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Muskoka Fisherman September 12th, 2006 05:16 PM

Pausing the lure
 
I was wondering about how long to pause certain plastic lures when the
fish is watching them. I have been out a number of times this summer
when a 5 lb bass has been eyeing my worm or jig and just watched it
without biting it. Maybe I had spooked with my boat or maybe I'm doing
something wrong in my presentation. Does anyone have any advice on
what I should do when the fish is watching my lure.


Chris Rennert September 12th, 2006 06:37 PM

Pausing the lure
 
Hey Muskoka, if you can give a little more detail I might be able to
help. When you say watching the lure, do they watch it fall to the
bottom (turning and looking down), do they swim over to it, away from
it? Which plastic bait are you using? If you can answer those it gives
us a place to start.

Chris
Muskoka Fisherman wrote:
I was wondering about how long to pause certain plastic lures when the
fish is watching them. I have been out a number of times this summer
when a 5 lb bass has been eyeing my worm or jig and just watched it
without biting it. Maybe I had spooked with my boat or maybe I'm doing
something wrong in my presentation. Does anyone have any advice on
what I should do when the fish is watching my lure.


RichZ September 12th, 2006 11:39 PM

Pausing the lure
 
Muskoka Fisherman wrote:
I was wondering about how long to pause certain plastic lures when the
fish is watching them. I have been out a number of times this summer
when a 5 lb bass has been eyeing my worm or jig and just watched it
without biting it. Maybe I had spooked with my boat or maybe I'm doing
something wrong in my presentation. Does anyone have any advice on
what I should do when the fish is watching my lure.


Other than bed fishing in the spring, if you're watching the fish watch
your lure, the odds are probably against you. Water's got to be pretty
clear for that, and clear water bass usually commit to striking from a
reasonable distance. If you see a fish eying a soft plastic, and a
little shiver of the rod doesn't trigger it, the odds are probably
pretty well stacked against you.

Muskoka Fisherman September 13th, 2006 12:42 AM

Pausing the lure
 
I can see them sitting about 8 feet down under some fallen trees or
near docks in some of the clear lakes. I have used tubes, jigs and
worms.


Muskoka Fisherman September 13th, 2006 12:44 AM

Pausing the lure
 
and the lure is sitting on the bottom of the lake usually and i hop it
along


Chris Rennert September 13th, 2006 12:44 AM

Pausing the lure
 
I'd use something that stays in their face as long as possible. Maybe a
soft plastic jerkbait, maybe drop shot. How close are you getting to them?
Muskoka Fisherman wrote:
I can see them sitting about 8 feet down under some fallen trees or
near docks in some of the clear lakes. I have used tubes, jigs and
worms.


Muskoka Fisherman September 13th, 2006 02:58 AM

Pausing the lure
 
I have been about 15 feet away from them in the boat and they were
about 1 foot or so away from the lure.


fishtale September 13th, 2006 03:17 AM

Pausing the lure
 
You might want to try downsizing the bait. I've seen videos where this
is a very effective technique. The bass was eyeballing the large bait
and didn't hesitate to take the downsized bait.

Muskoka Fisherman wrote:
I was wondering about how long to pause certain plastic lures when the
fish is watching them. I have been out a number of times this summer
when a 5 lb bass has been eyeing my worm or jig and just watched it
without biting it. Maybe I had spooked with my boat or maybe I'm doing
something wrong in my presentation. Does anyone have any advice on
what I should do when the fish is watching my lure.



Alwaysfishking September 13th, 2006 02:31 PM

Pausing the lure
 
IMO if they were staring at your bait that long, there was something they
didn't like about it. Try switching colors or move to a reaction type bait
such as a spinnerbait or crankbait, also vary the presentaion



"fishtale" wrote in message
oups.com...
You might want to try downsizing the bait. I've seen videos where this
is a very effective technique. The bass was eyeballing the large bait
and didn't hesitate to take the downsized bait.

Muskoka Fisherman wrote:
I was wondering about how long to pause certain plastic lures when the
fish is watching them. I have been out a number of times this summer
when a 5 lb bass has been eyeing my worm or jig and just watched it
without biting it. Maybe I had spooked with my boat or maybe I'm doing
something wrong in my presentation. Does anyone have any advice on
what I should do when the fish is watching my lure.





Bob La Londe September 13th, 2006 06:15 PM

Pausing the lure
 
"Alwaysfishking" wrote in message
...
IMO if they were staring at your bait that long, there was something they
didn't like about it. Try switching colors or move to a reaction type bait
such as a spinnerbait or crankbait, also vary the presentaion



"fishtale" wrote in message
oups.com...
You might want to try downsizing the bait. I've seen videos where this
is a very effective technique. The bass was eyeballing the large bait
and didn't hesitate to take the downsized bait.

Muskoka Fisherman wrote:
I was wondering about how long to pause certain plastic lures when the
fish is watching them. I have been out a number of times this summer
when a 5 lb bass has been eyeing my worm or jig and just watched it
without biting it. Maybe I had spooked with my boat or maybe I'm doing
something wrong in my presentation. Does anyone have any advice on
what I should do when the fish is watching my lure.


Were they swimming over to the bait? If so just as they get to that
distance where they were stopping jerk it away from them. Not just a
twitch, but several feet. Often that will trigger a violent strike.


--
Bob La Londe
Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River
Fishing Forums & Contests
http://www.YumaBassMan.com



--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com


Chris Rennert September 13th, 2006 06:29 PM

Pausing the lure
 
Bob, I definitely agree, it seems that image of something trying to flee
from them ****es them off. I also like the scene when you have a couple
dominant fish in one small area and they both show interest in a bait.
Like a bolt of lightning one of them will usually attack it and run away
as fast as they can. It almost seems that if you cast your bait closer
to one fish than the other the one the bait is closest to will ignore it
until the other shows interest then he will attack it.
Bob La Londe wrote:
"Alwaysfishking" wrote in message
...
IMO if they were staring at your bait that long, there was something they
didn't like about it. Try switching colors or move to a reaction type bait
such as a spinnerbait or crankbait, also vary the presentaion



"fishtale" wrote in message
oups.com...
You might want to try downsizing the bait. I've seen videos where this
is a very effective technique. The bass was eyeballing the large bait
and didn't hesitate to take the downsized bait.

Muskoka Fisherman wrote:
I was wondering about how long to pause certain plastic lures when the
fish is watching them. I have been out a number of times this summer
when a 5 lb bass has been eyeing my worm or jig and just watched it
without biting it. Maybe I had spooked with my boat or maybe I'm doing
something wrong in my presentation. Does anyone have any advice on
what I should do when the fish is watching my lure.


Were they swimming over to the bait? If so just as they get to that
distance where they were stopping jerk it away from them. Not just a
twitch, but several feet. Often that will trigger a violent strike.




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