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Good Topwater Bite
While feeding the bream in my pond yesterday I threw a Pop-R a few
times. One of the first few casts, as I worked the lure back thru the bream feeding, a 2 lb 6 ounce bass grabbed it. The Pop-R looked a lot like one of the bream feeding as I twitched it and I guess the bass thought it was an easy meal. A couple of casts later a 1.5 pound bass hit the lure, this time to the right of where the bream were feeding. There is a lot of what I call needle grass hanging over the edge of the pond, and the fish was holding right on the edge of it. A few casts later I made a long cast down the dam and my best fish of the morning hit. It was way out and fought good, jumping four times before I got it in. My dog was going crazy wanting to go play with it. That bass weighed 3 lbs. 5 ounces on my hand scales. Nice few minutes of fishing. Made me want to get some big shiners and see what I could catch there. I know there are big bass in it, over five pounds, but they are harder to catch. Good way to try out new plugs though. Nice and peaceful, the only sound other than the bream feeding is an occasional airplane going over. The bluegill are fun, too. Last week I got one that weighed 1lb. 6 ounces on my scales. Hope for a two pounder one of these days. I use an ultralight with 4 pound line, and they fight good. But I have to disagree with those that say they pull better than bass. A one pound bass on that same outfit with fight harder and longer than a 1 pound bluegill. I have caught both within minutes of each other while throwing a beetle spin with it. |
"Ronnie Garrison" wrote in message
.. . While feeding the bream in my pond yesterday I threw a Pop-R a few times. One of the first few casts, as I worked the lure back thru the bream feeding, a 2 lb 6 ounce bass grabbed it. The Pop-R looked a lot like one of the bream feeding as I twitched it and I guess the bass thought it was an easy meal. A couple of casts later a 1.5 pound bass hit the lure, this time to the right of where the bream were feeding. There is a lot of what I call needle grass hanging over the edge of the pond, and the fish was holding right on the edge of it. A few casts later I made a long cast down the dam and my best fish of the morning hit. It was way out and fought good, jumping four times before I got it in. My dog was going crazy wanting to go play with it. That bass weighed 3 lbs. 5 ounces on my hand scales. Nice few minutes of fishing. Made me want to get some big shiners and see what I could catch there. I know there are big bass in it, over five pounds, but they are harder to catch. Good way to try out new plugs though. Nice and peaceful, the only sound other than the bream feeding is an occasional airplane going over. The bluegill are fun, too. Last week I got one that weighed 1lb. 6 ounces on my scales. Hope for a two pounder one of these days. I use an ultralight with 4 pound line, and they fight good. But I have to disagree with those that say they pull better than bass. A one pound bass on that same outfit with fight harder and longer than a 1 pound bluegill. I have caught both within minutes of each other while throwing a beetle spin with it. Sounds like you might have been "creating a noise zone." That is a technique I first heard about here in this newsgroup. Basically I have heard of guys ripping a good minnow area with a buzz bait over and over again to to create a noise zone and then fishing a popper through the area a little bit slower. Sounds like your feeding sunnies were creating the noise zone for you. -- Bob La Londe http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
Ronnie Wrote:
But I have to disagree with those that say they pull better than bass. A one pound bass on that same outfit with fight harder and longer than a 1 pound bluegill. That's cause your fishing for those southern bluegills Ronnie, I hear that they are a bit slower down there :-) |
Ronnie Garrison wrote:
snip But I have to disagree with those that say they pull better than bass. A one pound bass on that same outfit with fight harder and longer than a 1 pound bluegill. ... A one pound bass fights harder than a one pound bluegill ?!? That's one funny pond you've got going there, Ronnie. Do you feed the bass steroids and the bluegill Valium ? ;-) -- Ken Fortenberry |
Ken Fortenberry wrote:
Ronnie Garrison wrote: snip But I have to disagree with those that say they pull better than bass. A one pound bass on that same outfit with fight harder and longer than a 1 pound bluegill. ... A one pound bass fights harder than a one pound bluegill ?!? That's one funny pond you've got going there, Ronnie. Do you feed the bass steroids and the bluegill Valium ? ;-) Ronnie I have caught a lot of both, that 1# blue gill will out zip a bass every time, only thing that would get close to fighting like the blue gill, of the same size , is a hybrid stripe. Of course if your using 14# test, it's hard to tell the difference,, on a 4# ultra/micro lite RIG,, you bet you can tell the difference -- 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 |
alwaysfishking wrote:
Ronnie Wrote: But I have to disagree with those that say they pull better than bass. A one pound bass on that same outfit with fight harder and longer than a 1 pound bluegill. That's cause your fishing for those southern bluegills Ronnie, I hear that they are a bit slower down there :-) Yea, maybe that is it. I do weigh my bluegill - a one pound fish is much bigger then most folks imagine. Did you see the article comparing northern and Florida strain bass in the Bassin Times? Seems the northerns are much easier to catch - maybe our bream are different too. |
Rodney wrote:
Of course if your using 14# test, it's hard to tell the difference,, on a 4# ultra/micro lite RIG,, you bet you can tell the difference That is what I use, and I can tell the difference. I think most people compare catching a bass on 14 pound line and heavy equipment to catching a bluegill on 4 pound test and ultralight, that is why they think bluegill fight harder. |
Ken Fortenberry wrote:
Ronnie Garrison wrote: snip But I have to disagree with those that say they pull better than bass. A one pound bass on that same outfit with fight harder and longer than a 1 pound bluegill. ... A one pound bass fights harder than a one pound bluegill ?!? That's one funny pond you've got going there, Ronnie. Do you feed the bass steroids and the bluegill Valium ? ;-) I feed the bluegill and catfish floating pellets, the bass eat the bluegill and cats, although I have caught a couple of bass on pellets - they hit them as the pellet sank. |
"Ronnie Garrison" wrote in Seems the northerns
are much easier to catch - maybe our bream are different too. It's just a Northern thing, fish have to eat more before that ice comes in:-) |
I don't know, Ronnie. I caught a nice little half pound red ear on my drop
shot rod on Monday morning fishing with the kids. He put up quite a scrap. I also caught a 10" LM on the same rod on the same grub with the same drag settings. The red ear spun the drag a lot more than that LM did. I caught them less than 30 feet apart and within a few minutes of each other. Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com |
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