hotsky Posted August 19, 2012 Report Posted August 19, 2012 I was just on Mepps website and noticed in their lure selection guide for Carp they have lures like Syclops and Aglia Long among others. Can you actually catch them on lures? I've caught a nice Bullhead catfish on a Syclops #3 before, but carp??
Woodsman Posted August 19, 2012 Report Posted August 19, 2012 Can you catch carp on lures - Yes. Is it a top producer or even an average producer - No. Worms, corn or boilies will produce far more consistent results.
Rich Posted August 19, 2012 Report Posted August 19, 2012 Bouncing tiny panther martins is my prime winter tactic for carp, for sure. Thats the only time lures are really all that productive for them though in my experience. I do get them fairly regularly in the backyard all season on rebel crickhoppers and bumblebees. Gotta slow drag em on the surface. Works equally as effective for browns.
Broker Posted August 20, 2012 Report Posted August 20, 2012 I do get them fairly regularly in the backyard all season on rebel crickhoppers and bumblebees. Gotta slow drag em on the surface. Works equally as effective for browns. you get browns in your backyard ?! Do you live in paradise ?! LOL
Christopheraaron Posted August 20, 2012 Report Posted August 20, 2012 By lures I believe you mean flies...
Snidley Posted August 20, 2012 Report Posted August 20, 2012 In the last 2 years I have caught Carp on spinners, J-9's, Shad Rap RS #4, and Kwikfish K8. Not in any way a productive method and for a lure maker to call it one is close to fraudulent false advertizing. Par for the course in fishing tackle sales though.
bare foot wader Posted August 20, 2012 Report Posted August 20, 2012 jighead and grub is effective if you're sightfishing...smallest jighead you can get away with and obviously scented grub...hooked many carp fishing for smallmouth this way
bigcreekdad Posted August 20, 2012 Report Posted August 20, 2012 loaf of bread actually....I've "fly fished" for them with canned corn...3-5 kernels on a # 10 fly hook.....worked good....Green Giant brand is my "lure of choice".
bushart Posted August 20, 2012 Report Posted August 20, 2012 Compound bow with a 40 lb draw Ok ok---I'll leave this to the carp guyz
aplumma Posted August 20, 2012 Report Posted August 20, 2012 I have a fly that looks like a mulberry that floats for carp feeding on the surface. Other than very special instances I would go with what the carp guru's suggest. Art
Broker Posted August 20, 2012 Report Posted August 20, 2012 Compound bow with a 40 lb draw Ok ok---I'll leave this to the carp guyz LOL do you go scuba diving for the dead fish afterwards ?
hotsky Posted August 21, 2012 Author Report Posted August 21, 2012 Flies as in flyfishing? I don't do that...yet. Bouncing tiny panther martins is my prime winter tactic for carp, for sure. Thats the only time lures are really all that productive for them though in my experience. I do get them fairly regularly in the backyard all season on rebel crickhoppers and bumblebees. Gotta slow drag em on the surface.Picked up the 2 mentioned Rebel lures, grasshopper is 'popper' type and bumblebug is a crankbait type. How do you work the popper? One thing I noticed is that they are built kinda light with tiny hooks, great for penfish and bass but can they handle a carp? :/
OhioFisherman Posted August 21, 2012 Report Posted August 21, 2012 My former son in law, one of my best friends, and I got 3 of them in one day fishing tubes for smallies in Sandusky Bay off of Lake Erie. The total weight for the 3 of them was easily 100 pounds, all were hooked legally in their mouths. Is it the best way to go about it? Probably not, but we have also caught them on other lures too. I have also caught catfish on jigs and pig, plastic worms, and jigging blade baits or jigging Rapalas.
Harrison Posted August 21, 2012 Report Posted August 21, 2012 Open water carp love jerkbaits and other body baits. They will eat a tube or and other plastic in a heart beat. Gets your heart pounding when you set on one of those monsters as a big smallie smashes jerkbaits the same. By open water I mean off shore fish, deeper big water.
Rich Posted August 21, 2012 Report Posted August 21, 2012 you get browns in your backyard ?! Do you live in paradise ?! LOL Me and a pair of hedge clippers made it paradise. Lol. The brown fishing comes in spurts but theres a mini pond back there thats always good for carp
Rich Posted August 21, 2012 Report Posted August 21, 2012 Flies as in flyfishing? I don't do that...yet. Picked up the 2 mentioned Rebel lures, grasshopper is 'popper' type and bumblebug is a crankbait type. How do you work the popper? One thing I noticed is that they are built kinda light with tiny hooks, great for penfish and bass but can they handle a carp? :/ If your drag is set right they will handle a carp and give you the fight of your life. Keep it rather loose and dont set the hook too hard. They have soft mouths and the smaller hooks actually hook em better, in treble form. Just gotta take it easy on the fight. The crickhopper is a crankbait just like the bumblebug. It has a bill to make it dive. It doesnt dive much below the surface... Just reel it very slowly. Killer on all sorts of fish.
hammercarp Posted August 21, 2012 Report Posted August 21, 2012 I've caught carp on jigs when fishing for walleye and smallmouth.
craigdritchie Posted August 21, 2012 Report Posted August 21, 2012 (edited) LOL do you go scuba diving for the dead fish afterwards ? No need - strong cord tied to the arrow lets you hand-bomb them into the boat. I hear they make spectacular fertilizer. Picked up the 2 mentioned Rebel lures, grasshopper is 'popper' type and bumblebug is a crankbait type. How do you work the popper? One thing I noticed is that they are built kinda light with tiny hooks, great for penfish and bass but can they handle a carp? :/ Crickhopper isn't a popper, so much as a shallow-running mini bait. Fish the same as the Bumblebug, just cast out and reel in. The little hooks are fine, they handle coho and steelhead no problem. Interesting thread. I've caught carp on jigs, but if I ever wanted to catch one on purpose I'd use bait, not hardware. Edited August 21, 2012 by Craig_Ritchie
hotsky Posted August 21, 2012 Author Report Posted August 21, 2012 I guess they make both popper and shallow runner, mine looks like this;
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