T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1195.1 | Rib-it,Rib-it! | PACKER::GIBSON | I'm the NRA | Mon Jul 17 1989 10:56 | 14 |
| Tim.
Frog catching was one of my pre- adolestent persuits, you will need
very sofisticated tackle for it. Namely: A stick about ten ft long.
made of high tech. wood material. (any Type) willow works good!
Tie a piece og string 8-10 ft long onto it and a piece of RED felt
to the end. Dangle the Rag in front of the frog. They will swallow
it, when the do, pull them quickly out of the water and fling them
onto the ground to stun them. This will give you a couple of seconds
to grab them before they hop away.
Continue this procedure until your pockets are full o' frogs.
P.S. Don't forget to empty your pockets before going home.
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1195.2 | Catchin' em's easy | CHEZIT::T_THEO | In the woods | Mon Jul 17 1989 12:27 | 3 |
|
Hmmmm...Thanks for the info, but my real question was how do I hook
the little buggers as bait so that I get into some bass?
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1195.3 | Reel poplar dis time ob de year | DLOACT::BEAZLEY | | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:31 | 10 |
| What chew need is wun ob dem tadpole lures. Me, I dunno jes who maks
dem, but I got a couple. Dey ar 2-3 inches long wit a weedless hook on
de bottom ob dem. Dere sorta round, black, wit lil white dots on dem.
Look lak a big tadpole wit a small tail.
Chew jes trow dem op on de lily pads or duck moss an de bass sorta
sucks dem down. Dey don strike hard so chew hav to watch all de time.
Dere standard 'quipment don chere in Loosiana.
Coonass
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1195.4 | Frog Hooking | DNEAST::HARRIS_STEVE | | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:40 | 18 |
| Tim,
Frogs are an excellent bait for BASS. I only use artificial
baits now but I use to use frogs a lot. I use to use small frogs about
1 1/2" long. I would hook them through both lips sort of like a tommy
cod. I also use to put a small splitshot sinker about 1' up the line.
The idea with the splitshot is to have it just heavy enough to keep
the frog below the surface. This forces the frog to struggle to the
surface constantly attracting the big ones.
It is hard to hook a bass with a small hook using frogs usually
fish caught have the hook deeply embedded in the back of this mouths,
one of the reasons I don't like live baits.
Actually many frog replica lures can be worked to effectively
imitate a frog, they even have some out that are weedless.
Good Luck
Steve
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1195.5 | Bass like frogslegs too | SA1794::CUZZONES | | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:41 | 11 |
| Tim,
I think the clue to success is in your original note. I haven't
used frogs as bait but I've seen illustrations of two hooking methods.
One is through the mouth, like a shiner. The other is THROUGH THE
BACK LEG .. try a meaty section of the thigh. If it doesn't work, at
least you'll be able to try twice before you have to throw away
the frog (or get sick).
-SSS-
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1195.6 | | SALEM::HART | | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:50 | 9 |
|
I always hook them thru the body near the ass end. If you push the
hook right through the little guy's back so that it loops around
it's backbone the frog should still swim good and the hook is right
where the bass will strike. You can also get weedless frog lure
just about anywhere and you won't have to mutilate no more toads. :-)
luck
Kevin
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1195.7 | My bass loves frogs | MOSAIC::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Mon Jul 17 1989 14:19 | 12 |
| My neighbor works at a place that cuts granite. They have a drainage
area that hold lots of little frogs. He's been bring me home frogs for my
bass. (Cheaper than goldfish!)
Although the wife doesn't seem to particulaly care for the idea. I keep
a 5 gallong bucket on the deck with muck, water and frogs in it. And the
frogs sometimes complain verbally while being carried thru the livingroom,
on their way to becoming fish food.
The goldfish didn't voice their opinions about the matter.
donmac
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1195.8 | Thanks folks! | CHEZIT::T_THEO | In the woods | Mon Jul 17 1989 14:34 | 14 |
|
Thanks Sportsmen!
I think I'll try one of those weedless lures. I'd seen them at B&T
shops before, but was reluctant to pick one up because I didn't think
anything would hit'em. Now I know different. You can spend lots of dough
on junk you'll never use or doesn't get them.
As for catch and release I wholeheartedly agree, but yesterday we were
going for dinner, I had chicken (sigh)...better luck next time I hope.
Tight_lines
Tim
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1195.9 | Hook dem fish, gig dem croakers | DLOACT::BEAZLEY | | Mon Jul 17 1989 16:34 | 12 |
| wile chew dere, see if dey got a frog gig(som places use spears an some
jes let chew use grabber gigs). Den wen chew git tired fishin at nite,
chew kin go giggin. Get op on de fron ob de boat wit one ob dem miner
lites an de gig in your han. Have some else paddle for chew. Lissen for
de biggest croaker on de lak an jes follow de sound. Wen chew get close
shine de light rite in hisw eyes an gig 'em!!
Den chew will hab somethin else to fry wit chew fish, frog legs. An dey
is mos good to!! Wen I wuz a little boy type I used to go giggin all
nite long, lotsa fun.
Coonass
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1195.10 | Texas style frogs???? | BTOVT::MORONG | | Tue Jul 18 1989 09:48 | 10 |
| I have also seen frogs hooked "Texas Style". Put the hook down
thru both lips, then bury the hook between the little critters
back legs (from behind and underneath). This keeps it somewhat
weedless, and gets the hook back where the fish will hit it.
I have personally never fished with frogs, but I paln on trying
it in the near future. I did pick up some artificial ones, and
plan on hooking them the way I described in the previous paragraph.
-Ron-
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1195.11 | By the year 2000 I should have..... | SALEM::EASTER | | Tue Jul 18 1989 10:05 | 16 |
| Hey coonass, I bet these natives up here in New England are scratching
their heads on your last note. With the size of the edible type
frog up here it would take a week to get a mouth full. The largest
I've ever seen up here was no more than 4 or 5 inches long. I believe
it's due to the amount of growing time, 4 to 5 months, vs. down
there year around.
I grew up in Texas but spent many a night (all night) catching frogs
just across the border in Oklahoma, well, we really shot them with
.22 shorts and picked them up. We would come home with 200-300 frogs.
Man-O-man are those legs great with some fried okra and french fries,
I can taste them now.
John
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1195.12 | How's about a frog barbecue at John's? | CASPRO::PRESTON | What makes the Hottentots so hot? | Tue Jul 18 1989 13:02 | 16 |
| Recently I explored a section of lake Waukewan that is only accessible
by going under a small bridge (canoes, crawdads and small alum boats
can fit). It turned out to be non-bass territory, but there seemed
to be plenty of smallish pickerel. I had a blast catching them on
a weedless rigged Mr Twister Hawg Frog - just a soft plastic frog
rigged like a plastic worm, (point run thru the nose, then turned
and buried in the backside).
I could see the pickerel come out of the weeds and grab the frog
from the side. They liked to hold it in their mouth and run with
it. If I set the hook right, I had 'em. Thing was, they were so
small that I wasn't too interested in landing them, but it was fun
just the same. I haven't tried the same rig in bass territory, though.
Probably should..! I used the yellow/green color.
Ed
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1195.13 | UPS Next Day, the only way.... | SALEM::EASTER | | Tue Jul 18 1989 14:52 | 6 |
| Ed, we'll have to have coonass send a bunch of them Louisiana frog
legs up here. Fried or smoked they would be a real treat. How about
it coonass????
John
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1195.14 | Which frog you tryin to hit???? | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Wed Jul 19 1989 10:58 | 8 |
| I use dem rubber frogs. LOVE EM. Lookin for some o dem 3/0
or 4/0 weedless hooks right now to hook em.
As for frog giggin, never did dat Coonass. Closest I ever come
to doin dat was when we was out in a rubber raft one night on a
lake. Didn't have no gigs. So, we jus slapped em on de noggin
wit the paddles. Talk about a bunch of WET kids. Der was LOTS
of dem, "OOPS, MISSED IM", that night. (Good excuse for a water
fight, right???) :-)
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