![]() |
Plastic Storage Question
Got a question for you folk. I finally started making a storage area in my
basement so I could get all my fishing stuff where I can spend the rest of the winter getting everything ready for the season. My question is storage for plastics. I have fished many tournaments as a non-boater and have noticed quite a few of my boaters keep their plastic, like senkos, stored in things like the Plano 3600. I've always been one to keep my plastics in the bags they came in. Does it make a difference? Thanks in advance -- Sandy Joren -------------------------- IN GOD WE TRUST |
Plastic Storage Question
On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 13:15:49 -0500, "Sandy Joren"
backed into a tree whilst ridin inna park then wrote: Got a question for you folk. I finally started making a storage area in my basement so I could get all my fishing stuff where I can spend the rest of the winter getting everything ready for the season. My question is storage for plastics. I have fished many tournaments as a non-boater and have noticed quite a few of my boaters keep their plastic, like senkos, stored in things like the Plano 3600. I've always been one to keep my plastics in the bags they came in. Does it make a difference? Thanks in advance It doesn't really make a difference. I would keep all mine in the storage boxes if I had a boat with storage areas. Now I just fill a storage box with an assortment and refill at home from bags. Boxes can be easier to find the color/size you looking for, but bags work too. Then there's Ronnie. Watching him dig through his forward storage compartment filled with bags can be quite fun. Almost like Christmas morning! ;} _ Dan TOASTY in Florida for now Remove the X for e-mail reply www.outdoorfrontiers.com www.SecretWeaponLures.com A proud charter member of "PETAF", People for Eating Tasty Animals and Fish!!! |
Plastic Storage Question
"Sandy Joren" wrote in message ... Got a question for you folk. I finally started making a storage area in my basement so I could get all my fishing stuff where I can spend the rest of the winter getting everything ready for the season. My question is storage for plastics. I have fished many tournaments as a non-boater and have noticed quite a few of my boaters keep their plastic, like senkos, stored in things like the Plano 3600. I've always been one to keep my plastics in the bags they came in. Does it make a difference? Thanks in advance Well hey there Sandy! Long time no see! I used to keep my soft plastics in the original bags, but found that there were few ways to reasonably store them so that I could easily organize them and see all the choices I have. There's little more frustrating than pawing through bags looking for one particular color and not being able to find it! I tried using the soft sided, two ring binder type organizers but just didn't like them. It seemed that the bags would fall open or tear, then I had lures all over the place. Since then, I have gone to the Plano 3700 boxes for my soft plastics as well. I like them because I can have one box for stick baits, one for fluke type lures, one for tubes, one for creatures, etc. Then I can have a fairly wide assortment of colors and sizes in each box and at a glance, can get a good idea of what I have for choices. And, with a glance, I can tell when I'm getting low on a particular color or size, which makes it easier to restock. The one positive to keeping them in the bag is if you want to put oils or scents in the bag and saturate the lures. But you can use standard zip-lock bags and still keep them in the Plano box too. I like the boxes when I'm fishing out of another boat. I can keep all my hooks in one box along with a small selection of weights. Then I pre-plan what I'm going to use and just take the four or five boxes I need. These fit easily into a gym bag and take up little room in the boat. Four rods, five boxes in a gym bag or back pack and I'd be pretty well equipped for just about any tournament. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
Plastic Storage Question
Then there's Ronnie. *Watching him dig through his forward storage compartment filled with bags can be quite fun. *Almost like Christmas morning! *;} _ Dan TOASTY in Florida for now And I often find a surprise I forgot I had! Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Plastic Storage Question
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 07:58:33 -0800 (PST), Ronnie
backed into a tree whilst ridin inna park then wrote: Then there's Ronnie. *Watching him dig through his forward storage compartment filled with bags can be quite fun. *Almost like Christmas morning! *;} _ Dan TOASTY in Florida for now And I often find a surprise I forgot I had! Ronnie http://fishing.about.com Indeed ;} |
Plastic Storage Question
Thanks to all for the words of wisdom. Points made good sense. I'll give
it a shot this season. The talk of Ronnie pawing through his forward compartment reminds me of me pawing through my gym bag full of bags of plastic and trying to find the 3 inchers. I'm going to try and do quite a bit more planning this year so the boaters I fish with don't groan when I back my truck up to the boat and start unloading.....:) Glad to see all the "buds" still around........ -- Sandy Joren -------------------------- IN GOD WE TRUST "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers.com" wrote in message ... "Sandy Joren" wrote in message ... Got a question for you folk. I finally started making a storage area in my basement so I could get all my fishing stuff where I can spend the rest of the winter getting everything ready for the season. My question is storage for plastics. I have fished many tournaments as a non-boater and have noticed quite a few of my boaters keep their plastic, like senkos, stored in things like the Plano 3600. I've always been one to keep my plastics in the bags they came in. Does it make a difference? Thanks in advance Well hey there Sandy! Long time no see! I used to keep my soft plastics in the original bags, but found that there were few ways to reasonably store them so that I could easily organize them and see all the choices I have. There's little more frustrating than pawing through bags looking for one particular color and not being able to find it! I tried using the soft sided, two ring binder type organizers but just didn't like them. It seemed that the bags would fall open or tear, then I had lures all over the place. Since then, I have gone to the Plano 3700 boxes for my soft plastics as well. I like them because I can have one box for stick baits, one for fluke type lures, one for tubes, one for creatures, etc. Then I can have a fairly wide assortment of colors and sizes in each box and at a glance, can get a good idea of what I have for choices. And, with a glance, I can tell when I'm getting low on a particular color or size, which makes it easier to restock. The one positive to keeping them in the bag is if you want to put oils or scents in the bag and saturate the lures. But you can use standard zip-lock bags and still keep them in the Plano box too. I like the boxes when I'm fishing out of another boat. I can keep all my hooks in one box along with a small selection of weights. Then I pre-plan what I'm going to use and just take the four or five boxes I need. These fit easily into a gym bag and take up little room in the boat. Four rods, five boxes in a gym bag or back pack and I'd be pretty well equipped for just about any tournament. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:33 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2006 FishingBanter