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Fish the Mitt

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Posts posted by Fish the Mitt

  1. 54 minutes ago, MickD said:

    there is almost no chance that your Pro Coat is bad.  99% of failure to cure problems with epoxy are caused by insufficient mixing.  Mix it for a solid two minutes, scraping it all together many times, then dip your brush into the center of it, not the edge.  Pro Coat takes a long time to get truly hard, so check it again before doing anything.

     

    It is likely that you can simply put a new coat on over the first one and have a good build.  Better to try it and find out it won't work than to simply assume it won't work.  You end up in the same place if it fails, but if successful you've avoided rewrapping the guides.

     

    If you are working in an especially cool area, that can also affect curing of epoxy, but not likely.

    I have some Pro Kote on the way. It is significantly less tacky then it was when I had posted this. I still don't see it curing 100% (even with a lot more time) so I will likely try another coat of Pro Kote and ensure I properly mix the two this time.

     

    I knew it was bad mixing because I had some left over in the little plastic cup they give you. Upon looking at, and feeling around this cup, it was hardened in some spots, not in others. So I totally agree that it was my fault, no one else's.

  2. 15 minutes ago, WRB said:

    The bow of the boat is in the water when moving slow or stopped. The keel guard only needs to be a few inches above the water line when the boat is stopped. When you pull the boat into a beach or ramp the bow end of keel guard will be out of the water, the back end in the water and the hull setting on the guard somewhere inbetween, depending how far on shore your boat is.

    You should replace the entire guard so it's 1 piece.

    Tom

    Thanks, Tom.

     

    Currently, my keel guard is under water while my boat is at rest. So I will look into replacing that.

     

    I mainly asked because 2 specific lakes I fish have raised banks (roughly a foot or two) so even if my guard protected me from the lake bottom, I run into the possibility of running the non keel protected portion onto land. I've gotten in the habit of banking my boat slightly sideways, which helps, but then makes getting on and off more difficult (not to mention pushing off).

  3. When I purchased my Skeeter, it came with a keel guard. However, in my opinion, it isn't long enough or forward enough. 

     

    So my question is two part:

     

    1. How far up on the forward part of the hull do your keel guards go?

     

    AND

     

    2. If I were wanting to extend mine another 2ft, would you add to the existing, or replace with an all new guard?

  4. On 9/23/2016 at 3:10 PM, slonezp said:

    I could make a video of me catching,  cooking, and eating a Kentucky spot and washing it down with beer before relaxing with 4 fingers of whiskey and dreaming about the proper way to rig senkos

    Was this ever made? PM me your YouTube handle because that's a channel I could get behind! (sarcasm of course).

     

     

  5. Late to the party, and it sounds like Mille Lacs might be the winner, but if you do make it to Northern MI, I suggest trying out Hubbard as well. It's really become a trophy smallmouth factory due in part by the great habitat efforts by the local community. MLF was just up there for the 2018 Summit Cup and they were catching 4-5bers all day (unsure what the biggest came in at).

     

    While St. Claire, Erie, and the NW part of Michigan gets all the glory, Hubbard (NE MI - Alpena) is really starting to shine in it's own right when it comes to smallmouth (109 yr old SM record was broken there in 2015 (9.33#) [record broke again shortly after (9.98 on Indian River)]).

  6. 39 minutes ago, drscholl14 said:

    Time of year, weather, water temp, windy or calm? If windy which part of the lake is the wind blowing into, where were the fish last time I was in these weather conditions.  Cloudy or sunny?  Clear or stained water?  The list goes on and on......

     

    Would probably be a better fisherman if I could shut that off once in awhile. 

    A lot of this I do before ever leaving the house in order to maximize my already limited time on the water.

     

    Before I leave:

    - Time of year

    - Weather (encompasses everything from sun vs clouds, wind speed, wind direction, barometer, incoming/outgoing fronts, etc..)

    - Understand which species I'm targeting (or if both, plan for both)

    - Successful spots in previous endeavors

    - Typical bass patterns for the season

    - Study topo (Navionics) to choose high probability spots

     

    Before I cast:

    - Water clarity (and how the wind/direction impacted this)
    - Current (since I fish a lot of impoundments)

    - Water temp

    - Water level

    - Whether or not the spots I picked from home would hold up based on what I see on the water

    - Then adjust as needed

     

    Very rarely do I just go out and fish without doing any of the above. I tend to plan my outings in advance, and rarely do I just wing it. Unless all else fails on the water, then it's a free-for-all.

     

    I wouldn't say it overcomplicates things as I actually enjoy this part of fishing. The challenge in trying to figure it out, if you will.

    • Like 2
  7. 8 hours ago, Tim Kelly said:

    I would try mixing another batch of prokote and putting a thin second coat on the guides. The epoxy might well set the unset stuff underneath, or at least give you a useable rod. Assuming you just have a slightly tacky epoxy coating at the moment. If it doesn't work, you're no worse off, just a bit of epoxy down.

    That's what I had originally planned to do but after reading a few posts online, it wasn't recommended. I haven't fully decided what I'm going to do as I had to order more Pro Kote anyways so either option is sidelined until I receive it.

     

     

  8. 19 hours ago, Abby said:

    I just got that same kit, it will be my first build also. I bought the tool kit last year to start centerpin rods but have yet to build one.

    MIX THE PROKOTE PROPERLY!

     

    I say that because apparently I didn't mix it well enough and mine won't cure. I have to remove it and start over with the thread finish.

  9. I use a variety of Keitech paddle tails mostly - usually the easy shiners or the Swing Impacts. For a bladed jig, since I rarely fish it on the bottom, I will almost always have a paddle tail or fluke style trailer. On occassion I'll throw a craw trailer, but it's rare.

    • Like 1
  10. 19 hours ago, MIbassyaker said:

    I think of it as a way to fish a small plastic bait near the bottom "as though" it were weightless. The weight gets it down, but with the weight ahead of the bait, moving it will pull the bait behind, but let it hunt, slide, shimmy, shudder, flutter, undulate, and settle on its own more freely, giving it very natural look, and I think that's why they'll bite it when they're in a mood to ignore anything else 

    Very well put, and I couldn't agree more.

  11. 2 hours ago, 12poundbass said:

    Sunny and 48 here already ?. I had a job at one of the larger lakes around me yesterday. What I saw shocked me.... 50% of the lake was open water! This itch keeps getting worse! 

    I'm currently sitting next to Houghton Lake. 45 & ice as far as I can see... 

    So close, yet so far away. Ugh. I need a beer.

    • Like 4
  12. Over the years, I have moved exclusively to Plano stow-away style boxes/sleeves. These stay on my bass boat during fishing season. I also have 2 dedicated to my kayak that have a variety of things I may need. I do have a large 6 tray Plano box that I used to use, but as stated, I've moved away from that. Now it's used for storing those things I have an abundance of that I don't necessarily need on the boat. 

     

    As for method of organizing. I organize by lure type. Tray(s) of cranks, tray(s) of jerkbaits, tray(s) of jigs, etc.. etc..

  13. 4 hours ago, Fishingmickey said:

    Hi Mitt,

         Semper Fi! Have you read Louie's "The Walking Drum" or "May there be a road". Sorry for the thread hijack guys. I'm a former marine who grew up cutting his reading teeth on Loius L'Amour. Had to share.

    Fishingmickey

    I have not. A generally stick to his frontier stories only, and have only read a few short stories. So that excludes both you mentioned, unfortunately. 

     

    To Tame a Land, Kilkenny, and Hondo are the three I've probably read the most (multiple times each).

     

  14. For me, at 60 degree water temps, there are two areas I focus on.

     

    1. Spawning grounds

     

    2. Transition routes to and from these spawning grounds.

     

     

    Do you have an idea of where these bass spawn? Have you or can you see them on beds? Flats, back of coves and creeks, etc... is where I'd start looking. 

     

    Some anglers during the spawn only target bedding bass. Others will only target the bass in moving in, or moving out. Others will do both. I fall in the last category. 

     

    Does this specific lake have a name? Topo map? Is it TX or MS?

     

     

    Lastly, welcome to BR!!

  15. Time: Well your reds/oranges are meant to resemble crawdads to an extent. So when does crawdads become a large part of a bass' diet? Fish them then..

     

    How: All my red/orange lures (any craw imitation really), are fished on the bottom. Again, replicating a crawdad, I'm not going to be fishing this throughout the water column. Jigs on the bottom, crankbaits hitting bottom all the way back to the boat, etc... but that doesn't mean red won't work for other things either.


    I suggest reading the thread started by @WRB yesterday. 

     

     

     

    • Thanks 1
  16. 57 minutes ago, GoneFishingLTN said:

    Good morning with spring coming up I was wondering how come as a fourm we don’t help the newer bass fisherman(like my self) understand maps and seasonal patterns. Wouldn’t it be a great learning tool for a lot of people?

     

    ideas I had idk if this is allowed but one person who believes they understand it well post a map of x lake. And explain how fish are coming from the deeper water to spawning flats during the beginning of spring and show a great example of what exactly a spawning flat is. 

     

    Side note when I first started it was very overwhelming hearing speaking flat and saddles etc just because I had no idea what any of that meant but it seemed like everyone (most on here) knew because how long they have fished. 

    Wouldn’t it just a nice guide for people heading to the lake to be ok so they are transitioning over to the spawning flats off this deep point...oh ok that’s exactly what a spawning flat looks like. 

     

    If this is a a bad idea by no means shut it down. Just figured it would be a good learning thread. 

    As a forum, a lot of the content here begins with an OP (you) who poses the topic or question. So, if you want to learn what you stated above, post a lake map. 

     

    As for an actual guide, it would be hard because everyone lives across the country and what one pattern works in FL isn't what will work in TN or MI. And also, every lake has the potential to behave differently day to day. There are no hard and fast rules to bass fishing - just guidelines. So creating a comprehensive guide to reading and understanding topo/contour maps of every lake and season across the country is not real possible or conducive to learning.

     

    As for posts like what you're talking about? I've seen dozens and have been involved in dozens where someone posts a navionics map, and the BR Community helps break it down (with our own opinions and experience based on generalities and location).

     

     

    So again, sure. Post a navionics map of your favorite lake!

    • Like 1
  17. 46 minutes ago, MassYak85 said:

    You know what's (almost) as good as catching fish when it's 100 degrees outside? A cold drink. What do you guys take on your boat, canoe, kayak, bank etc. during the summer to take a lunch and some drinks that has worked well throughout the worst summer heat? I primarily fish from a kayak and am only looking for something small, that would carry a few water bottles and have a little extra room for a sandwhich or something. Preferably a soft cooler but I am open to suggestions. 

    On my kayak I don't use a cooler, so I'm not much help there. I usually just have a Gatorade between my legs and a can of Grizz in my shirt pocket for a snack ?

     

    On my boat, I use a soft cooler my GF got from work. It's no Yeti but it works plenty good for a day on the water. 

     

    On my old bass boat, the live well wasn't big enough for 5 perch, let alone 5 bass, so that was my designated cooler. 

    • Like 2
  18. 1 hour ago, ratherbfishin1 said:

    I have no answer to your question but I've been interested in making my own rods too.  You mind if i ask how much the start up cost was for you?  Not the materials for the rod but all the tools you need to make it.

    This turnkey kit was $180+tax (minus 10% for giving my email to Mud Hole). Total was $170.

     

    This included the rod kit (blank, grips, reel seat, guides, etc..) and everything needed to build it (CRB hand wrapper, dryer, stands, threads, epoxies,  tape, razors, brushes, guide book, etc..).

     

    The only thing I've needed that wasn't in the kit was rubbing alcohol - everytjing else is there. I wanted to start basic and this includes everything I need plus some.

     

    As a reference, the rod kit alone is $113 I believe. I know it's over $100.

    • Like 1
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