open water. Overall, I do prefer using a spinning rig for dropshotting but if you're someone who doesn't like spinning rig then definitely give the baitcaster a shot.
-
Show your fishing holes!
-
Drop Shot On A Baitcaster
No but I am selling a 742C HP in new condition if you are interested. I have two and don't really need both. I could see how that rod would be great for those applications though.
-
Pneumonia Sucks
Sorry to hear that Spankey. Get well soon. I came down with pneumonia in June of 2021 on a fishing trip. Spent a whole week of vacation in northern Michigan laying in the bed in our rental. Beautiful weather and I had a fever that peaked over 105. ER diagnosed me as having sun poisoning so I spent 5 days waiting to get better without any meds. Driving 5 hours home towing my boat with a fever in the 102 range was not a lot of fun. Came down with Covid about a month later. That was not a good summer for me.
-
Smallmouth Leader Line Selection
6 lb Gamma Edge
-
Fishing as Therapy.
That sounds like an awful stretch to go through. Glad to hear things have improved.
-
Adding autopilot trolling motor to PDL kayak?
$2500 out the door for a PDL? Now add for rigging, electronics, and a battery. Wow. I kicked around the idea of getting a pedal-drive kayak but I'll stick to my Wilderness System Ride 115 for the couple times a year I use it.
-
Your Moron Moments
So I motored down the river this past weekend and fished a spot 8 miles from the launch. After about 15 minutes, I went to move and my motor wouldn't fire up. I had used a plug-in charger for my phone while I was running which is something I never do. I figured that was the reason my battery was dead. I took the time to move a trolling motor from under the front deck to see if that would fire up the motor- no change. So I figured my trolling motor batteries would not make it back to the launch but there was another launch about a mile away. Called my wife and she was going to meet me at the launch so I could take her car and go get my truck. I make it to the next marina and was fishing while waiting for my wife. Catch a nice fish and figured I'd get everything organized so I could leave as soon as she arrived. Do you know where this is going? Yeap- I pulled out the kill switch which was attached to my life jacket when I arrived at my first fishing spot. I just had tunnel vision that my battery charger drained my battery. Re-attached the kill switch and the motor fired right up. Thankfully, my wife hadn't left town and started the 45 minute or so drive to the marina. Only lost a couple hours due to my stupidity. At least I should never make that mistake again.
-
Buying From Small Shops vs Big Shops
I worked at a local shop and it was the same deal. Their bread and butter was bait and putting line on reels. Hard baits, reels, and electronics made little money. Rods and terminal tackle were more profitable. To this day, they have fair prices and a decent selection but if you watch the online sales and buy in bulk, you can save quite a bit.
-
Buying From Small Shops vs Big Shops
I buy between 95% and 99% of my tackle online or at winter fishing shows.
-
If a top-shelf bass fishing celebrity could join BassResource...
Q and A sessions on a podcast with preselected questions BUT let us suggest and then vote on the questions. If it is a chat you might end up getting a lot of questions along the lines of "What pound line do you use for spinnerbaits" or "What is your favorite color jerkbait?" which have value but can easily be Googled. If we get access to a pro, we need to ask higher level thinking questions like tournament strategy, making adjustments on the water, dealing with changing conditions and seasons, dealing with adversity, misconceptions in bass fishing, examples of good and poor decisions he's made, lessons that took him a long time to learn, ect. ect,
-
Uses for paddletail swimbaits without the tail
I use them on a dropshot and they work very well.
-
Brag about your state's bass fishing.
I've become pretty satisfied with the bass fishing in Illinois. Newton Lake in central Illinois is often on the Bassmaster list of best lakes in the Midwest. I love that lake. Southern Illinois has a couple great lakes and I love the ones with a 10-HP limit. I also have a very good cooling lake that opens on March 1st and that lake will be fantastic for the first month of the season regardless of the air temps. Lake Michigan around Chicago is very good for smallmouth, even though I primarily fish Lake Michigan in Indiana, and there is an adjoining river and lake that have become very good over the last 5 years. There are other lesser-known lakes that I have a lot of success on that I keep quiet about. Learning the sleeper lakes, avoiding fishing when tournaments are being held, and just becoming a better fishermen has made me happy fishing Illinois waters. But with all that said, I plan to get a second home in A-Jay country in about 10 years because that is just so much better.
-
It's Always A Little Sad
There's good and bad. I love the fact that less people are fishing. Last year was my first year fishing all of November and well into December. As long as there are no tournaments, the number of fishermen plummet. And while it's colder, the number of big fish I catch go way up compared to the summer. If I am fishing Lake Michigan or its feeder rivers, I can easily tangle with a salmon or trout so that is also fun. Got into a couple musky last year as well. Naturally, it is a little sad since the big fishing pause is coming. However, I have a fantastic cooling lake that opens March 1st so my offseason is usually no more than 2.5 months. And if the water is open this winter, I plan to try some damiki rig fishing and lake trout fishing. There's something about the empty water and cold temperatures that feels both lonely and liberating at the same time. My expectations go way down and I'm just happy to be on the water.
-
Hi from the Windy City
Hey there McFly. Tinley Park basser here. I'm in Maple Bassmasters and if you are interested in that club I could give you a lot of info.
-
Between the lines
I've gotten to the point where if I'm on a multi-day trip and the fishing is not great early in the trip, I'll make it a half day just to conserve energy. If I try to hit it hard for 4-5 days in a row, I'll run out of steam by the end of the trip especially if the fishing is not great. Burned myself out prefishing a few times.
-
Competitive Fishing
I did not do well when I first started club tournaments in my mid 20s. I was such a novice since I had only gotten into fishing a couple years before. My dad was an excellent bowhunter but as a fisherman he was a spinnerbait/Rapala Countdown guy. If they didn't hit either of those baits, he was in trouble. So I never had anyone to teach me so I was just left with reading magazines and watching a few shows here and there. In terms of tournaments, I was greatly affected by dock talk and often tied on lures for the first time the night before a tournament if I heard a couple fishermen had done well with the presentation the day before. I didn't have confidence baits, I fixated on color, took poor performances badly, and just made way too many mistakes. I used to have knot issues and broke off on a lot of fish. I missed out on my club's championship team by a few points my first year and I easily would have made it if I could have tied a dammn knot. I look back sometimes and realize just how much of a better fishermen I am nowadays and my tournament results reflect that. I really wish I could go back and teach my 25-year old self a few things that took me way to long to learn.
-
Dream living/fishing location!
Tell me about your summers. My father lived in southern IL and from roughly mid May to mid September, the norm was 90+ and high humidity. Their temperatures were generally 5-7 degrees warmer than where I live (300 miles north) which is about 5-7 degrees warmer than where I go in the summer, Northern Michigan which is about 300 miles north of me. I HATE that high heat and humidity where after 10 AM you are drenched in sweat if you are expending much energy outside. Am I wrong to think this is the norm for Florida but for even a longer amount of time each year?
-
Dream living/fishing location!
This is my plan when I retire. In about 10 years, I'm buying somewhere around Traverse City and will stay there from April to early November every year. Besides the smallies, I want to learn how to fish lakers in the cold water season. My wife wants to have our home base around Chicago for our kids which I am in total agreement with. I plan to take a 2-week trip to Texas every February and with a great local power plant lake that opens on March 1, I think my fishing calendar will be full. I know this doesn't really answer your question but there isn't one place that would satisfy me for the entire year. Down south is too dammn hot in the summer and you know about your winters up north. Maybe if I ever got into ice fishing, I'd be happy living up north all year around.
-
How did you catch your HUGE smallmouth?
My profile pic is my biggest @ 6.6 lbs. Caught it on a green pumpkin, blue flake tube at daylight. My top 5 would be a little under 30 lbs. Having a one day, 25-lb bag has been a goal for a while. I've hit 23-24 lbs a couple times. I just don't spend enough time on the right type of water.
-
Considering a Glass Boat
Depends how much you want to spend. The Nitro will be the least expensive but you definitely hear more build quality issues with them than Tritons and Rangers. But a lot of people like their Nitros which definitely counts for something. With the crazy price of boats nowadays, I am going to strongly consider a Nitro for my next boat. Good luck.
-
How late into the season is still “good”?
I plan on Damiki rig fishing this winter as long the launches aren't frozen. Last year I fished for largemouth and smallmouth throughout temps in the 40s. Low 40s got pretty tough and then it froze up on me. Mids 40s is a great time for a blade bait.
-
Fishing Etiquette
Had a guy yesterday come between me and the shore. To give you an idea how far I was from the shore- I was sitting just a little out of reach of the shore with a cast. So I was floored he didn't go around me. Then, the coangler got hung right in front of me so he had to turn around to unsnag. Neither guy ever looked at me. I just put my rod down, poured a cup of coffee, and watched them shaking my head. I literally thought about this thread while this was going on. I didn't say anything. What's the point? Say something and have a verbal altercation while I'm out enjoying the day of fishing? What does that change? The boater was in his 60s and he knew better.
-
Switched to braid, 20, 30 or 40?
You're not going to break the 20 lb line so this comes down line management. Thicker line is easier to deal with but braid handles nicely on spinning reels already. I'd go 20 lb but I have learned to go thinner with braid when I am indecisive. The 30 being a little thicker will be more user-friendly but the 20 will cast better.