Minnow Fishing Useful Guide
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I am looking for a japanese myth that says Japan has been formed by a fish (maybe a minnow)?
I'm very interested in Minnow Fishing Japanese mythology. Now I have read in Juliet Piggott's work that a story says that a big fish (maybe a minnow) woke up under the ocean and the Japanese islands have formed. I need a reference to read more about this story.
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December 20th, 2010 at 5:40 pm
Types of Minnows# There are many different types of small fish labeled as minnows. There are both saltwater and freshwater minnows. However, saltwater minnows are actually able to live in both environments. Fathead minnows, more recently known as rosy-red minnows, are the most common minnows kept as pets.What Minnows Eat in the Wild# In the wild, minnows mostly eat small insects like mosquitoes. They also eat algae and different microorganisms. They eat dead and decaying materials, such as pieces of animal matter or plant matter. If they are saltwater minnows, depending on where they live, they may eat very small shrimp. Overall, they eat very small quantities in the wild.What Minnows Eat in Captivity# You can feed your minnows Tubifex freeze-dried blood worms or any other small, live foods. You can feed them the typical tropical fish flakes you would find in a pet store. However, it may take them awhile to become accustomed to eating this. If the minnows are not eating fish flakes, you can also try frozen brine shrimp or other small frozen insects. Feed them plants or green, leafy vegetables along with the flakes. As with any kind of fish, all minnows behave differently, so you may have to experiment. If you are simply keeping minnows to use for bait, you can actually feed them bread crumbs. It is possible for them to die if you overfeed them.How Much Do Minnows Eat?# Make sure any food you put in the aquarium is in small enough pieces for the minnows to eat. You should feed your minnows a small amount, twice a day. Look to see how much food is left floating in the water or on the bottom of the tank in order to determine how much you should feed them regularly. If the next time you feed them there is left-over food from the prior feeding, you fed them too much. If the minnows eat all of the food immediately, you should add more. Remember, you can kill them if you overfeed them. Be careful. Good luck.
December 21st, 2010 at 5:46 am
It depends on what you want the baitfish to do, really. Where you hook it will determine how it can swim… the main thing is to avoid internal organs when hooking.http://www.fao.org/docrep/003/t0511e/T0511E19.gifhttp://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://titelines.com/mac.jpg&imgrefurl=http://titelines.net/index.php/idx/8/120/article/&h=206&w=640&sz=37&hl=en&start=11&um=1&usg=__2ylt7PW4tkIAIv1k6EqrKvtIoww=&tbnid=xWKdv6ifqp1b3M:&tbnh=44&tbnw=137&prev=/images%3Fq%3Drigging%2Blive%2Bbait%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26rlz%3D1T4HPIA_en___US220%26sa%3DNRemember, keep your casts gentle… a full body piercing is a good bit of trauma in itself.Edit: No shame, Johnny, you were probably answering while I was looking for links.
And Chimp has yet another wonderful point… something I should have brought up after working in the pet store for so long… you can’t just throw fish from a container into a tank (or pond, or lake), they do have to adjust…
December 21st, 2010 at 5:24 pm
First of all, a roadrunner is a jig with a small spinner blade attached to the top. Most popular summertime colors for Lake Dallas are white, chartreuse, black and yellow. Lighter colors work best in sunny conditions and clear water, go to darker for shady days or when water is off color. Use a varied speed retrieve, jigging up and down but keeping it out of the weeds on the bottom. Drag it parallel to any logs or submerged trees, again varying retrieve speed.Fishing from the bank really limits the amount of water and structure you can cover, so just experiment with shad or perch colored crankbaits, larger spinners in same colors as above, and plastic worms rigged either Carolina or Texas style. You can find these terms defined on any good fishing website. Just google “fishing” or “bass fishing”.If you get lucky and find the black bass or sandies chasing shad in the shallows (early morning seems to be the most likely time), throw a jointed rapala minnow or a plastic minnow bait right into the action and retrieve with a jerking motion. Make it look like an injured shad, and a hit is virtually assured. Finally, try booking a local guide for half a day…..will probably be the best money you can spend to find what works right now.
December 22nd, 2010 at 5:38 am
next time name the fish you have already and you should treat the minnow with milafix first than mix with your fish
December 22nd, 2010 at 6:00 pm
http://www.doityourself.com/stry/makeminnowtrap:
December 23rd, 2010 at 5:45 am
I love this lure and have caught LM Bass, SM Bass, walleye, steelhead and even crappies with it. First off understand that one lure will not always catch fish every time it’s used and it takes some experimenting to attract fish with this or any other lure. .I’ll cast it out and let it sink to the bottom, wait a few seconds, then twitch the rod tip a couple of times, reel in the slack and repeat. Some times I’ll cast it out, jig it, let it settle to the bottom then crank the reel in fast a few turns to make it look like a startled bait fish. Some times I cast it out and just reel it back in. During a spawn if you jig it off the bottom it will look like a fish raiding spawning beds which will trigger a strike it. Most of my retrieves I try to make it look like an injured or struggling bait fish to make it look like an easy meal. I have also painted the lead head chartreuse green, orange, red or even all black with big white eyes. I think some times it makes the difference.Basically you have to use different retrieves until you find one that makes fish react to it . Keep changing the retrieves and don’t give up on this lure. It will catch you fish.
December 23rd, 2010 at 5:43 pm
The way you are “supposed” to hook a minnow/shad is though their lips. This way the fish will be able to swim around a little. Though the back & tail would either kill the fish or not allow it to do anything, like swiming.
December 24th, 2010 at 5:29 am
I use this “Gulp” product ALOT! Try fishing it with a 1/8-1/4 OZ Jighead with a larger-gap hook. (FYI: Black is a key color for stream fishing because it mimic’s leeches & crawdad. A black Jig-head & black “Gulp” Minnow Grub work VERY well in most river/stream condition’s.)Try it! Just make sure your jig’s have STRONG hook’s!Good luck!
December 24th, 2010 at 5:57 pm
Smaller Abu Garcia, Shimano, or Daiwa reel that holds about 100 – 120 yards of 6 LB line. Abu’s “cardinal” 100 series are fine reels and the best size for pike minnows would be model C101I-C. Nothing expensive for them. A reel anywhere from $20 – $40 would work fine. Also check out Bass Pro Shops “Megacast” spinning reels MC10FE would be the best model for pike minnows, and they’re only $20 per reel.A light action rod that is able to handle 4 – 8 LB line or something similar would work great. Longer rods would be more fun but shorter rods are best when fishing small creeks for them. Cabela’s Whuppin’ Stick rods are great rods, $25 per rod I believe, the 5’6″ Light action Whuppin’ Stick would do great, it’s rated for 4 – 10 LB line. The rods’ model number is WSSL 56-2.6 LB Trilene XL is the cheapest mono you can find that has extremely low-memory. I use it in 4 LB on my ultra-light reels for bluegill & crappie. I’ve caught several crappie up to about 12″ or 13″ on it and it’s did great. That’s the absolute BEST for them, $20 reel, $25 rod, $3 line. But I don’t even think I’d pay that much for a rod/reel combo if I didn’t fish for pike minnows a lot. You can easily get by fishing for them with any light action rod/reel spinning combo from zebco or shakespeare.
December 25th, 2010 at 5:52 am
I’m not sure what your asking?all i can decipher is that your asking if you can tack a strip of bacon and put in front of a bass and will it hit. the answer is maybe, you would have to move it and put a light bullet sinker on it to get it down.
December 25th, 2010 at 6:06 pm
First of all, more white clouds. They are schooling fish and require a group of 6 or more to be comfortable. You can add neons, corycats, glo-lites, serpaes…all of them schooling fish, so, again…6 or more. You can add a clown pleco or rubber-lipped pleco (single). Mainly other community fish.
December 26th, 2010 at 6:04 am
try grey to black shiney . about a 3 to 4 inch should kill em.
December 26th, 2010 at 5:16 pm
I guess the evolution people will enjoy this
December 27th, 2010 at 5:36 am
I actually live in MN and fish in Canada frequently and have never seen anyone using a Banjo Minnow to catch Northern/Musky.Not to say you couldn’t catch them with the BM, but, I can almost guarantee you will run out of Banjo Minnow plastic bodys long before your fishing trip is over! Most people use giant Titanium In-line spinners, HUGE Rapala Shallow Shad Raps, Giant Spinnerbaits, & huge Jigs for Musky.The problem with Banjo for Pike? After 1 medium-sized Pike your Banjo Minnow “body” is going to be “toast”. Expect to catch 1-2 Pike per B-Minnow. I hope your bringing 50-100+ replacement bodys? When I go to Canada I go through bags and bags(over 100) of 4″-5″ Curly-tailed Grubs and I’m fishing for Walleye & Smallmouth Bass!In Canada, when I want to catch a Northern, it’s really VERY easy. Tie on a 12LB “invisi-wire” leader and a 6″ Rapala Husky Jerk in Silver. I’ve caught over 30 Northerns (to 42″) with the same lure all day! I actually wore the hooks out! Ya can’t do that with a Banjo Minnow! Hope this helps ya? Good fishing!PS-I think Fubar owns stock in Banjo! (lol)
December 27th, 2010 at 6:04 pm
Pike are noted for cutting you off. If you are just using a minnow and split shot, A leader will cut down on your catch. Hooks and split shot are cheap But if you are using a lure a leader is pretty much given.