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singingdog

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Posts posted by singingdog

  1. Freshwater and saltwater and fly rods for deep discounts. Lots of Wild River stuff for $100-$129 Some Legend stuff for $250. Great shipping with them (under $20) IF the rod is 7' or under or a 2 piece. Watch out for "border brokers" fees if they have to ship other than USPS ground (like 8' one piece rods get shipped )

     

    Where is that listed? I don't see it on the page.

  2. Another vote for Slammers.

     

    If you fish skirted grubs, save them after the rock bass tear the twister tails off. The body/skirt makes a great dropshot bait rigged with the skirt out like a small, solid bodied tube. Yamamoto sells them as "Ikas". A couple of my other favourites are Pro Senkos and Jacks worms (one of the best kept secrets for smallies).

     

    On many of our lakes, a shakey head will catch fish head-to-head with a dropshot rig. It's much easier to rig, and much easier to fish. Occasionally the dropshot will catch more fish, but not that often. All the baits mentioned so far work for both presentations.

  3. Yeah, I was thinking of that, you know what kind of paint to use, other than powdered?

     

    If you are into selling them, powder paint is the way to go. If you are tieing them for personal use, you can use nail polish. The fish don't really care one way or another.

  4. spend alot of time jerking spoons on steel...have found on most lakes in the minden/haliburton area most our big fish come off flats 20-30 feet water...lots of nimbers in 30-50 feet but usually smaller

     

    here it a experment for you....big fat salty tubes white/pearl dragged and jigged...might be surprised how many you catch and how big..well done go gettem

     

    Great advice. Snap jigging those tubes very aggressively is another tactic to try: 5/8 oz jig heads to get them down, then snap them hard off the bottom. I know a young guy that does very well in the summer with 6-8" musky tubes...lakers pounce on them.

  5. Several of the lakes that I fish regularly are very different this summer: much lower plant growth, much higher water clarity. Most years the plants - especially cabbage - on a couple of lakes are so thick that the fishing gets difficult. This year the cabbage is waaay more sparse. As well, the water clarity seems much higher. Yesterday I was flyfishing for LM. It was like flats fishing: sight fishing super spooky fish that I could see easily in 6 FOW. I have even started using different presentations on a couple of lakes that are usually very stained, but are very clear this year. Anybody else notice a change in plant growth/water clarity this year? Change in fish behaviour?

  6. Casting distance can be crucial with smallies: they love to follow a bait for along time before hitting it. In open water, I prefer a spinning outfit (I have never had trouble casting cranks with a spinning outfit. I guess the cranks that I use can't tell what kind of reel they are attached to) for the extra distance. Nothing beats a lipless crank for distance, but the Spro Little Johns come close....and catch fish.

  7.  

    And yes I am comparing "deadly weaponry" to this and its not a big stretch. A fishing rod/hook is just as deadly to a fish as a gun is to a duck.

     

    Bit of a stretch, isn't it? Every day, thousands of fish in Ontario are caught and released using a rod/hook. I don't think you can say the same thing about the ducks that are "caught" using a gun.

  8. Judging by the way you fellas are fishing these, I find Mann's Little George tailspinners work very well in the same situations at a much more wallet friendly price point. Sometimes add a little bit of crawler to the hook, makes it look like a disembowelled minnow :whistling:

     

    http://www.tacklewarehouse.com/Manns_Little_George/descpage-MLG.html

     

    I will fish tailspins in much the same way as a lipless crank, but they aren't a substitute. Tailspins and jigging spoons seem to really shine when the water is colder, especially late fall. Lipless cranks, for whatever reason, work better for me when the water is warmer.

  9. A crankbait rod is the only "specialty" rod I own. After losing some real hogs on lipless cranks, I decided to try one and have never looked back. The flexibility is very helpful in keeping big fish hooked. It isn't good for ripping lipless cranks off of the tops of weeds, which can be a deadly technique, but any rod with decent backbone and a fairly fast tip will accomplish that.

  10. Aruka Shads are my faves, but plenty of others catch fish. I like to fish them like a jigging spoon: let them settle to the bottom, then rip them a few feet up with the rod tip, repeat. It is a great way to catch smallies that are holding along steep dropoffs. Lakers and 'eyes like them too.

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