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singingdog

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Posts posted by singingdog

  1. 7 lbs is a looooong way from 9lbs 8oz. Lots of 7s have been caught from Simcoe, but has anyone ever weighed a fish over 8.5 from there? Erie is producing amazing #s of 7s, but I have never heard of a 8.5 being caught from there either. It's like there's some kind of growth limiter on those waters.

     

    Don't you remember that guy from Ottawa that broke the world record, but filleted it before it could be weighed? I always admired his cajones....if you're going to lie about a fish, you might as well double the weight instead of adding a measly pound or two.

     

    I believe the Ontario record is from Birch Lake. There are some virtually unfished bass lakes in the area between the Kawarthas and the Highlands....nuff said.

  2. I used to live and work on that lake as the program director for the leadership centre that was there. The lake is full of smallish smallmouth. Somebody snuck some 'eyes into at one time, but I have no idea how they are doing. It would be cool to hang out with Bob for a weekend....see if he will take you to a good fishing lake ;)

  3. Definitely tube jigs, with enough weight to make occasional bottom contact. Deep diving cranks, making lots of contact, are another good way to cover a hump like that. Look at your map and look for variances in the slope of the shoal....there is usually a "spot on the spot" on humps like that. For smallies, I would be looking for boulders and spots where the drop-off to deep water is slightly steeper than the surrounding contours.

     

    Check out this InFisherman article. It has some great info about fishing humps for bass.

  4. Good post from Garry. A very good fisherman from up this way absolutely swears by the "spot on the spot" theory. You can find it by chance, but it often takes less time on the water, and more time studying maps/electronics to find the bigger ones.

  5. That's an immature cowbird, being fed by the cardinal. The adult birds that get parasitised will feed the cowbird young until they are fledged, just like their own young. What's really strange is seeing a small warbler feeding a cowbird that is 1.5x it's size.

     

    Interesting study a few years ago on cowbirds. It seems that the females will revisit nests that they have parasitised. If the host bird had recognized the cowbird egg and gotten rid of it, the cowbird would proceed to destroy the nest. If the egg remained, they would leave the nest, along with any host eggs still intact, intact.

  6. My best presentation for big smallies is wacky-jigging. Here's 2 recent ones:

    P7070292.jpg

    P7010276.jpg

     

    90% of the time I am throwing dark green or brown.

     

    I have caught up to 20 smallies, but more typically 7-8, on the same senko by using either an O-ring, or by putting a thin band of shrink-wrap tubing on the middle of the senko and hooking through the shrink wrap. Orings and a circle hook will normally get you 4-5 fish/senko.

  7. I'll counter Bill the Bass Man and say that smallies can be very particular. On the lakes that I fish, a single presentation rarely works every outing. Granted, I target larger fish, and will sacrifice numbers to size on any given day. If I am unfamiliar with a lake, I will almost always start with a tube on one rod and a spinnerbait on the other.

  8. If you want to fly fish for browns, go out furnace falls in irondale. If you want to fish musky on a fly rod try donald river near haliburton. Lots of bass in the gull river, they seem to swim in schools. the burnt river in kinmount hold nice walleye, musky and bass. The bottom of the whitewater reserve also holds rainbows as they were stocked in minden lake.

    If you need any more info pm me as i live in minden.

     

    Do you mean the Burnt river near Donald? There is no Donald river near Haliburton.

  9. I fish in the montreal area.I have all the proper tools and I use a cradle for release.

     

     

    I went out this morning had 4 attacks on a seducer but couldn't land them.Is there a lure for fishing in heavy weeds?

     

     

    Thanks for the advice about proper release.

     

    T-rigged plastics (big grubs, flukes, senkos) and big flipping jigs are both good in heavy cover. You can fish a short-arm spinnerbait in surprisingly heavy cover.

  10. It doesn't have to be complicated, or expensive. You can catch a lot of fish with a few bucktail inline spinners and some heavy-duty spinnerbaits. If you stick with lighter lures that don't require a winch to retrieve, you can do a lot of musky fishing with a MH rod and a good baitcaster. Do listen to the advice about release tools and leaders....those are not places to scrimp.

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