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Summer time shore fishing, help!
Hello
Is there any good methods for catching large mouth when its roughly 85 degrees and sunny in the afternoon from the shore in a lake? My guess is they are in the deep waters that I wont be able to get to from the shore, I never seem to have much luck on days like this. Thanks |
Summer time shore fishing, help!
You can catch bass from shore, under the circumstances you mentioned, if not as
many as from a boat. Here are some things that will help: 1. Fish cover such as lilly pads, weed beds, floating mats of weeds, stumps, brush piles, fallen trees, etc. 2. Fish are more likely to be in an area with access to deeper water, such as near a drop-off or creek channel. (note: these first to things are almost a must for successful shore fishing in my opinion. I catch next to nothing from areas with large expanses of shallow water with little or no cover) 3. Fish early morning or late evening, or other low light periods such as heavy overcast. 4. Fish right before a storm or front hits. The best fishing I have ever had was on hot muggy afternoons when I could hear thunder rumbling in the distance. However, once the storm hits, the fishing is over, the fish will move to deeper water, so run for the car before it hits. Hope this helps. -Zimmy |
Summer time shore fishing, help!
A totally over-looked shoreline strategy is to wade. If you can get a
proper handle on the bottom conditions, wading, even with just gym shoes and jeans, can be a truly wonderful experience. It even cools you off. You can cast back towards shore or out towards weeds. Until you really know your location, of course, wear a life vest and carry a walking rod. Get an old belt and put a piece of cut-up pvc into it to hold your rod. Look in the magazines and catalogs and you will see the "professional" rodholders. You can make one for pennies with a scrap of pvc. Another, equally important issue....the fish can "hear" you walking from many, many, yards away on land. I live on a small pond and I can see the fish scurrying away as I walk to the shore. They start moving when I step off of my deck, which is at least twenty feet from the water. Walk softly and carry a short rod. Pitch and cast into any cover. The biggest fish lie in 4 or 5 inches of water as long as it is in the shade or covered with floating debris. If I had an area that looked good, I'd wade to it from far away, and fish into it. If I couldn't wade, I'd still be standing 100 feet to one side, and work my way up towards it slowly. One STEP at a time. I'd use very light, non-disturbing lures. Plastic worms, tubes and maybe a small floating Rapala on a light spinning line. Any disturbance may scare the fish off and it is a long walk to the next good area. -- RichG TX - WI manager, Carolina Skiff Owners Group on MSN http://groups.msn.com/CarolinaSkiffOwners "Michael Luka" wrote in message ... Hello Is there any good methods for catching large mouth when its roughly 85 degrees and sunny in the afternoon from the shore in a lake? My guess is they are in the deep waters that I wont be able to get to from the shore, I never seem to have much luck on days like this. Thanks |
Soft Plastic Bait
I never seem to have any success with rubber worms or lizards and such.
Whats the best method for using them? I tried to set up a carolina rig according to a directional picture I seen. I could not find beeds at the local bait shop so I just did without and still no luck. Thanks "Michael Luka" wrote in message ... Hello Is there any good methods for catching large mouth when its roughly 85 degrees and sunny in the afternoon from the shore in a lake? My guess is they are in the deep waters that I wont be able to get to from the shore, I never seem to have much luck on days like this. Thanks |
Soft Plastic Bait
Michael Luka wrote:
I never seem to have any success with rubber worms or lizards and such. Whats the best method for using them? I tried to set up a carolina rig according to a directional picture I seen. I could not find beeds at the local bait shop so I just did without and still no luck. Thanks Buy your beads at WalMArt, in their craft department,, Although I rarely use them when Carolina rigging,, well something I never do any more, anyway. I have caught many, many, bass fishing that way though, and fish """"SLOW"""", that will help you more than anything,, more the worm slowly, then pause, wait, and do it again. If your going as slow as you think possible,, slow down some more, that ain't slow enough. -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Long Shot "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, Decoy Activator and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
Soft Plastic Bait
Thanks, im about to hit up a lake now and theres a major thunderstorm
comming through in about 2 hours, so im gonna follow your advice and the advice of the guy above me and test my luck. Thanks alot for your help everyone! "Rodney" . wrote in message ... Michael Luka wrote: I never seem to have any success with rubber worms or lizards and such. Whats the best method for using them? I tried to set up a carolina rig according to a directional picture I seen. I could not find beeds at the local bait shop so I just did without and still no luck. Thanks Buy your beads at WalMArt, in their craft department,, Although I rarely use them when Carolina rigging,, well something I never do any more, anyway. I have caught many, many, bass fishing that way though, and fish """"SLOW"""", that will help you more than anything,, more the worm slowly, then pause, wait, and do it again. If your going as slow as you think possible,, slow down some more, that ain't slow enough. -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Long Shot "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, Decoy Activator and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
Summer time shore fishing, help!
What do you recommend from shore when there's dense algae/weed mats
close to most of the accessible shore? If I cast past them to the open water, then I'm retrieving back into the slop and getting stuck. If I try, I get a glob of weed stuff even when rigged 'weedless'; it gathers at the weight/hook-eye/top of worm area. Should I try a heavy enough weight (1/4 oz? 3/8?) to get a worm to sink through it? If so, then what? I can't pull through the mats and keep the lure in the water and along the bottom. Do you have success casting weightless thick stick worms on top of the weeds, and twitch retrieve them? I've tried this, but never had a bite so far. I may be way too quick, but I think maybe there aren't bass under the areas I'm trying. Are there some good articles to help with 'slop' conditions you can point me to? Thanks, Richard Berke Columbia, MD |
Soft Plastic Bait
Only one thing can keep you from catching fish on soft plastics: a lack of
patience. -- Bob Rickard (AKA Dr. Spinnerbait) www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "Michael Luka" wrote in message ... I never seem to have any success with rubber worms or lizards and such. Whats the best method for using them? I tried to set up a carolina rig according to a directional picture I seen. I could not find beeds at the local bait shop so I just did without and still no luck. Thanks "Michael Luka" wrote in message ... Hello Is there any good methods for catching large mouth when its roughly 85 degrees and sunny in the afternoon from the shore in a lake? My guess is they are in the deep waters that I wont be able to get to from the shore, I never seem to have much luck on days like this. Thanks |
Summer time shore fishing, help!
Well, it's time to be creative. You might carefully check out wading --
a lake I am thinking of you can wade several feet beyond the muck and still be in thigh deep water. You could try raking some open areas in the dense muck -- this will spook the fish -- but come back and fish the openings later. Some muck fishermen tie as much as 1 ounce on their rigs to really punch through the muck -- but that can be slow work. Snagless critter lures such as sum frogs, scum rats and such can be drug across the surface of the stuff ---- often dragging to the edge and then letting it slide off will draw a strike. Finally, think about a belly boat or float tube -- $75 and you are out beyond the muck and dont need to worry much about the depth. In Richard Berke wrote: What do you recommend from shore when there's dense algae/weed mats close to most of the accessible shore? If I cast past them to the open water, then I'm retrieving back into the slop and getting stuck. If I try, I get a glob of weed stuff even when rigged 'weedless'; it gathers at the weight/hook-eye/top of worm area. Should I try a heavy enough weight (1/4 oz? 3/8?) to get a worm to sink through it? If so, then what? I can't pull through the mats and keep the lure in the water and along the bottom. Do you have success casting weightless thick stick worms on top of the weeds, and twitch retrieve them? I've tried this, but never had a bite so far. I may be way too quick, but I think maybe there aren't bass under the areas I'm trying. Are there some good articles to help with 'slop' conditions you can point me to? Thanks, Richard Berke Columbia, MD |
Summer time shore fishing, help!
"Michael Luka" wrote in message ... Hello Is there any good methods for catching large mouth when its roughly 85 degrees and sunny in the afternoon from the shore in a lake? My guess is they are in the deep waters that I wont be able to get to from the shore, I never seem to have much luck on days like this. I agree with what Zimmy said. Just want to add that my shore fishing areas do not offer visible cover or structure to target, so I catch my fish by keeping on the move and covering as much water as I can and using a variety of baits. At this one pond, most of my bigger fish come on sunny days. The water temp is more important than the air temp. Good luck. |
Summer time shore fishing, help!
What do you recommend from shore when there's dense algae/weed mats
close to most of the accessible shore? If your talking about algae, it will stick to anything, weather its "weedless" or not. What I do is look of holes in the mat and cast fall-type lures (Senkos, tubes, jigs, etc). If the holes are fairly big, its easy, but sometimes your casting to an opening thats only 4 or 5 inches across. Give the lure plenty of slack line and let it fall, and once it hits bottom, let it sit for a bit, at least 30 seconds or so. Watch the line and if it moves at all, take in the slack and set the hook. If nothing happens, you can try jigging the lure a bit, then pull it out, reel in, remove the slime from it, and try again. If the weed/algae mat is really thick and dense and has no openings, I take an old anchor on a rope and tos it out and use the rope to pull it back in. The algae and weeds get pulled along by the rope and you can make tempoary lanes in the slop. Now you can use any type of lure you want in the open lanes, but this only work if its not windy. -Zimmy |
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