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#11
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On Fri, 22 Sep 2006 18:16:49 -0400, "Alwaysfishking"
wrote: "Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now" wrote in message Randy, who carrys the Renegade weighted 4/0 hooks. I was getting them at the local wally world Thanks |
#12
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1. Old Style Bomber 6A Firetiger. The old style was a different
plastic, using a lead bb. It dives deeper and has a different sound. 2. Old style Bomber 6A in the old crawfish color. Dark brown with black stripes. A piece of sandpaper is used to dull the finish slightly. 3. Bagley crawfish. Seal the hookeyes and tie ring with clear fingernail polish. Keep a bottle of clear fingernail polish handy for any scrapes etc. 4. Zoom lizard in pumpkinseed/chart tail. Flipped and pitched into buckbrush, stumps, etc. 5. A beetle spin. In that green color that you can see for a mile. It can have a black stripe or a white dot. When nothing else works on the rivers, throw a beetle spin. Be careful, they have light hooks. Why? They work for me. Bob La Londe wrote: Here are mine. 1. Rooster Tail 1/6 oz in powder blue w/ silver blade. 1/16th oz for trout. I caught my first bass ever on an inline spinner in moving water. 2. Zoom U-Tail worm in watermelon seed rigged on a 2/0 worm hook behind a 1/16 to 1/8 oz bullet weight. Can also be drop shotted very well. This is the first bait I ever felt like I mastered or atleast caught fish because of my abilities rather than just blind luck. 3. Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad in Chrome and black or gold chrome. (no longer made) I caught my first fish over ten pounds (a 12 lb striper) on this bait, but also it consistantly would produce decent bass slow cranked on days when nothing else seemed to work. 4. Popper... Almost any color. Small or medium size. Popper. Yeah baby! Did you see that one blow up on it!? 5. Little bent metal fish shaped spoon. This is the second bait I felt like I mastered or atleast caught fish because of my abilities rather than just blind luck. I had two or three patterns with this bait. I would like to note that my largest numbers of bass and my largest bass were not caught on any of my favortie baits listed above. Largest numbers were easily caught on live threadfin shad freshly netted. Largest were all caught on plastics, but not the one listed above. |
#13
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![]() 1. rapala jointed lure ie j13, j 11 etc. 2. rapala husky jerk 3. rapala rattlin rap 4 smithwick minnow plugs 5 softbaits (also hard baits)deep discount at walmart why 1,2,3 readily available in most (ie walmart) stores in my locale 1,2 available in various sizes 1. easy retrieve no jerking 3. good at night cause makes rattle 4 .some have excalibur rotating hooks (sticky) 5. cheap and opportunity to try various baits |
#14
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1. Anything plastic that is 5 inches or less on a split shot rig..( Meat
head worms, Small finesse worms.) DOWNSIZING on these overfished waters in Alabama is why I use this rig. The bass tournaments are killing our lakes here @ home! 2. Anything plastic that is 8 inches or less on a Texas rig. (Culprit red shad worm, Mann's hardnosed paddle tails) See above for the reason 3. Rattle Traps. Reservoirs that I fish are often Murky or plain out Yahoo chocolate colored so sound is a must. 4. A jig. One of the most versatile baits other than a worm that has ever been created. I prefer the bitsy craw and the Eakins jig when I don't have to pitch through mats and trash. DOWNSIZING here has the same results as the splitshot rig..AWESOME bait! 5. The SLUG-O..To me there is no other lure in the world with the "wounded dead fall" of this bait. The Zoom Fluke is awesome but ive caught bigger and more quality fish on a 4 inch slug-o than any other stick bait I have fished. You can throw it anywhere in anything. I've even Carolina rigged it with results before. These are just my choices over all through out all seasons. "fishtale" wrote in message oups.com... 1. rapala jointed lure ie j13, j 11 etc. 2. rapala husky jerk 3. rapala rattlin rap 4 smithwick minnow plugs 5 softbaits (also hard baits)deep discount at walmart why 1,2,3 readily available in most (ie walmart) stores in my locale 1,2 available in various sizes 1. easy retrieve no jerking 3. good at night cause makes rattle 4 .some have excalibur rotating hooks (sticky) 5. cheap and opportunity to try various baits |
#15
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![]() "Bob La Londe" wrote in message .. . Here are mine. 1. Rooster Tail 1/6 oz in powder blue w/ silver blade. 1/16th oz for trout. I caught my first bass ever on an inline spinner in moving water. 2. Zoom U-Tail worm in watermelon seed rigged on a 2/0 worm hook behind a 1/16 to 1/8 oz bullet weight. Can also be drop shotted very well. This is the first bait I ever felt like I mastered or atleast caught fish because of my abilities rather than just blind luck. 3. Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad in Chrome and black or gold chrome. (no longer made) I caught my first fish over ten pounds (a 12 lb striper) on this bait, but also it consistantly would produce decent bass slow cranked on days when nothing else seemed to work. 4. Popper... Almost any color. Small or medium size. Popper. Yeah baby! Did you see that one blow up on it!? 5. Little bent metal fish shaped spoon. This is the second bait I felt like I mastered or atleast caught fish because of my abilities rather than just blind luck. I had two or three patterns with this bait. I would like to note that my largest numbers of bass and my largest bass were not caught on any of my favortie baits listed above. Largest numbers were easily caught on live threadfin shad freshly netted. Largest were all caught on plastics, but not the one listed above. -- Bob La Londe 1. T-rigged worm (color and size depends on the situation). The first artificial I learned to fish as a youngin, and have always seemed to be able to get bitten on it when NOTHING else in the box was working. I will use t-rigged worms from January to December and get bit most of the time provided I am presenting it right and am in the right depth to put it near the fish. My favorite non-homemade types to use are the Cyberflexx/XXX style of late. They last forever, and the fish don't seem to mind biting them if presented properly. I do pour a lot of my own "other" plastics though. 2. Smithwick Devil's Horse/toothpick topwater (red/yellow small size with rear prop only). My favorite top water bait. I find this works great on my local waters since it isn't as loud and obnoxious as buzzbaits. Maybe due to all the buzzbait/burned spinnerbait pressure my local lakes see. Mostly do this during the warm months, up until late October here. A good backup for this bait when fish are more skittish, would be a Spook, or Baby Spook (in almost any color, depending on cloud cover and wind/surface ripple). 3. Rat-L-Trap. Seasonal, usually an early spring, late winter bait. Caught the 5 largest LM bass I can claim to have caught in my life on this bait, all in late February & early March. I prefer the basic chrome with black back for typical early spring muddy waters. Clearer waters seem to like chrome with a blue back. I have also had some success in "fish colored" patterns (bass-shad-bream), especially of late with the "bleeding" series that includes a red hook up front. This is a deadly pre-spawn bait when "yo-yo'd" (not a steady retrieve) in cold water, in my area. A 1/4 oz chrome trap yoyo'd in about 3 ft caught me my largest LM bass to date in February of '03. 4. Jig, jig/pig. I am still learning to fish these, got turned onto them late in life. The best bait I've found to skip under docks and platforms on busy lakes where typical weekend warriors are just banging the banks with worms or spinnerbaits. Whether I use a trailer or not is up to the fish's mood, and will start without a trailer most times to feel out the aggressiveness of the fish at that point and time. I usually prefer black, black/blue, and reddish brown(crawdad) shades with these, unless the water is stained or really naturally dark (tannic), then I will add a skirt with strands of chartreuse in it. I will trim the skirt on occasion if using a trailer, so the trailer's action isn't impeded and so it can be seen a little better if it is a swimmer type. I've also added some with built-in rattles to the armory, for those times when the water is stained up and I want the fish to "hear" it as much as see it. 5. C-rigged soft plastic. Between the summer doldrums and late winter's pre-spawn crankbaiting, I can usually find fish with C-rigs and T-rigs. The lakes around here are man-made by and large, and have roads that cross them (which means man-made bridges, rip-rap, etc) and c-rigged lizards and worms are hot stuff around rip rap, and around fish beds in a second or late spawn. Sizes depend on the lake (more pressure = smaller size) and colors depend on water color for the day. My goto colors are dark (black, red shad, methiolate, motor oil) but sometimes pumpkin seed and watermelon are the tickets too. Basic curly tail lizards or paddle tail worms are my favorite here. Honorable mentions: Rapala medium diving crankbaits. Usually in some sort of forage color, like shad or baby bass. Good for finding suspended bass around submerged structures that would otherwise be spooked by rat-l-traps. Great for me in water shallower than 10'. I like the minnow style and the broken back swimmer minnow style. Stick worms. I've been trying to learn these finesse baits, for use in both wacky and drop shotting - all relatively new concepts to me, and is a bait that can be fished from 1 ft to the bottom IMO. Tried Senkos, Kinamis, you name it. I just bought some molds and will be pouring my own this winter since I have some new color ideas that no one else seems ready to offer - and I can vary the salt content and make them fall at rates that I choose, and can choose my flake size and color for those that I want some sparkle in. This means outside of those Cyberflexx, XXX, whatever high-stretch commercial baits, I'll be pouring all my own "other" softbaits now. (Lizards, chunks, "pigs", paddletails, and now stick baits). Smithwick Rogue hard jerk baits. Deadly late winter early/spring bait when they aren't hitting noisy baits like rat-l-traps. I'm trying to learn to apply soft flukes here, but have not gotten very good with them yet. I haven't the talent really to say I can catch a limit on spinnerbaits, but continue to try to learn their use. And is why they aren't in my "top 8" as noted above...yet. |
#16
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![]() Bob La Londe wrote: Here are mine. 1. Rooster Tail 1/6 oz in powder blue w/ silver blade. 1/16th oz for trout. I caught my first bass ever on an inline spinner in moving water. 2. Zoom U-Tail worm in watermelon seed rigged on a 2/0 worm hook behind a 1/16 to 1/8 oz bullet weight. Can also be drop shotted very well. This is the first bait I ever felt like I mastered or atleast caught fish because of my abilities rather than just blind luck. 3. Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad in Chrome and black or gold chrome. (no longer made) I caught my first fish over ten pounds (a 12 lb striper) on this bait, but also it consistantly would produce decent bass slow cranked on days when nothing else seemed to work. 4. Popper... Almost any color. Small or medium size. Popper. Yeah baby! Did you see that one blow up on it!? 5. Little bent metal fish shaped spoon. This is the second bait I felt like I mastered or atleast caught fish because of my abilities rather than just blind luck. I had two or three patterns with this bait. I would like to note that my largest numbers of bass and my largest bass were not caught on any of my favortie baits listed above. Largest numbers were easily caught on live threadfin shad freshly netted. Largest were all caught on plastics, but not the one listed above. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#17
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1 Pumpkin green Scumfrog
2 6" stick-o's in greens or browns 3 4" tubes watermellon with copper flake 4 1/4 oz black & blue jig & pig 5 4" X-Rap " hot rod" in the spring on St. Clair |
#18
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Top 5, truthfully this changes per body of water, but here my general 5
favorites. 1. Swim Jig: Favorite colors: Black/Silver, White/Chartreuse: Once the weeds are up , and I cannot throw a crank bait on a lot of flats I like to fish I just switch to a swim jig and never seem to miss a beat. This bait fills a niche, where spinnerbait blades get fouled up too much, and you have to cover to much water to fish a worm, that is when this bait shines. 2. Tube jig: Favorite size 2.5", favorite weight 1/8(Blacks and browns). I haven't met a smallie that didn't like crayfish. 3. 6" Producto paddle tail worm (vibrator worm). This worm is so versatile. I can straight retrieve it with no weight or a very small weight and the tail vibrates really nicely. I can cut an inch or two off of it and flip and pitch it for finicky bass, and another way I use it is to retrieve it over slop. 4. Rapala DT6 in Ghost or Black/Silver. In cold water these baits suspend(actually rise really slowly) on their own without any added weight, and that seems to be the key as I drop (or rise) below 50 degrees. This bait seems to match the most common size of the shad I see bass puking up. 5.Spinnerbait: White with a Colorado blade, the darker the water , the bigger the blade :-). Bob La Londe wrote: Here are mine. 1. Rooster Tail 1/6 oz in powder blue w/ silver blade. 1/16th oz for trout. I caught my first bass ever on an inline spinner in moving water. 2. Zoom U-Tail worm in watermelon seed rigged on a 2/0 worm hook behind a 1/16 to 1/8 oz bullet weight. Can also be drop shotted very well. This is the first bait I ever felt like I mastered or atleast caught fish because of my abilities rather than just blind luck. 3. Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad in Chrome and black or gold chrome. (no longer made) I caught my first fish over ten pounds (a 12 lb striper) on this bait, but also it consistantly would produce decent bass slow cranked on days when nothing else seemed to work. 4. Popper... Almost any color. Small or medium size. Popper. Yeah baby! Did you see that one blow up on it!? 5. Little bent metal fish shaped spoon. This is the second bait I felt like I mastered or atleast caught fish because of my abilities rather than just blind luck. I had two or three patterns with this bait. I would like to note that my largest numbers of bass and my largest bass were not caught on any of my favortie baits listed above. Largest numbers were easily caught on live threadfin shad freshly netted. Largest were all caught on plastics, but not the one listed above. |
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