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#1
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I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over
time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. -- ** FREE Fishing Lures ** Weekly drawing ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com |
#2
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Bob La Londe wrote:
I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. The first time I went fishing targeting bass specifically, an old friend was showing me the ropes. This was in the mid '70s. He showed me how to rig a "drop shot", and that was what we caught them on all day. Only he called it a "tight line" rig. |
#3
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Bob La Londe wrote:
I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. I wrote about the "inverted split shot rig" in Fishing Facts, Bassin and In-Fisherman in the 80s and early 90s. In those days we always put a short (3" or so_ leader between the main line and the hook, but it was essentially the same rig fished in exactly the same situtations. If you look at the DS article on my site, I even include a diagram from and old Fishing Facts article. It's http://www.richz.com/fishing/articles/dropshot.html |
#4
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It's been done in sal****er for over 100 years...
WW "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. -- ** FREE Fishing Lures ** Weekly drawing ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com |
#5
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Very old system indeed. Fishing a hand line for perch in Escanaba during the
mid 50's with my uncles. They rigged a weight at the end of the line and placed 6 hooks with a 3inch dropper every nine inches up the line. Baited each hook with a piece of night crawler caught the night before in the yard. Used to cut the worms into three pieces. Fished out of a 12ft aluminum that had grandma's washtub in it for a "livewell". Sometimes on Saturday morning we could get about 60 to 70 perch. We would take them home and clean them. Grandma would invite the neighbors to fish dinner that night. She cooked the fish and the neighbors all brought a dish to pass around. Some times we would have more than 30 people eating outside picnic style. Those were great times to be an 8 year old. "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. -- ** FREE Fishing Lures ** Weekly drawing ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com |
#6
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On Sat, 23 Oct 2004 23:49:28 GMT, "Illinois Fisherman"
sent into the ether: Very old system indeed. Fishing a hand line for perch in Escanaba during the mid 50's with my uncles. They rigged a weight at the end of the line and placed 6 hooks with a 3inch dropper every nine inches up the line. Baited each hook with a piece of night crawler caught the night before in the yard. Used to cut the worms into three pieces. Fished out of a 12ft aluminum that had grandma's washtub in it for a "livewell". Sometimes on Saturday morning we could get about 60 to 70 perch. We would take them home and clean them. Grandma would invite the neighbors to fish dinner that night. She cooked the fish and the neighbors all brought a dish to pass around. Some times we would have more than 30 people eating outside picnic style. Those were great times to be an 8 year old. That made me remember Perch fishing with a similar method at Washinton Island, Wisconsin. It's off the tip of Door County peninsula. My dad had a small plane and we would meet his buddies up there and fish in an old double ended fishing boat with a one lung inboard owned by a young man that used to snack on the minnows all day. :{ Always had to bring an extra dozen ot two for him! The rig we used was a weight at the end of the line and two hooks with about a 10/12" tag line. We used a neat little plastic do-hickey to attache the hook lines to the main lines. I wonder if they still make them? We would go home with a 5 gallon bucket of fillets for each of us. We also used to cast big Res eye lures while we waited for a fish on both hooks. Caught quite quite a few Northerns that way. Hadn't thought of that method for years. Thanks for reminding me. Those were some of the greatest times with my dad. "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. -- ** FREE Fishing Lures ** Weekly drawing ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com Remove the x for e-mail reply www.outdoorfrontiers.com |
#7
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![]() "Dan, danl, danny boy, Redbeard, actually Greybeard now" wrote in message ... On Sat, 23 Oct 2004 23:49:28 GMT, "Illinois Fisherman" sent into the ether: Very old system indeed. Fishing a hand line for perch in Escanaba during the mid 50's with my uncles. They rigged a weight at the end of the line and placed 6 hooks with a 3inch dropper every nine inches up the line. Baited each hook with a piece of night crawler caught the night before in the yard. Used to cut the worms into three pieces. Fished out of a 12ft aluminum that had grandma's washtub in it for a "livewell". Sometimes on Saturday morning we could get about 60 to 70 perch. We would take them home and clean them. Grandma would invite the neighbors to fish dinner that night. She cooked the fish and the neighbors all brought a dish to pass around. Some times we would have more than 30 people eating outside picnic style. Those were great times to be an 8 year old. That made me remember Perch fishing with a similar method at Washinton Island, Wisconsin. It's off the tip of Door County peninsula. My dad had a small plane and we would meet his buddies up there and fish in an old double ended fishing boat with a one lung inboard owned by a young man that used to snack on the minnows all day. :{ Always had to bring an extra dozen ot two for him! The rig we used was a weight at the end of the line and two hooks with about a 10/12" tag line. We used a neat little plastic do-hickey to attache the hook lines to the main lines. I wonder if they still make them? We would go home with a 5 gallon bucket of fillets for each of us. We also used to cast big Res eye lures while we waited for a fish on both hooks. Caught quite quite a few Northerns that way. Hadn't thought of that method for years. Thanks for reminding me. Those were some of the greatest times with my dad. "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. -- ** FREE Fishing Lures ** Weekly drawing ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com Remove the x for e-mail reply www.outdoorfrontiers.com See my reply to a drop leader is not a dropshot. Saw a similar rig at a fishing museum in Italy. Roman from 1-200 b.c. |
#8
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On Sat, 23 Oct 2004 23:49:28 GMT, "Illinois Fisherman"
sent into the ether: Very old system indeed. Fishing a hand line for perch in Escanaba during the mid 50's with my uncles. They rigged a weight at the end of the line and placed 6 hooks with a 3inch dropper every nine inches up the line. Baited each hook with a piece of night crawler caught the night before in the yard. Used to cut the worms into three pieces. Fished out of a 12ft aluminum that had grandma's washtub in it for a "livewell". Sometimes on Saturday morning we could get about 60 to 70 perch. We would take them home and clean them. Grandma would invite the neighbors to fish dinner that night. She cooked the fish and the neighbors all brought a dish to pass around. Some times we would have more than 30 people eating outside picnic style. Those were great times to be an 8 year old. That made me remember Perch fishing with a similar method at Washinton Island, Wisconsin. It's off the tip of Door County peninsula. My dad had a small plane and we would meet his buddies up there and fish in an old double ended fishing boat with a one lung inboard owned by a young man that used to snack on the minnows all day. :{ Always had to bring an extra dozen ot two for him! The rig we used was a weight at the end of the line and two hooks with about a 10/12" tag line. We used a neat little plastic do-hickey to attache the hook lines to the main lines. I wonder if they still make them? We would go home with a 5 gallon bucket of fillets for each of us. We also used to cast big Res eye lures while we waited for a fish on both hooks. Caught quite quite a few Northerns that way. Hadn't thought of that method for years. Thanks for reminding me. Those were some of the greatest times with my dad. "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. -- ** FREE Fishing Lures ** Weekly drawing ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com Remove the x for e-mail reply www.outdoorfrontiers.com |
#9
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Bob La Londe wrote:
I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. The first time I went fishing targeting bass specifically, an old friend was showing me the ropes. This was in the mid '70s. He showed me how to rig a "drop shot", and that was what we caught them on all day. Only he called it a "tight line" rig. |
#10
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It's been done in sal****er for over 100 years...
WW "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... I think drop shotting as it is done now is the result of refinement over time. Bassin' magazine from 1998 and earlier talks about different varients of the "Yankee Rig" which is almost identical in some setups. They also indicate it is a fresh water application of a known and established sal****er fishing rig. -- ** FREE Fishing Lures ** Weekly drawing ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com |
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