Jump to content

Count Down Rapalas


captpierre

Recommended Posts

Thinking I'm going to give these a try.

Saw a seminar at the fishing show.

He said a real slow presentation after counting down to near the bottom.

Should be a winner for eyes on deep weed edges and humps.

Anybody use these on the Kawarthas?

I ft drop per second. Mono or braid make a difference?

Colour and size?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

they sorta became 'out of favour' when suspending cranks were released and i find their action is muted compared to floating or suspending versions but they still have their time and place.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

About 15 years ago I was in Algonquin Park portaging into a couple lakes deep in the park when I started talking to an old timer

on one of the trails . He asked us where we were going and what we planned on using for lures . I showed him my selection of

spoons , mepps and rapalas and he looked through them and said " is that a countdown rapala " right at the bottom of my box

was an old countdown perch rapala that I had never used before and to tell you the truth I don't know why it was in there but it

was . Now , everyone has some secret lakes and spots that you wouldn't share with anyone but this old timer told us to fish in

this certain spot on lake X with that perch coloured countdown rapala . Well I didn't really believe him because he was so willing

to give up his secret spot/lure to a complete stranger and that is very rare in the fishing world . Well wouldn't you know it we went

to that spot and trolled these countdown rapalas and were literally catching beauty lake trout on every pass and the other canoe

who didn't have these rapalas caught about half as much as we did . So to end this quick story I would like to say thanks to that

very kind fisherman who shared his stories and secrets with us and also to say that countdown rapalas do work , especially in a certain

lake within Algonquin Park :good:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Steelhead love em....

I like that they don't dive once you start retrieving. Let sink to desired depth then reel (I count and use the 1s=1ft) Sometimes I will twitch or jerk it in on the retrieve but often just a straight retrieve works well. Great for casting on rivers....

 

TDunn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Captpierre,

 

I used to live on upper Chemong and my old man neighbor caught tonnes of Walleye. He used Count Down Rapala's and pretty soon I caught on!

 

They work well because they get right to the bottom while trolling very slow (as versed to floating cranks that don't get deep). We used to troll weedlines with them and they worked so well, after a while it's all we used.

Edited by Regan Thompson
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mostly in summer and we'd troll the Kawartha weedlines in 10-12 FOW. We used to fish Chemong a lot and there was not much structure there as you may know. Just a big bowl of weeds! There were certain areas that had more of a sandy bottom. The weeds would be less dense in these areas and that's where we had the most luck.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not sure they are meant for trolling deeper water especially since there are multi level diving Rapalas that are designed to target specific depths. But maybe the tighter wobble is preferred over the big wobble of diving cranks.

I was thinking more of a casting strategy where I don't have to cast way beyond the spot to drag a diving crank down to depth. A countdown will go to any depth even deep divers wouldn't reach casting.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not sure they are meant for trolling deeper water especially since there are multi level diving Rapalas that are designed to target specific depths. But maybe the tighter wobble is preferred over the big wobble of diving cranks.

I was thinking more of a casting strategy where I don't have to cast way beyond the spot to drag a diving crank down to depth. A countdown will go to any depth even deep divers wouldn't reach casting.

Thats how I use them from boat or shore

Link to comment
Share on other sites

this is my go to lure, especially the gold colour. smallies, pike, muskies and walleye in the kawarthas. they cast a mile because they are weighted. I do the countdown method and fish some pretty deep dropoffs. a foot a second is about right, reel slowly and it will go down a bit more. I do agree, the action is limited but they do work.

Fire tiger is another great colour.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I use the CD 7 Perch pattern for walleye in my local river. If you can wade to a point where you can work the lure straight downstream they catch a lot of fish.

More often than not, I don't even have to retrieve. Just make a short cast downstream. Allow it to work in the current ticking bottom. Looks a feeding baitfish. To search different water downstream, just open the bail. Let it drift downstream and close the bail. Much like hotshotting. Steelhead love the Perch pattern as well. Especially when they settle in and rest in deeper holes. Not my first choice for Steelhead but when fish are aggressive, they'll smash them.

 

CD 9's in black and silver work well for shoreline browns in early Spring. Just as effective as AC shiners. Usually troll them at about two miles an hour. Count them down to half the water depth. If the water is really flat I will troll using my bow mount electric so as not to spook fish. Tried small side planers years ago but found them to be a whole lot of aggrivation. Perhaps with new technology the are now more user friendly. The early ones were a pain. Flat lining with long leads behind the electric gets it done.

Edited by Roe Bag
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recent Topics

    Popular Topics

    Upcoming Events


×
×
  • Create New...