1st cast-catch, then nothing
On Aug 1, 9:30*pm, "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers.com" go-
wrote:
"Jason Rosin" wrote in message
...
I fish mainly on two small ponds (#1, 3min. across on 10ft. bass boat
w/ 30lb thrust motor; #2 10 minutes).
90% of the time I fish Senkos , with either 14lb firewire or
spiderwire in the weeds, 8lb powerline in more open water. Pond 1 max
depth is 40 ft, and pond 2 max 15ft. Mostly I'm fishing ofround weeds
and lillies.
Three outings in the past two weeks (twice from 7-11am, and once
around dusk). But the strangest thing is happening. Each outing I've
got a fish (smallie) *on the very first cast, or two on the first two,
then nothing for hours. Fore example, today on the dee[er pond, along
the weeds/lillies I had one on the first cast at 4lbs, and the second
one 2.5lbs, twenty minutes later, then nothing for 4 hours though a
few (4) nibbles I couldn't set the hook on.
Just seems like a weired and persistent pattern, or a 6 year amateur
fisherman's day-beginning luck.
Am I doing something wrong? If the Senko's still in excellent shape
should I change it, or the hook, after catching a fish with it? Should
let out line and retie ?
Thanks for any input.
JJR
It sounds to me like you're concentrating on the first couple of casts, then
when you have success, you're not fishing the same way, probably too fast..
The next time out, try to duplicate EXACTLY the same retrieve, right down to
the cadence of the lure and how fast you're reeling in the line.
You should be checking your line for signs of fraying, and if needed cut and
retie, but as long as the Senko is still in reasonable shape, there's no
need to change anything.
--
Steve Huber
Executive Producer/Editor in Chief
OutdoorFrontiers Multi-Media LLChttp://www.outdoorfrontiers.com- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Steve, as far as Senkos, I was always curious how to tell when they
are no longer good. I tend to have a few outside the plastic bag in my
box and never throw them away. Some are left over from previous year
and I never know if on bad days it's the old plastic that's the
problem.
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