T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
248.1 | a cheap fish scent | UNYEM::GEIBELL | IN SEARCH OF SNOW BUNNIES | Thu Jan 14 1993 07:40 | 10 |
|
We use WD 40 penetrating oil for scent alot of times., and believe
it or not it works good.
Lee
|
248.2 | Good Ole George L. Herter | MPGS::MASSICOTTE | | Thu Jan 14 1993 12:03 | 15 |
|
Years ago I got sucked into a "FISH ATTRACTOR" in the Herters
catalog. That's when he sold everything from antfarms to bull
dozers. Well, almost. :^)
It showed a catfish holding onto a piece of clothesline that
was tied in the middle to a mono fish line. "THEY REFUSE TO
LET GO!" If memory serves, it cost me about $5.00 for a pint.
Turned out to be linseed oil!
Like the man said, "There's one born every minute!" :^)
And it never helped either.
Fred
|
248.3 | | GERBIL::DUPONT | | Thu Jan 14 1993 12:45 | 10 |
|
I don't know-
When vacationing on Lake Whinni this past
summer I bought catfish attractant that
you sprayed on a sponge- & caught fish!!!
chet
|
248.4 | | DELNI::OTA | | Thu Jan 14 1993 16:14 | 16 |
| I have been using various attractants for a couple of years and will
continue to use them. Is there any imperical evidence that says they
catch more fish, nope none. It all boils down to what gives you more
confidence when you fish. I tend to find I use attractants when the
fishing slows down. My gut tells me that when I use attractants I tend
to fish longer with a given setup and a tad more diligently. My
partners all have started using the stuff too, so who knows, its
what you fell comfortable with that counts.
Brian
PS
I have been known to use alka seltzer in kangeroo pouch worms when it
was really slow and claim to have caught a couple. However, did I use
it at a tournie, nope.
|
248.5 | wd-40 is a good choice also | ESKIMO::KERSWELL | Gill_Raker r r r r | Fri Jan 15 1993 07:49 | 22 |
| I use it,, need i say more...
No i use the stuff, i mainly use it to remove/coverup anything that
might have given a lure an oder, but like Ota say's it's also a
confidence helper, when things get slow, I carry 3-4 different
kinds also, i dont stick with one impaticular, I mainly use REAL
CRAW when i'm fishing gitzit's, i like to full them up, what I
do is fill up a visine bottle (the cover is removable) and just stick
the spout into the gitzit and filler-up, good when fishing them slow.
I Know a few people who dont buy attracatant's they make it themselves,
they add shrimp/liver/garlic not sure what else, i could find out if
some was interested,.
I mainly use them when i carry a rod in my trunk with a lure attached
god knows what get's on the lure in there. like trying to unhook the
treble hooh's from the carpet you smudge the lure right there so it's
time for a squirt, I believe MMatt even uses 454 when he runs out of
mouse, so some of it has many applications.
(Gill_Raker)
|
248.6 | maybe dip 'em in Beer? | VICKI::SMITH | Consulting is the Game | Fri Jan 15 1993 11:59 | 8 |
| I've never used any odor enhancers on Lures. But, I'm thinking
about just dipping the rubber worm into an open can of Beer just
before casting it... Since I'm an UltraLight (4 lb. test) fisherman,
then maybe I should use only the 'Lite' beer???
keep 'em tight,
Bob
|
248.7 | taste better | MSBCS::HURLEY | | Fri Jan 15 1993 14:01 | 3 |
| I have tried this and the only differance I can say is that the beer
seems to taste a little better after. The more cans of beer you use the
better..
|
248.8 | here's all you need | ESKIMO::KERSWELL | Gill_Raker r r r r | Fri Jan 15 1993 14:36 | 11 |
|
IF YOU WANT SOMETHING that will really work it would be
annesette? it would leave a liquish scent on your bait?
or you could even send your lures to the Legend he would
bless them for you and you would never have to add a thing
to them for the rest of your life, send the lure's to;
LEGEND of the lakes
P.O BOX Lunker City
GOD'S country USA 0U812
|
248.9 | Real Craw and FS 454 | DEMING::MATTSON | | Thu Jan 21 1993 08:32 | 15 |
| GER,
I use some type of Fish atrractant all the time. Most of my
tournament buddies do as well. Typically it benefits slower moving
baits. The idea is the fish moves in a little closer to take a look
and hopefully the smell will trigger it to hit. Plus as others said it
will mask the human smell or any others that might not seem natural to
the fish.
I mainly fish for bass. They don't rely on smell as much as other
spieces (ie; catfish). But in a tournament you want every advantage on
your side. Faster moving baits probably don't benefit much from using
an attractant, although I'm sure there's folks that differ on that
opinion.
Gary
|
248.10 | treating salmon/trout eggs | KAM500::LEPAGE | Prisoner of gravity | Fri Apr 02 1993 17:13 | 27 |
| Hi,
Spring is in the air...can you feel it?
Does anyone have any experience with preserving/treating salmon/trout eggs.
I have a batch that is frozen in my freezer from a nice brown trout i caught
last fall and since this is my first time with this type of bait i don't
wan't to waste it.
I've been told of various ways to treat them, such as :
garlic, brown sugar, salt and yes even borax.
My question is,
1) I always thought of borax as a detergent, wouldn't such a product
leave a ...soapy... taste in the eggs?
2) then once i've tied the egg sacks, do i just put them in a jar with
salt water or are ther better solutions available?
Any info would be much appreciated.
cheers,
Ger
|
248.11 | | EMDS::MMURPHY | | Mon Apr 05 1993 08:18 | 7 |
|
A guy I new, tied what ever he need for a weekend and
the rest remained frozen. The ones he tied any tight sealing
container or ziplock. I personaly would not treat them with
anything.
Kiv
|
248.12 | Borax is a salt.. | RIPPLE::CORBETTKE | | Mon Apr 05 1993 12:50 | 13 |
| re .10
Borax is not a soap. Just buy pure Borax, take the eggs and make sure
all sides of the eggs have borax on them. This can be done by rubbing
the skein with borax, fluffing the borax in btween the eggs in the
skein. Cut the skein in to convenient sizes for storage, usually in a
pint mason jar. Make sure you put a little layer of borax between
each piece as you store it. It should last forever in a refrigerator.
The other methods all require some mix of materials and each person has
their own best recipe.
Ken
|