Lure Bait Free Interesting Knowledgebase
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If you are looking for information about Lure Bait, you will find the below related information very helpful.
It provides a refreshing perspective on Lure Bait and to the price and availability of Lure Bait.
What is better to use, fake lure or live bait?
I feel Lure Bait that I catch more fish with fake bait, but i hear that you can catch larger fish with real bait
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December 16th, 2010 at 4:33 am
There is no such thing. Every one has a different idea of what the best bait is. It varies from lake to lake, one day to the next, one year to the next, even time of day may affect what the fish are hitting on.Water temperature has an effect, time of year and seasons of the year effect what the bass are hitting on the best. Fishing pressure will effect the bass bite.But, everyone will tell you what they catch them on the best. But notice there will be a lot of different answers.
December 16th, 2010 at 4:14 pm
For fishing off of (your) dock, I would use a 1/8 to 1/4 oz. jig, preferably a Fuzz-E- Grub or a Northland Fireball, tipped with a 3 to 4″ minnow. You may need to add a stinger hook. Other options would be a 1/4 oz. jig head with a soft plastic minnow body (or a Berkley Gulp minnow) or a deep diving and/or suspending crank bait. Try fishing after dark. You might not have the best of luck, just limiting yourself to the dock. If you don’t have a boat, try shore/dock/pier fishing where Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River meet.
December 17th, 2010 at 4:18 am
Your question is quite general — we don’t know where you’re fishing or what you’re fishing for, or even if you’re fishing in the sea or freshwater, but if someone told you that you can’t fish lures from the shore, they’re crazy.You can fish lures anywhere you fish bait, and vice versa. You can also fish lures WITH bait, like a bit of worm on a jig.Lures don’t necessarily need to reach deep waters. Lures just need to reach the fish! If a lure looks and acts like something a fish would eat, the fish will consider taking it. If you’ve had luck fishing with bait in a certain area, try a lure in the same place and see if you have any success. For example, let’s say you’ve caught fish on live minnows or shad chunks off your favorite point of land — try a lure that looks and acts like a live minnow in that same area. The fish are only interested in food, and if you can fool the fish into thinking your bait is food, chances are you can fool the same fish into thinking your lure is food.Your main challenge will be selecting lures that imitate natural forage. You won’t have much luck with a purple squid lure if there are no purple squids in that water. Look in the water and see if you can tell what the fish might be eating — crawdads? baitfish? insect larvae? grass shrimp? You may have to get wet, turn over some rocks, etc., but it’s worth it. And, as I’ve often said — ASK THE LOCALS. If you see some other folks fishing, ask them about what the fish feed on in that area. Ask them what lures (if any) they use. Most anglers are happy to trade information, especially if you’re respectful and observe proper fishing etiquette.I mostly fly fish, so I don’t do much with bait nowadays, and I can tell you that catching fish on an artificial lure is somewhat more gratifying than baitfishing. I know baitfishing has its place, and I would never criticize anyone for using bait. However, when everything else is equal, fishing with a lure will require a more informed presentation, and this makes me feel like I’ve done a little more to “earn” my catch.
December 17th, 2010 at 4:28 pm
willett pond
December 18th, 2010 at 4:34 am
tip a 1/4-1/2 oz. jig with a minnow or nightcrawler…if there hitting one more than the other stay with it. orrrr try trolling a nightcrawler harness with a spinner above it.Tight Lines!
December 18th, 2010 at 3:59 pm
What I have found that works pretty good is Zoom* brand watermellon flukes; about 3”-4″ long. Work those on the bank; with these I would use a small split shot at the top of the lure just to help it dive better. I have also used Berkly* Power Bait* Tequila sunrise 7″ power worm, and just again worked those on the bank. With the Berkly* worm I use a Texas rig. A good stand by color of worm is purple or junebug.Good luck and I hope that helps.
December 19th, 2010 at 3:46 am
Drift slowly across shoals while dragging a jig along the bottom with a shiner/minnow. Once you land one stay in that spot. Give it the odd little bit of action like flutter the bait the odd time. They can hit quite light so feel for every vibration in the rod. Try a jig and twister tail too. Perhaps Black or brown or yellow. Use about 6 to 8 pound test line with a medium action rod.
December 19th, 2010 at 4:32 pm
I have caught bass off many different lures before during and after a rain. I have been having lots of sucess off a senko rigged wacky style and also topwater lures work well for me when conditions are cloudy and after a rain.
December 20th, 2010 at 4:34 am
Have gone way under where? Do I need to start looking under the bed when I get home?
December 20th, 2010 at 4:14 pm
What’s your target? Natural baits work best (minnows and worms for pan fish… gizzard shad or skip jack for catfish) in my opinion. Try to cast where the water is calm but still moving, if you can, find cover such as underwater brush. That’s where the bigger catfish will be.
December 21st, 2010 at 4:15 am
Not sure if u got the email!Cigar minnow,lane or vermillon sanpper,pinfish!I like to used heavy jigs 4 to 8 oz as needed with strip of cigar minnow on it!Big pieces of spanish strips or chunks with standard rig or knocker rig for big snappers!
December 21st, 2010 at 4:02 pm
the flounder in jersey just go nuts over marabou jigs.You’ll need light tackle,4 lb test is perfect, but the just cant resist an eighth oz jig. I like green,yellow white and grey jigs. Bass Pro has them real cheap.There is no need to tip them with bait.I’ll guarantee if you try this you’ll kill them.
December 22nd, 2010 at 4:20 am
when float fishing i would put about two feet of line betwen the float and the hook, with one split shot up about 8 inches from the hook. for bait it’s hard to beat a garden worm or red wiggler. wax worms and crickets would work too. if you’re not getting bites at a certain depth just move the bobber up or down and experiment. as for lures a really small inline spinner or micro crankbait would be my go-to.
December 22nd, 2010 at 4:08 pm
For lures think I’d go with either Panther Martin or Blue Fox Inline spinners along with a’ backup up of the Kastmaster castin’ spoon (size: 1/8oz., on them all). If it be specifically a’ trout pond chances are their stocked, so if that be the case then Berkley’s Trout Gulp will do ya’<);-3 Panther Martin:http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?id=0065791123346a&navCount=1&podId=0065791&parentId=cat180001&masterpathid=&navAction=jump&cmCat=MainCatcat20166-cat180001&catalogCode=9IS&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat180001&hasJS=trueBlue Fox:http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?id=0011720110248a&navCount=3&podId=0011720&parentId=cat180001&masterpathid=&navAction=jump&cmCat=MainCatcat20166-cat180001_TGP&catalogCode=9IS&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat180001&hasJS=trueKastmaster:http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?id=0030481113624a&navCount=6&podId=0030481&parentId=cat20309&masterpathid=&navAction=jump&cmCat=MainCatcat20166-cat20309_TGP&catalogCode=9IS&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat20309&hasJS=trueBerkley’s Gulp (Trout Formula):http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?id=0048353122245a&navCount=9&podId=0048353&parentId=cat600174&masterpathid=&navAction=jump&cmCat=MainCatcat20166-cat600174&catalogCode=IA&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat600174&hasJS=trueA’ medium retrieve with the spinners will catch their eyes and as for the spoon ~ in intervals, retrieve, pause and retrieve… Note: The inline spinners I’ve mentioned are personal favorites and not to many times have they let me/us down ~ trust me.Added: Thumbs ta’ BC…
December 23rd, 2010 at 4:18 am
There are lots of bass in the sea, and more fish called “bass” which aren’t really bass. They all eat all sorts of things, from sardines, anchovies, mackerel, and other fish, to squid, worms, mussels, crabs, shrimp, and so on, plus a bunch of different types of artificials. If you say where you’re fishing, you might get a useful answer.ADD: Scotland? I haven’t got a clue.
December 23rd, 2010 at 4:29 pm
I would try to stay away from artificial lures when starting a fishing trip and only use them if all else failed, Shrimps or cutting smaller fish into strips is a great start.It is best to take a wide variety of different baits because when one bait might not work another may have huge success.