Sunday Evening Report (Best Day This Year!)
Moderators: Stan Wright, roadwarriorsvt
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Sunday Evening Report (Best Day This Year!)
With the rainy weather, I thought I'd be the only one on the lake. Boy was I wrong. SIX boats were coming in as I headed out, at about 4:30 pm.
I've gotta say, today was the best day of fishing in 2010 for me and not one single peacock bass!
I'm gonna share where the hot spot was today, but you guys can't tell no one okay?
I returned to the XXXXXX area of XXX, on the north side. I started with 25 crickets and about a dozen worms, and I used every single one!
I landed 13 assorted fishies. To be honest, I was missing them as fast as I could bait the hook! I was just missing too many. I was mainly going for bluegills. I ended up catching 2 catfish, 4 or 5 bluegills, a few red devils, some type of ciclid, and finished with a talapia.
There was one huge lunker around there. He hit my bait and took off making my reel scream!! He got about 10 yards or so before the line went limp.
I'm not positive exactly what this is. Some type of ciclid?
Last fish of the day, a talapia, caught on 1/2 dead worm!
The epitemy of peacefulness. Light fog settled on top of the water, about 6:30 pm.
[/b]
I've gotta say, today was the best day of fishing in 2010 for me and not one single peacock bass!
I'm gonna share where the hot spot was today, but you guys can't tell no one okay?
I returned to the XXXXXX area of XXX, on the north side. I started with 25 crickets and about a dozen worms, and I used every single one!
I landed 13 assorted fishies. To be honest, I was missing them as fast as I could bait the hook! I was just missing too many. I was mainly going for bluegills. I ended up catching 2 catfish, 4 or 5 bluegills, a few red devils, some type of ciclid, and finished with a talapia.
There was one huge lunker around there. He hit my bait and took off making my reel scream!! He got about 10 yards or so before the line went limp.
I'm not positive exactly what this is. Some type of ciclid?
Last fish of the day, a talapia, caught on 1/2 dead worm!
The epitemy of peacefulness. Light fog settled on top of the water, about 6:30 pm.
[/b]
Last edited by roadwarriorsvt on Fri May 07, 2010 6:49 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Good job! I'm not sure if you got your pics mixed up, but that is a tilapia, not a smallmouth. I have a pet salamander, so I am constantly buying crickets. I have often thought about taking some to the lake to use as bait, but I thought there wouldn't be enough bluegills around to supply steady action. Maybe I will try it now though!
Fishing is fun only if you do it for fun. www.texassidewinderrods.com
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Fixed it.
Fishing for the bluegills seems to be a little tricky, at least for me. Since they are kinda petite biters, some restraint/patience is needed before trying to (gently) set the hook. I probably lost 3 fish to every 1 I landed!
One of the things I learned is to put the cricket far up on the hook. I had about 1/2 the cricket hanging off. Lost many bites. They would bite the hanging cricket off the hook, just leaving me the head!
This type of fishing would be good for smaller kids since the action is fast. Most strikes were within a few seconds of the bobber hitting the water.
The Set-Up
I had great success with the following set-up. Using a #6 or #8 (preferred) hook, I set the small 1 1/4" bobber about 18" deep. I used a very small BB size split shot sinker a few inches above the hook. Almost all fish were caught about 1-2' from the grass line. Hook the cricket in the crease inbetween the head and body, moving the hook down the cricket's body, exiting out the backside. This will help hide the hook and make the fish bite the hook, not just rip the bait off the hook.
Fishing for the bluegills seems to be a little tricky, at least for me. Since they are kinda petite biters, some restraint/patience is needed before trying to (gently) set the hook. I probably lost 3 fish to every 1 I landed!
One of the things I learned is to put the cricket far up on the hook. I had about 1/2 the cricket hanging off. Lost many bites. They would bite the hanging cricket off the hook, just leaving me the head!
This type of fishing would be good for smaller kids since the action is fast. Most strikes were within a few seconds of the bobber hitting the water.
The Set-Up
I had great success with the following set-up. Using a #6 or #8 (preferred) hook, I set the small 1 1/4" bobber about 18" deep. I used a very small BB size split shot sinker a few inches above the hook. Almost all fish were caught about 1-2' from the grass line. Hook the cricket in the crease inbetween the head and body, moving the hook down the cricket's body, exiting out the backside. This will help hide the hook and make the fish bite the hook, not just rip the bait off the hook.
I think both fish are mozambique tilapia...but I could be wrong. It's a little hard identifying the fish from the pics.
Sounds like a lot of ultralight rod bending fun
Sounds like a lot of ultralight rod bending fun
Caution - Objects in picture are smaller than they appear.
I am genetically predisposed to make fish look bigger than they really are.
Life List: 386 species and counting
http://muskiebaitadventures.blogspot.ca ... -list.html
I am genetically predisposed to make fish look bigger than they really are.
Life List: 386 species and counting
http://muskiebaitadventures.blogspot.ca ... -list.html
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