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Dropshotting
I know dropshot is mainly a clear water technique, but has anyone here
ever fished it in stained or dark water? if so what color worms seem to work best. matthew 4:19 follow me and I will make you fishers of men. |
Dropshotting
"BIG FISH 2006" wrote in message ... I know dropshot is mainly a clear water technique, but has anyone here ever fished it in stained or dark water? if so what color worms seem to work best. matthew 4:19 follow me and I will make you fishers of men. Dropshot started out as clear deep water. But any worm that works in stained water will work on a dropshot rig. Works well in the stain. |
Dropshotting
BIG FISH 2006 wrote:
I know dropshot is mainly a clear water technique, but has anyone here ever fished it in stained or dark water? if so what color worms seem to work best. My "version" of drop shotting works in even ZERO visibility water, the reason is the equal, and natural vibration you "can" put on a lure, of course a dark lure helps when they get close to it, But white, and silver (shad) also produces well. -- Rodney Long SpecTastic Wiggle rig Formally the Mojo Wiggle rig http://spectastictackle.com/ |
Dropshotting
On Jun 10, 6:07 pm, (BIG FISH 2006) wrote:
I know dropshot is mainly a clear water technique, but has anyone here ever fished it in stained or dark water? if so what color worms seem to work best. matthew 4:19 follow me and I will make you fishers of men. I drop shot a lot, my home lake usually crystal clear, but we do get stained and even muddy water after big rains. I don't think there is a water condition prohibiting drop shotting. The darker the water the closer to cover I put it. Black bass tend to hold to submerged wood more in darker water. The darker the water, the brighter the plastic, like bubblegum, strawberry, yellow on black, or high contrast like black on bright blue, white & black, solid black, solid white. I opt for GULP worms in the dirtiest water, or other worm brands having impregnated attractants. There's no better time for a stinky attractant. The darker the water the noisier the worm. I use paddle tails, ribbon tails, any type that will give off a little extra vibration when lifted a little. In clear water I mostly use earth tone colors like watermelon red, pumpkinseed red, whatever best imitates the forage, like crayfish, baby bass and shad colors. Jim |
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