Everything posted by boudroux
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Sun Protection
Sorry about the delayed response. I got a 5 pack from salt armor and they seem to fit me and my boys without any issue. They are very stretchy. Another thing I just recently got into using are these. Keep them wet, wrapped around your neck, tucked into your shirt. These things are killer. https://www.froggtoggs.com/chilly-pad-33957/
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3 years on, thoughts on rods and reels for new people
3 Years into my bass fishing and I'm convinced the best rod and reel is the one in your hand at the moment. When I first got into this I made a post or two that in hind sight were a combo of blind enthusiasm and a bit of being overwhelmed at the options and number of manuf. in this sport. These probably made the experienced folks here take a deep breath and sigh and think geez use the search button guy. ha A few years later, some sweet second hand purchases, more ass chewing from the wife about purchases then I care to count, a couple broken rods, 7 and 9 year olds who go through tackle and gear like a candy bar and now I'm feeling like offering a simple piece of advice to others who might be new to this. Worry less about the gear and more about casting skills. Because my sons are young but can throw a baitcaster very well they have a few 30'ish dollar BPS rods with KastKing assassin reels. Wrinkle your nose but I can promise this much. With these cheapo combo's I'll out fish a guy with top shelf gear who hasn't taken the time to practice casting until accuracy is achieved along with the ability to skip baits into small spots. Another thing I keep running across is a lot of times you are never in a perfect position to do a easy front hand cast so being able to fish backhand, out of position and such has been a huge help. I swear I catch more fish when the boat gets pushed out of position by wind or current and I see something I want to target and instead of taking the time to preposition the boat I just fire a cast with confidence that I'll hit it. My primary fishing grounds is a river with strong current so this out of position stuff might not apply to some folks however I'm confident that casting skills would apply exactly the same on lakes. One more thought for the new folks that I just recently figured out. Find a person who is super experienced, buy them gas and food and spend all day on the back of their boat. It was mind blowing watching a local bass club ass kicker grind for 6 hours straight. I swear he got 3 casts to every one of mine and could hit a gap between tree branches the size of a freaking baseball from 35 feet away, almost every time all day long. Stop obsessing on which $100 dollar rod is the most sensitive and get out there and practice casting with the same intensity, your fishing experience will be far more rewarding! Just my opinion based on personal experience thus far.
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Question About Spro Frogs Vs Live Target Frog
I frog fish a lot where I'm at. Tonight I just tried my first SPRO bronzeye and am ready to throw it in the trash. I generally use live target hollow body frogs and they work well for me. I've tried Matzou, Bass Pro house brand and a couple others and have never had a frog as tough to work over laid down reeds as this SPRO. The eye catches everything when trying to pull it over. At times it felt like there was a darn treble hook on the nose it hung up so bad. Also, when it lands it slaps down like a kid doing a cannon ball from the high dive. I've always heard such great things about this frog and am scratching my head on how poorly it just performed. Had 7-8 blowups and zero hookups. From personal experience on my other frogs I guarantee I would have gotten at least a few of those in the boat.
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Mend it vs gorilla glue
Just an FYI gorilla glue is dangerous to dogs. I've not had my dog chew any baits yet but something to keep in mind. I only mention it if there is anyone like me who regularly has their dog on the boat where there is a possibility of a glued bait laying around. http://www.petpoisonhelpline.com/poison/gorilla-glue/ She did chew the foam handle knob off a reel though.
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Sun Protection
Our routine is fish until it feels like you are about to melt, jump in the water for a couple minutes, back on boat until it feels like you are about to melt again. HA The fishing here is worth the heat for sure.
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Rod overboard
I've lost 3 combo's overboard. One was my 8 yr olds fault when he snagged a tree in heavy river current. He tried to clamp down the line with his fingers, got cut and let go. The second I hastily set down on the deck with the lure hanging over the edge about an inch under water. We passed over some surface grass (trolling motor speed), the lure snagged the grass and over it went. I spent three hours in chest deep water using a metal rake trying to find that d**n thing. The third was trying to squeeze through a gap in tule reeds, somehow one of the rods on deck got tangled up and pulled over. The most darned one was when 3 plano boxes full of jigs blew off the deck at speed. I would have never thought in a million years boxes that probably weighed 5 pounds each could get blown away like a tissue.
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Understanding Prices of Rods
I was wondering about this exact subject myself the other day. I went on a couple of the sites that sell all the blanks, guides etc. I spent a couple hours pricing out different combinations of guides and such on just a couple different blanks. It was a real eye opener on how much guides change the price of a build. You could take a blank that is say 70 bucks and turn it into a 100 dollar build or a 200 dollar build with just guide options alone. Thats before getting into all the options of cork and such. It was interesting to do and probably worth the exercise on your part to see.
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Sun Protection
Most has been covered here but I'll add this. The neck gaiters suck wearing over your face but I don't go out without them around my neck. There is a company that regularly runs sales of neck gaiters where you can get 5 for around 30 bucks. If I recall it is Salt Armor or something like that. My boys and I spend all of June and July and part of August on the Colorado River in CA/AZ. Well over 100 every day. most days over 110 without a single cloud in the sky. We are on the water everyday, all day and use the SPF shirts, lots of sunblock, hats, neck gaiters and haven't had a burn yet.
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Boating etiquette
I've called the local LEO once and have also spoke with the tournament director about it on another occasion and nothing seems to change. In my area there is only one outfit that runs tourny's and he doesn't seem to care what the entrants do once they blast off. One of these days a homeowner below us is going to flip his lid and it will get ugly.
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Boating etiquette
I run a little campground on the water. We are located on a backwater of a main river and upstream from our camp is very good fishing but you have to go a hair over a mile to get past us. There are many houses with docks, our camp with a dock and it is 5mph/no wake until well past my dock. I can't begin to describe the bad manors some of the bass fishermen have when going past the houses and us to access the fishing area. It is generally during tournaments that the actions are the worst. We can hear the boats coming from way up the main river long before they make the turn into our channel. It is like a race between the first 5-8 boats coming up the no wake zone. I've never done it but I've been so tempted to jump in my boat and wake the hell out while they are trying to fish but two wrongs don't make a right.
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No stank sandals
I love my crocs. All day comfort, water friendly. You just need thick skin for all the croc haters.
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Help Braid to Fluoro knots
I have braid main line on everything and use the blood knot. I find it super easy and fast to tie and in the times where I break off I always get my leader back. In my experience the blood knot is stronger then my improved clinch knot to the lure. Tying the blood knot takes about 30 seconds and is easy in the wind/dark etc.
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New Personal Best with fly rod.
Very nice! I'm actually gearing up to do a ton of flyfishing for the spawners this year. As I type my old man (retired and jonsing for stuff to do) is tying up his take on a wacky worm fly. Awesome post, thank you!
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Deciphering Posted Information Can Be Tricky ~
Awesome thread going here. Been fly fishing entire life, started bass fishing in 2016 when I purchased a business on the edge of a killer river. Initially, I read, read and read some more here and other places. I even asked the typical newbie type question or two. One thing that does jump out at me on replies to the type of questions highlighted in this thread is the following. It isn't often a poster worrying about the lure is told to get better at casting. My experience since picking this up has been the more I practice my casting techniques and accuracy the more fish I'm catching. Granted I'm lucky that since 2016 I'm spending almost 200 days a year now with a rod in my hand if only for an hour and am progressing quickly on casting. But even if only in the back yard or a soccer field practice casting like a fiend. I also will spend a little time each outing in the boat dedicated to strictly boat control. A little wind and/or river current and the best lure for the current situation ain't doing squat if you can't get into position to even cast. As a quick example. Mid January a huge scrub bush thing got hung up in the tules where I'm at. It had a massive root ball and 6 inch thick trunk. For a week straight I caught a fish a day under that root ball on everything from a spinnerbait, wacky worm, creature and a paddletail. It was a relativity technical cast to get the lure over the root ball, between the bush branches and tules but if you got a lure to fall in that spot it seemed like it didn't matter what lure, a bass smacked it. At this point in my personal journey of bass fishing I'm of the believe that being able to cast very well is every bit as important as what is tied on the end of your line.
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Where do they go. Colorado River Smallies in Winter
Early Jan, my last time out there, they were in the mid/upper 50's. In the summer the water on the main channel is upper 70's to lower 80's.
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Where do they go. Colorado River Smallies in Winter
Thanks for the replies, much appreciated. There are large sandbars all along but I've never tried the downstream side of one because I figured being in open water with no cover the drop off wouldn't hold fish. I'll spend some time fishing the middle of the river on the sandbar drops and see how it goes. Thanks again!
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Where do they go. Colorado River Smallies in Winter
So my main smallmouth haunt is the lower Colorado River in California approx 40-50 miles up from the Mexican boarder. In the section of the River it is all man made banks, very consistent sand only bottom with summer time depths ranging from a couple of feet to isolated deeper (small) section that can be anywhere between 8-12' deep. During the summer when the water levels are highest we slay them along the rip rap banks. Summer time the water is well up on the rock banks leaving a few to a handful feet of water over the rocks. Throwing just about any type of swim/crank/spinner works like a charm. In the winter however, the water levels are way down and the rocks are mostly dry with mud banks exposed. I'm yet to figure out where they go this time of the year. This stretch is dynamite in higher water and a mystery in winter/low water. Part of my question is how far do you think the fish travel to find the type of cover they prefer? I ask because down river a ways the river is as nature does it. No rip rap banks, just natural river with cliffs, a few deeper holes, lots of bends and such. However for the most part this down river stretch is extremely shallow and can be very tough to navigate in a boat. Also, the fish from the upper stretches would have to travel down anywhere from a dozen to many more miles. Is it possible they move that far in the winter? This video is of the man made up river stretch with summer high water. You can see there is only a couple feet of rocks exposed. This time of the year you would see the rock bank completely exposed so the edges have no cover at all. Any help is appreciated and I thank you in advance.
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Southern Cali has fish, lots of pics
Someone told me recently that Canyon Lake is pretty darn low right now making the fishing tough.
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Southern Cali has fish, lots of pics
Just got back from a week fishing the Lower Colorado River and the back waters, south of Blythe and north of Yuma. Due to business I am lucky to spend a good amount of time there each year. 2017 was my second full year bass fishing so I'm new and learning each trip. This recent stretch over new years was a great learning experience for me because I forced myself to use different techniques, some successful and others not so much. We caught fish every day on the backwaters and nothing on the main river. Pics from our most recent trip Spinnerbait next to a submerged log: Flipping the tules with a creature: My old man and his first bass that was not caught on a flyrod: Couple select pics from the previous trips: Turtle on a paddletail: 34 pounds for my 9 year old My personal best freshwater fish, 40 pounds:
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Any other fly fishermen out there?
I've been flyfishing for trout since I was 5. Recently I've started catching smallmouth on the lower Colorado River in California on a 5wt using small streamers. What a blast catching these guys on the fly.
- Finally Finished in the Money
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The CA Delta and Folsom Lake be up there end of July
Thank you for the replies, very much appreciated. I'll look into that other area for the delta and see about camping. A couple more weeks....
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Hooking Yourself
My first attempt to remove was using my bench vice but the angle wasn't right to be able to pull it out so I grabbed a pair of linesman pliers and had my wife hold them and I jerked it out. The darn tetnis shot hurt more than nailing myself.
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Hooking Yourself
As a kid I buried a hook in my brothers thigh canoe fishing. My dad pushed it through to cut the barb. It was 30 years ago and I can still vividly remember how much skin stretches before that hook pushed through. I just did this building a ceiling mount rod rack.
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The CA Delta and Folsom Lake be up there end of July
Just talked the wife into driving up to the Folsom Lake area to visit her girlfriend and stay for a week. We will leave SoCal on July 29th and return around Aug 4-6 depending on how we feel. I'm bringing my boat (20' Ranger) and my sons and I plan on fishing each day while she does her girl stuff. I'm doing my reading and am excited. Her friend lives 20 minutes from Folsom Lake so we will definitely fish there a few days. Looking at water levels it appears Folsom is almost full currently. Hopefully someone can confirm that for me please. I seem to remember reading not to long ago about Folsom being so low that ramps were out of the water, docs were sitting on dry ground way away from water etc. Second question on Folsom, those with the experience there would you say the map from Fish-N-Maps is good enough to get a first timer by or would you recommend a different companies maps? We will also go to the delta for a couple days. Because it looks like that is an hour or so from our friends house I'm thinking my boys and I will go there for a couple days and find a campground and just sleep in the bed of my truck. As a huge fan of the Walking Dead show the area on google maps that jumped out at me was the Terminous area. It shows on the Little Potato Slough/S Mokelumne River and looks like it is a good spot to access lots of water around there. Any thoughts on this spot vs. maybe picking somewhere different with tent camping/launch near by? Also, again Fish-N-Maps shows a map for the entire delta area, would this be a good choice or should I look for a delta map from a different company. For the days we go to the Delta I'm certainly open to suggestions on an area that has tent camping and a boat launch near by that would be worth checking out. I thank anyone in advance for your time and suggestions.