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#1
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I have one of those that you send down the line. It is a heavy fish looking
thing, green and yellow, about 6" long, with 2 rings the line slides through. Got it from BP or Cabelas a while ago. I have had OK success with it but was wondering what others use to unsnag those crankbaits? |
#2
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If I know in advance I'm going to be fishing crankbaits in heavy cover,
(EG, I'm fishing the Hudson) I put the lure retriever in the boat. Collapsible pole extends to 16 feet, has a coil at the end. You spin the coil onto the line, follow it down to the lure and either push the lure off, or snag a hook with the coil and pull it free. But other than that, a few old spark plugs in the boat will save a bunch of crankbaits. Just close the gap almost all the way up on them, and you can hang them on the line pretty easily. GET straight over the lure with the line taut nut not tight and let it fall to the lure. a lot of times it will knock it free on 1st contact. If not, just shake it a few times. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
#3
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If I know in advance I'm going to be fishing crankbaits in heavy cover,
(EG, I'm fishing the Hudson) I put the lure retriever in the boat. Collapsible pole extends to 16 feet, has a coil at the end. You spin the coil onto the line, follow it down to the lure and either push the lure off, or snag a hook with the coil and pull it free. But other than that, a few old spark plugs in the boat will save a bunch of crankbaits. Just close the gap almost all the way up on them, and you can hang them on the line pretty easily. GET straight over the lure with the line taut nut not tight and let it fall to the lure. a lot of times it will knock it free on 1st contact. If not, just shake it a few times. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
#4
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I have a pole type retrieve that usually works in fairly shallow water - down
to about 15 feet. I also made a chain type by hooking six inch pieces of light chain to a big ring and attached a 3 ounce weight. The ring is tied to heavy cord. I put the ring around the line and let it slide down to the plug. The chains hang the hooks and you can pull it loose. That works when you hang up in old line on the bottom - a pole often will not do that. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#5
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I have a pole type retrieve that usually works in fairly shallow water - down
to about 15 feet. I also made a chain type by hooking six inch pieces of light chain to a big ring and attached a 3 ounce weight. The ring is tied to heavy cord. I put the ring around the line and let it slide down to the plug. The chains hang the hooks and you can pull it loose. That works when you hang up in old line on the bottom - a pole often will not do that. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#6
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I absolutely hated having to stop my fishing to go in and knock hung-up a
crankbait off a snag. Even when I had the discipline to lay the snagged rod down to delay ruining that promising cover and to continue fishing with another rod, I still found it a major distraction. A few times I lost track of the snagged rod, only to drift away and have the damn thing slide over the side into the water. These things overwhelmed my anally ordered (flawed?) mind and led to my totally abandoning crankbaits and changing over to spinnerbaits only, except for those shallow shad raps, etc., that I coud fish as topwaters. I found that for me the spinnerbaits, as soon as I started experimenting with modifications such as undersized blades, oversized blades, and unfamiliar (to the fish) blade types, produced as well for me as crankbaits ever did, if not better. Plus I could throw them into almost any kind of crap and seldom ever hang up, as long as I kept them moving. I found that having that kind of peace of mind during a pleasurable experience such as fishing quickly restored to me a big part of what fishing is all about for me; peace, quiet relaxation and catching lots of fish. I see the the current heavy crankbait advertising going hand-in-hand with the same phenomen being bestowed to expensive mono lines as being really great news for the manufacturers, who are involved in a 100% push of these items because they are extremely profitable. These two criteria product classes are the highest replacement items on the market, and for these manufacturers the profits are major. Expensive crankbaits are still lost more than any other kind of lure, and we are taught to replace that "used" mono as often as after each use. I don't use crankbaits at all so I seldom ever lose a lure. I also don't use mono (I now use only fluorocarbon, and then only for leaders), so except for frequently replacing leaders I re-use my Fireline and Power-Pro to an extreme, with both still going strong and doing great. I actually find both to be far superior to mono for any use. At Secret Weapon, we get an awful lot of re-orders from regular customers. Almost never are these orders for the replacement of lost lures. Usually they are from customers who find that other colors and sizes now will produce far better than the standard 3/8 oz. whites and chartreuses that everybody else throws all the time... ho hum. We are currently looking at a really cool and unique crankbait line that we may bring into the Secret Weapon family. If we do, I will probably stop talking about their high loss ratio like everybody else. I know what you are thinking: "Damn capitalist! " Maybe we all move on financially when the opportunity arises, huh? In the meantime, can anybody spare a few bucks for a Starbucks... -- Bob Rickard (AKA Dr. Spinnerbait) www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "RGarri7470" wrote in message ... I have a pole type retrieve that usually works in fairly shallow water - down to about 15 feet. I also made a chain type by hooking six inch pieces of light chain to a big ring and attached a 3 ounce weight. The ring is tied to heavy cord. I put the ring around the line and let it slide down to the plug. The chains hang the hooks and you can pull it loose. That works when you hang up in old line on the bottom - a pole often will not do that. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#7
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I absolutely hated having to stop my fishing to go in and knock hung-up a
crankbait off a snag. Even when I had the discipline to lay the snagged rod down to delay ruining that promising cover and to continue fishing with another rod, I still found it a major distraction. A few times I lost track of the snagged rod, only to drift away and have the damn thing slide over the side into the water. These things overwhelmed my anally ordered (flawed?) mind and led to my totally abandoning crankbaits and changing over to spinnerbaits only, except for those shallow shad raps, etc., that I coud fish as topwaters. I found that for me the spinnerbaits, as soon as I started experimenting with modifications such as undersized blades, oversized blades, and unfamiliar (to the fish) blade types, produced as well for me as crankbaits ever did, if not better. Plus I could throw them into almost any kind of crap and seldom ever hang up, as long as I kept them moving. I found that having that kind of peace of mind during a pleasurable experience such as fishing quickly restored to me a big part of what fishing is all about for me; peace, quiet relaxation and catching lots of fish. I see the the current heavy crankbait advertising going hand-in-hand with the same phenomen being bestowed to expensive mono lines as being really great news for the manufacturers, who are involved in a 100% push of these items because they are extremely profitable. These two criteria product classes are the highest replacement items on the market, and for these manufacturers the profits are major. Expensive crankbaits are still lost more than any other kind of lure, and we are taught to replace that "used" mono as often as after each use. I don't use crankbaits at all so I seldom ever lose a lure. I also don't use mono (I now use only fluorocarbon, and then only for leaders), so except for frequently replacing leaders I re-use my Fireline and Power-Pro to an extreme, with both still going strong and doing great. I actually find both to be far superior to mono for any use. At Secret Weapon, we get an awful lot of re-orders from regular customers. Almost never are these orders for the replacement of lost lures. Usually they are from customers who find that other colors and sizes now will produce far better than the standard 3/8 oz. whites and chartreuses that everybody else throws all the time... ho hum. We are currently looking at a really cool and unique crankbait line that we may bring into the Secret Weapon family. If we do, I will probably stop talking about their high loss ratio like everybody else. I know what you are thinking: "Damn capitalist! " Maybe we all move on financially when the opportunity arises, huh? In the meantime, can anybody spare a few bucks for a Starbucks... -- Bob Rickard (AKA Dr. Spinnerbait) www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "RGarri7470" wrote in message ... I have a pole type retrieve that usually works in fairly shallow water - down to about 15 feet. I also made a chain type by hooking six inch pieces of light chain to a big ring and attached a 3 ounce weight. The ring is tied to heavy cord. I put the ring around the line and let it slide down to the plug. The chains hang the hooks and you can pull it loose. That works when you hang up in old line on the bottom - a pole often will not do that. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#8
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Hey Bob -- I've got an idea for a crankbait line. Remember the old "Flex
Plugs" (I think that's the right name) marketed by Burke. They were made of tough but soft plastic and they worked like regular plugs but a bass would hold on to them much longer than a regular hard plastic bait. My favorites were the Big Dig (dug deep like a Hellbender) and a top water that looked rather like a Heddon Chugger. I've never figured out why Burke took those lures off the market. The only place I can get them now is on eBay and they're getting harder to come by all the time. I'd love to see someone with your creative skills take the idea and come out with a similar line of lures. You'd probably figure out a way to make them shake, rattle, and roll and catch even more fish than the Burke lures did. Family, Friends, Fishing, Rob Storm http://stormsrestaurants.com |
#9
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Kind a like the Storm "Wild Shad?"
Rob Storm wrote: Hey Bob -- I've got an idea for a crankbait line. Remember the old "Flex Plugs" (I think that's the right name) marketed by Burke. They were made of tough but soft plastic and they worked like regular plugs but a bass would hold on to them much longer than a regular hard plastic bait. My favorites were the Big Dig (dug deep like a Hellbender) and a top water that looked rather like a Heddon Chugger. I've never figured out why Burke took those lures off the market. The only place I can get them now is on eBay and they're getting harder to come by all the time. I'd love to see someone with your creative skills take the idea and come out with a similar line of lures. You'd probably figure out a way to make them shake, rattle, and roll and catch even more fish than the Burke lures did. Family, Friends, Fishing, Rob Storm http://stormsrestaurants.com |
#10
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Fritz wrote:
Kind a like the Storm "Wild Shad?" Nothing like it. The Flex plugs were actually made out of soft foam and had metal diving lips and through wire construction to hold the hooks. They were real crankbaits, but with soft bodies. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
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