T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1610.1 | DEEEEEEEPPPPPP | DEMING::TADRY | | Mon Jun 03 1991 09:23 | 13 |
| Brian,
I think you partner has it all over you, which is probably why you fish
with him. Deeper water makes the difference Dude. I wouldn't hesitate
fishing dropoffs down to 40 feet in the heat of the summer, lets face
it, its cooler. Get those deep diving crank baits and look out. You'll
need a real high speed reel though, those big bill crank baits don't
dive well with a whimpy retrieve. I'd even though a jig and pig if I
were you. I trust we can count on you at the Quinsig Night Tourney?
You'll like Quinny, Its got SHARP drop offs down to 70+ feet!!!! BIG
BASS. Hope this helps,
Ray
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1610.2 | DUMB FISH!! | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Mon Jun 03 1991 10:51 | 10 |
| Hmm...those three 5+ pounders and the 7+ pounder that I caught in mid
April in 2.5 feet of water within 30 feet of the shore must have been
confused then.....
(In my opinion it all depends on the time of year....)
JMc (Stupid angler...)
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1610.3 | shallow in the spring - its more fun! | GNPIKE::NICOLAZZO | Free the beaches! | Mon Jun 03 1991 11:55 | 10 |
| re: .0
I guess I favor the heavy pads/shallow water stuff. Nothing like
tossing a rubber worm near the pads and seeing the wake of a big
fish coming out to grab it - I've gotten plenty of 4+ lb. fish in
shallow water, but I suspect as the water warms, you either have
to go deeper or farther back into the weeds (my catch rate drops
alot around mid-july).
Robert.
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1610.4 | It depends on lots of things. | HPSTEK::BCRONIN | | Mon Jun 03 1991 12:52 | 21 |
|
We are talking about Largemouth Bass, right?
I think everybody has an answer for this one... and they're all
different! It depends on the lake, the time of year, the amount of
fishing pressure it gets, the amount/type of cover, etc, etc!
I feel that you should fish the areas that are too much trouble
for the average fisherman. Hard to get to ponds. HEAVY weed/wood
cover. Watch 10 boats fish a big heavy weedbed. What do they do?
Most will throw some lures along the edge. Some will even throw a
few from the front edge back into the weeds. How often do you see
someone bother to go way back in, back where their electric can't
take them, where they have to either paddle or pole to push through?
Very, very few will bother.
Most of my biggest bass have come from heavy weeds in large
shallow areas. And most were caught in the hottest months of the
year with my biggest in the beginning of August.
Ask the REAL pro. Get one of Doug Hannons books on big bass.
Nobody has caught more hawgs than he has, I think the last number
I heard was something like 300+ that were OVER 10 lbs. !!!
B.C.
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1610.5 | haven't a clue | DONMAC::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Mon Jun 03 1991 13:06 | 12 |
| I'll share the type of areas where I have caught my largest fish,
but I'll pass on trying to come up with a golden rule for big bass.
Not only does the time of year matter, as .2 mentioned, but I'd say the
time of day as well - and current weather conditions, and the moon, and
the traffic, and the body of water, and.........
My two largest bass (7lbs 12 oz and 7lbs 8oz) were both caught in July
(a couple years apart) in 8-10' of water around wood structure. I've
also caught a couple between 6 and 7lbs in 3-5' of water.
-donmac
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1610.6 | good article in the fisherman | PENUTS::GORDON | | Mon Jun 03 1991 13:10 | 23 |
| I am a salt water fisherman and have never fished for bass in fresh
water, only trout in streams and rivers. I recently read an article in
the Fisherman, NE edition on structure for bass and the "migration
routes" taken during each day. The reason I paid so much attention to
it was Striped bass follow the same pattern.
It basically said that during the day bass travel to/from deep water
along structure (dropoffs, boulders, logs, etc.) in their search for
food. It said this happens every day; the only thing that changes is
how far they move based upon the weather, sunlight intensity, available
food. The pros who consistantly will know where they are on a given
day based on the conditions.
The article said to start deep off of a point and work your way in
shallower until you find the fish. Keep a log of when,where,
conditions, bait/lures, etc. so in the future you can find the fish
faster and catch them.
I anyone is interested, I can probably find the article and send it to
you. It is only a couple of weeks ago.
Gordon
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1610.7 | | ROBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Mon Jun 03 1991 13:34 | 14 |
| My buddy caught his 8-1/4# lm in 3-4', casting to shore (1' or less
depth) and retrieving back to the boat. The fish hit between five and
fifteen feet from shore.
My experience with LM is essentially the same, except that I don't stuff
sash weights in their belly to make them weigh over eight pounds. ;^)
I've caught smallmouth in three feet of water, and in twenty feet. One
basic finding: my biggest smallmouths (four #) have been caught at the end
of my longest casts from the boat. *Always* around rocky structure. In my
favorite smallmouth lake, they'll come up from depths in the teens to
take Torpedoes and Zara Spooks.
Art
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1610.8 | | SOFBAS::SULLIVAN | | Mon Jun 03 1991 15:12 | 9 |
|
I'll be up at Memphre' next week!!
I'll be fishing top water and those smallies will
come up out of 35' of water to blast my bango-lure!
Hope to have the 7lb smallie on the wall soon.
- Slam
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1610.9 | timing is everything | JURAN::HAUER | | Tue Jun 04 1991 08:13 | 21 |
|
IMHO
I have caught the majority of the big fish pre spawn...
we MAY all agree with that. But once the summer heat shows
up....my belief is that you work the shore to 8-10 feet and
HOPE that the hawg has come up to feed.
Not that I have spent hours and hours working deeper water...but
what time I have spent has been unproductive looking for the big
fish. Certainly technique is involved here...but I believe that
when they are sitting out in deeper water...they are not looking
to feed agressively. Sooooo....you have to have the timing right
when they move up to feed near the shore...and in general I have
found that the best time is dawn or dusk.
Summation: Work the structure from the shore through 10 feet of
water....and PRAY your timing is right.
Gitzit'
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1610.10 | Time is what I need more of | JUPITR::NEAL | I fish with Orlando Allinson | Tue Jun 04 1991 09:33 | 13 |
|
I think the time of year and location has been covered, but there
is one important element your leaving out. PUT YOUR TIME IN! Dont
sit around pondering where the big fish are, go fish for them. Last
year I caught more fish over the 4 pound mark than ever before, I would
say easily over 10. What did I do differently? Nothing except I spent
a lot more time on the water. At least 3 - 4 times a week average.
Personally, I think the big fish are just the result of normal fishing.
You get one every now and then.
Rich
P.S. Try the NUNYA line from Pop Top (tm)
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1610.11 | no net Orlando | JURAN::HAUER | | Tue Jun 04 1991 11:41 | 12 |
|
Rich...I guess that is what I was trying to say...keep fishing and
when the active big one is around...hopefully you are too.
Also...with Orlando in the boat and NUNYA's on your line...I am
surprised that you ONLY caught 10 over 4. I would suppose that
those are the ones you boated...who knows how many Orlando lost
due to misnetting...:-)
Gitzit'
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1610.12 | He's trying to kill me, I know it! | JUPITR::NEAL | I fish with Orlando Allinson | Tue Jun 04 1991 13:40 | 10 |
| Gitzit,
I hate to say it, but of all the net persons I have had,
My wife is the only one so far that hasn't tried to give me a heart
attack when netting. She gets them first time every time.
Old Orlando, man this guy is tuff on the ticker. I thought I was going
to die when it took him FIVE tries to net the hawg winner in this
springs tourney.
Rich
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1610.13 | Times of year/types of lure... | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Thu Jun 06 1991 13:52 | 30 |
| Re .9
I have to agree with most of what you say... My experience has been
that before spawning...that is right after ice-out and maybe in most
years up to June 1 or so, there is NO specific place that the Bass will
be found... After semi-dormancy during the winter months, they are
cruisin'...hunting for food...and crayfish---one of the Largemouth's
favorite snacks---typically hang around under rocks in shallows... My
"spot" is a place on a large lake where a small stream empties into the
lake...and the area is shallow---2-3 feet, with fist sized rocks and
smaller. I fished this area with an 8" Producto grape worm, rigged
Texas style...got not a single ticle from 9:00 in the morning till 2:15
in the aft...then caught 2 over five pounds in less than 20 minutes..
Two days later, same place, same scenario...not a thing for 4-5
hours, then a 5+ and 7+ within a half hour...
After the spawning is over, the Bass look for a place to hole
up...dead tree, stump, log, brushpile...and that's when I get out th
old Spinnerbaits... Slow retrieved past this type of structure will get
you extremely excited....when a Bass hits a Spinnerbait, they POUND it
usually...no problem setting the hook...they set it for you.
These are 2 distinctly different ways of fishing for Bass...but both
are a whole bunch of fun for me anyway...
JM
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1610.14 | Big or Small | TOTH::ORLOWSKI | | Fri Jun 07 1991 16:12 | 11 |
| ..a little off the subject.
.
.
.
. <>x <><>X
....
what is best...all day with 1 - six pounder
or
7- but all under 3 pounds ??????
-Steve
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1610.15 | dont forget the cloths pin | LUDWIG::KERSWELL | | Sat Jun 08 1991 11:18 | 9 |
| best structure,,
keep an EYE on madd matts house when he's not
around, open up the cover in his back yard,He
has his own personal under the yard creek running
threw his property? not sure if it holds the hawg
but like the RE::14 says theres plenty of small ones!!!!!!
(Gill_Raker)
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1610.16 | Someday....s o m e d a y!!! | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:31 | 17 |
| Re .14
Funny thing you should ask... I really can't say I prefer one over
the other. I've had days when I caught 35-40 in the 1 to 2 pound
range, and there've also been days with nothing doing and then I
latched into a 5 pounder... With the action fast and furious, you have
a ton of fun, but the adreneline shot that a 5+ pounder gives you when
it sticks it's head out of the water and it looks like a bucket full of
cotton is really hard to duplicate...
I guess I'd take either...it's all part of the territory..
I guess you gotta take what you are given...
(Damn...I KNOW there's a 10+ pounder right near that place where I
caught that 5+'er!!! That's O.K...I'll be back!!)
John Mc
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1610.17 | No question about it... | KAHALA::PRESTON | Beastly Rotter in residence | Mon Jun 10 1991 15:39 | 11 |
| > what is best...all day with 1 - six pounder
> or
> 7- but all under 3 pounds ??????
Well, having had a few days with 7 fish under 3 pounds, and NO days
with one six-pounder (no fish, period), I'd have to say a six-pounder
is WAY better.
Ed
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1610.18 | Even the BAD days are good.... | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Tue Jun 11 1991 09:54 | 10 |
| Re .17
Right you are...and there ain't NONE of us who haven't had those days
with 2 bites....a mosquito and a tick!! But even those are days I
wouldn't trade for anything..(well, maybe Megabucks...). Even the days
youthink all the fish in the water have gone to South America are good
because you're OUT THERE and the sun/air/water etc. are still something
to enjoy... 'Course, some action is much better...
John Mc.
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