Jigging Spoon Helpful Information
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How do you catch a pike, for real. Like, what kind of tubes/jigs?
Alright, lemme explain this again since last question was not helpful.I went fishing today, with spoons, tubes, jigs ect ect. I found the pike. Jigging Spoon I saw some hiding in the weeds, and than i saw a Walleye in the same path of the pike. Anyways, what jigs and tubes can i use?I know a devil lure or w/e do they sell thoses at walmart at any chance? And Sucker minnows, where can i find thoses, i have a live bait net, but i can't find them. Oh, and the water is murky. Please help me catch my first pike.I tried spinner baits, and buzz baits. Even jerky baits too.
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December 19th, 2010 at 3:32 am
I find that doing things like what you say leads to tangles and lost fish, but it can work. I use spoons and spinners. Sometimes spinners really catch the attention of pike and bass. I particularly like spinner jigs where I put a lead-head wriggler on the side of the spinner. Those seem to work pretty good in certain conditions. You may have to play with the size of the wriggler to get the lure to go where you want. I do a lot of bank fishing. Some days are way better than others.
December 19th, 2010 at 3:52 pm
U need a d22 or crank baits to let it sink to a selected depth where the fishes r hanging out then u slowly reel it in with little jerks to entice them to strike out of reflex action.Sometimes they do hug the bottom so that depends.when the depth r much greater for that section of the river they do hug da bottom more,when at shallower part they feed at the middle to upper.when they r in feeding mode,they tend to feed downstream or with da currents cos they get the advantage over their food.when u r finish with upper then middle then if nothing mostly hugging tha bed.when they r at these depth,bottom or mid water u really need a diver,if mostly bottom then u need to crank it.
December 20th, 2010 at 3:25 am
Here you go this should give you many sites to work with. Good luck with your lures and good luck fishin’ with em’!http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=how+to+make+fishing+lures&aq=f&oq=
December 20th, 2010 at 3:13 pm
This time of year there are two areas to focus on for catching bass, it sounds like that may be what you are looking for.. 1) Areas where fish are spawning.A Texas rigged worm or lizard is hard to beat for bed fishing. Either pitch your bait quietly onto the beds or cast past it and reel up to and drop your bait there. Use enough weight to keep the bait on the bed and work it in place with short hops.2) Staging areas adjacent to spawning areas.Try Carolina rigging a 6″ zoom lizard and fish it around rocky points or ledges having trees or brush. If you can locate any large grassy flats burn a lipless crankbait right over the tops of the grass and weeds and you will either start catching fish or eliminating unproductive water. You might try a topwater bait or buzzbait early in the day and get bit.Good luck.
December 21st, 2010 at 3:10 am
Sage Fly had some great advice for live bait. Definitely try that !!Pike are voracious eaters and will attack out of spite even when not hungry. I like using crank baits or suspending lures that look like perch or trout or a sucker. Use an erratic retrieve, reel, stop, jerk, maybe jerk or twitch twice, reel, repeat. Always finish up with a figure 8 every cast and make sure you are ready to set the hook. Keep about 2 ft of line out while doing the 8. I would recommend steel leaders for these toothy critters just like i use for muskies. Make SURE you have release tools like a long nose pair of needle nose pliers and a net !!!!!!!!!! Good Luck !!
December 21st, 2010 at 3:52 pm
If no one gets back with ya’ (am sure they will) here’s their site with a’ few tips on fishin’ it and the phone number where you can get the info., first hand. Have a’ friend that makes the trip down from the Central Valley and when he gets back in, his ice chest(S) are alwas “brimmed out” with Trout, cats, etc., etc… Don’t know if I’ve helped but, with these links you’ll have a’ better idea of what ta’ expect;)…< ' ( (( >
December 22nd, 2010 at 3:29 am
Well I know this its been bad fishing weather down here in FL lots of wind . And if live bait wont catch fish in the ocean not much will. I hear the Snook bite is good in places at night but they like inlet or protected areas. Try finding some structure like bridges , rock jetties, piers or docks and boat houses. Maybe try night fishing near a lighted dock or pier if you can find one, its near a full moon and they should be feeding at night.I have found the hour before a low tide till the hour after hightide comes in are good fishing times.I found this Report on May 28 for the Gulf Area of FLFt. Myers: We lucked out much of the week and found our fish in protected areas near the passes in Estero Bay. Plenty of release snook action, some fair redfish bites and the first of the year big trout showed up. The tarpon have temporarily left the central bay. There are snook on the stick beaches, what sticks there are left after the park crews removed the dead fall.
December 22nd, 2010 at 3:40 pm
Try the store at the Capt. Joe’s Jigging Spoons site.http://www.captainjoesjiggingspoons.com/
December 23rd, 2010 at 3:31 am
In the thickest grass situation, I use the senko type worms rigged Texas style weedless and fished weightless- these lures cast easy – I cast into the weeds and pull it to the openings in the grass cover and fish it slowly to the other side of the opening and repeat. I also cast to the weed lines and fish it slowly with twitches of the rod tip. The next lure is great on getting strikes, but hard to hook a high percentage of the fish on it- It’s the Ribbet frog- cast easily and gets a lot of strikes, about one in three is the average for catching a bass for me- some people may do better. It’s a fun lure to fish .When I fish weeds , these two baits are the ones I have the most success on .Try them-you’ll enjoy fishing them.
December 23rd, 2010 at 3:50 pm
Any lure that relies on visibility alone will be compromised in murky water. If it’s a vibrational lure that transmits signals that can be picked up by the fish’s sensors in its lateral line then it should fair better, as should a scented lure.When the water’s murky I prefer to use natural bait rather than lures, so the fish can home in on its scent.The combination of a spoon and a jig on the same rig is a new one for me. Normally these two lures require quite different techniques to be fished successfully.
December 24th, 2010 at 3:44 am
white or white/chartreuse spinnerbaits with tandem gold blades1/2-ounce rattletraps in chrome and firetiger patternssuspending jerkbaits – blue/chrome/ orange and fire-tiger patternsif there is a big mayfly hatch going on (usually in july, but can come early) use buzzbaits and jitterbugs.
December 24th, 2010 at 3:19 pm
ive had great success with a yellow dare devil spoon with either red or black diamonds on the back.if you watch around sometimes you can get a big bunch of them but not always.http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?_DARGS=/cabelas/en/common/catalog/item-link.jsp_A&_DAV=MainCatcat20166-cat20309&id=0023712110855a&navCount=4&podId=0023712&parentId=cat20309&masterpathid=&navAction=push&catalogCode=IA&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat20309&hasJS=true
December 25th, 2010 at 3:05 am
Of course, but make sure you use a small one ,try a blue Mepps if you can get hold of one, if not anything about 15m long 10-12m wide,just keep working it for 30 mins or so then scale down a little ,don,t give up if nothing happens , move to another swim.
December 25th, 2010 at 3:04 pm
White perch really don’t get too big for the most part. They average about 8 ounces and 5″-10″ when they overpopulate (which they often do) their growth is stunted. Sorry to say, but a 1 pounder is about as good as they get. You can catch them with minnows and crawlers pretty consistently, live bait beats out artificials.
December 26th, 2010 at 3:54 am
soft plastics are some of the best baits for bass so u should use them. if u do decide to use some get senkos they are awesome. get some weedless jigs, and put a yum wooly bug on for a trailer and pitch it into the pads. some hard baits that are good are teminater spinnerbaits. buzzbaits will work great in and around the pads. also use crankbaits around the edge of the weeds. but u will almost always catch more bass on soft plastics such as worms and lizards. if u are having a bad day fishing switch to a weightless lizard rigged weedless. toss it onto the pads and slowly creep it back in the bass will explode on it. hope this helps.
December 26th, 2010 at 3:24 pm
Welcome to the Pacific Northwest. The good news is…you are going to love fishing here. I am particularly fond of the Columbia River. The bad news is…salmon and steelhead fishing is a whole new ball game. I’m wouldn’t bother trying to accomodate existing equipment and techniques…you are going to have to do some assimilation. As you already know, you have to head down to the river and spend time with the guys who fish a particular area…techniques and terminal tackle will vary even within a relatively limited stretch of the river. And, of course, there’s no substitute for knowing the river.Also, the trick here is how NOT to catch bass when you are after something else.
December 27th, 2010 at 3:27 am
The main tip is fish s-l-o-w, very slow at times. My favorite bait to throw in cool water are jigs. Preferrably 3/4 ounce or 1/2 ounce with a nice big trailer and rattle. A lot of people will say you want to size down your baits, which is true in some cases but not for baits like jigs. Bass are very slow moving in the Winter and if they go for a bait they want it to be well worth it. They won’t tend to chase down baits like they do other times of the year which is why a slow retrieve is a pretty vital. They’ll also generally be holding fairly deep as you mentioned so you of course want to give whatever you are using time to fall down to that deeper water. So again, a jig is my go to bait in the winter.Second. if you haven’t tried any rattle traps I’d strongly suggest it. I’ve pulled out more fish on these in cool water than I have on the jigs, they just don’t tend to be as big. You can cover a lot of water with these and fish the however you want, they’re very versatile. I like letting them sink until they hit bottom then use a stop and go retrieve with a twitch or 2 in between. They have loads of different colors and sizes so buy a few and experiement. Remember, GENERALLY in stained water a darker color will do best and in clear water a lighter/natural color will do best. But for some reason in Winter I’ve pulled a lot more fish out on a crawfish color in any water clarity. That would be my 2nd choice. Lastly, if neither of those were producing I would bust out my bigger plastic worms. 10 inch and even 12 inch Texas rigged worms have done nicely for me in the past. I tend to stick with the Culprit brand worms and occsionally Berkley Powerbait worms. As I said I like Texas Rigging best but a lot of people will Carolina Rig and Drop Shot like you said. Im not sure of the brand but there’s some pretty neat hooks that come with rattle on them that I like to use this time of year. When you’re fishing in water as cold as you are you need all of the “extra” stuff you can get imo like extra noise, flashy/flakey materials, and scents. It’s strange you didn’t get any fish in the boat with that broad of a selection. I’d suggest switching up colors, sizes, retrieves, etc next time you’re out. The smallest change can make the biggest difference. Just experiement, you’ll find something that they’re wanting to take.
December 27th, 2010 at 3:07 pm
In general you fish spoons by casting them out, sinking them to the depth you think the fish are at, then winding them in at the speed which gives them the best action. Different lures work best at different speeds, so start by watching the lure in the water and trying different speeds. If you wind too fast, it will generally spin (which isn’t the best action); if it’s too slow it won’t wobble at all. Sometimes wobbling it in a ways, then stopping periodically to let it sink for a few seconds, then resuming the retrieve will work.If you see fish working out there, cast past them and bring it in through them, otherwise cast to structure, or just cast as far as you can so you’re covering more water with each cast. Try different depths, too. If you hold the rod tip up, the lure will tend to come to the surface as you reel in, so retrieve with the rod tip down to keep it from coming up as quickly.