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#1
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Curious Bob, you say the lures didn't draw the fish out of the brush. How
do you know there were fish in the brush you were fishing? You can't rely on lures to draw fish out of brush when it's tough Bob, you have to get your bait in there & bounce it off the fish's nose son! When I'm not catchin' em I tend to blame mysself, not my lures or the fish. Warren -- http://www.fishingworld.com/MesaTackleSupply/ http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com http://www.secretweaponlures.com http://warrenwolk.com/ http://www.tri-statebassmasters.com/ "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... "Craig" wrote in message news ![]() Bob, I am confused. Your title indicated a review of Mesa Tackle products. What I read was story of an outing you had where you use one of Mesa Tackles lures, for one cast, and caught a fish. Hell you didn't even credit the lure with the catch, indicating you felt any plastic lure would have done the trick. Go use those puppies on a few more outings where they are your primary lures, then come back and tell us what you liked and disliked about them. Tell me why I should or should not buy them. Score them on a scale of 1 to 10 on Quality, effectiveness, price, etc. I would love to hear an unbiased opinion. Craig Baugher Well, it was the first time I used them, and you are probably right. Any jerk bait would probably have caught that fish. I guess my only comment on the whole thing was if anything the Mesa Tackle stuff did not catch fish when nothing else would either. They may be great plastics, but they didn't draw fish out of the brush on a tough day. I threw craws, jig trailers, and worms by Mesa Tackle. One of the two fish I caught was on a Mesa Tackle plastic. I didn't try the drop shot stuff though. I just have a hard time throwing a rig like that in weeds and grass. As to what kind of review I "have to" give... nobody pays me for my opinion and I will always have my own bias. I did use the stick worm as my primary worm most of the day. I tried it wacky rigged. I tried it texas rigged weighted and weightless. I spent eight hours on the water and switched up between topwater and stick worms most of the day. I only changed up my approach to try and pull a big fish out of heavy cover after a fulld ay of pounding the water. I was kind of happy that a follow up techinque produced a fish for me. I asked about follow up tactics here a while back, but didn't get much feedback. Yeah it wasn't much of a review. More of a rant about a day of pounding the water for little return. -- Bob La Londe Yuma, Az http://www.YumaBassMan.com ADD YOUR WEB LINK TO THE LINK INDEX ON MY SITE |
#2
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I agree with Warren. A tough day is only tough because I cannot find what
the fish want or what is needed to make them strike (out of anger, fear, instinct). But I have found during these times that my odd ball lures are the ones that draw the strike. Like this worm somebody gave me that has a jig head with what appears to be a Indiana blade sticking out of it. I never use it unless all else fails, because it just doesn't fit my normal style of fishing, but it does work in those tough conditions. I have may be a half-dozen lures that I call odd-balls, and each has produced fish, typically in tough conditions. -- Craig Baugher Living in The United States, and Loving It! Practicing My Freedom of Speech, and Enjoying It! Knowing how to Thank those that paid for it, by Honoring It! |
#3
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"Craig" wrote in message
om... I agree with Warren. A tough day is only tough because I cannot find what the fish want or what is needed to make them strike (out of anger, fear, instinct). But I have found during these times that my odd ball lures are the ones that draw the strike. Like this worm somebody gave me that has a jig head with what appears to be a Indiana blade sticking out of it. I never use it unless all else fails, because it just doesn't fit my normal style of fishing, but it does work in those tough conditions. I have may be a half-dozen lures that I call odd-balls, and each has produced fish, typically in tough conditions. -- Craig Baugher Living in The United States, and Loving It! Practicing My Freedom of Speech, and Enjoying It! Knowing how to Thank those that paid for it, by Honoring It! Its funny you guys have said that. I have relied pretty heavily on the early morning topwater bite (something that has never produced for me in the past), and then on soft plastics this year. I spent a couple outings throwing nothing but spinner baits and caught a few fish, but nothing spectacular. I spent quite a bit of time thinking about it and I have been thinking about some different things to throw at these fish. Almost everybody here goes to flipping jigs or worms when it gets tough. Thats what I did too. Now I was thinking if the bite was tough why not try some of my old standby stuff. When I was a kid I caught a lot of bass (mostly small ones) on small Kastmaster spoons ripped very fast through the water, and small inline spinners run as slow as I could run them. I even figured out how to run them over weeds without hanging up. There does have to be atleast a few inches of clear water over the weeds though. I would use a light action rig 7' or longer and hold the rod tip as high as I could to keep the lure in a pulled up direction and crank it just fast enough to keep it out of the weeds. I have already decided to have a couple of those tiednon next time I go out. I also ordered a few of the Mepps minnow inlines. I only ever owned a couple of those when I was a kid. At three bucks a pop they were more than I could usually afford so I stuck with the cheaper Rooster Tails or even cheaper generic spinners. I never fished the big stuff when I was a kid tromping through the brush on the Gila River. Crank baits were out of my price range, and I would have never dreamed of throwing topwater. I've listened to all this throw anchor line with boat anchors directly the brush stuff. I've learned that topwaters do produce some nice fish. Finesse worms do work for sight fishing when the fish are biting. I don't know about the jig and trailer being the big fish getter, but I have certainly tried it. Now its time for me to go back to my basics. Its going to be tough with all the weed growth in the water, but I will give it a shot. As to knowing the fish are there... I have seen them. I really can't imagine a back water fish is going to thread his way out of a 8-10 foot deep back lake through a bunch of shallow channels to the main river and hunt the main curent on a slow day. Sure he may move back into heavy cover, or he may move into to deeper water, but the fish I catch in the back waters look different than those I catch in the current. They eat different stuff and they hunt different prey. Blame the bait? No that wasn't my point at all. They didn't make the difference. Sure they are good looking baits, but they did not give me an edge. Further back in the brush? Thats what I do when I pitch. In fact when the regular pitching gear failed to produce for me I started throwing light action stuff back into the brush. By noon or one I was throwing 12 lb (6lb dia) super mono into cover I would normally reserve for 50lb Power Pro. On the edge of the brush and then towards deeeper water. I just wasn't throwing what they wanted. I was amazed though by how easily I got the lighter stuff in and out of the heavy stuff. I figured if I hooked up with it I would have to run the boat right up into the trash to get my fish. That was something I figured I'ld worry about after I actually hooked one. My other stand by when I started to be able to afford stuff was the Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad crank bait. It was a bait that would always get me a fish or two of I just kept thowing it out and cranking it in very slow. It is no longer made, and it catches every weed in the area. With the heavy weed growth its difficult for me to throw a lot of my real confidence baits, but I think I am going try them next time out. My little green Zoom U-Tails didn't even produce this last time out, and they have been my hard corp bait in recent years. Its been a tough season fishing for me. Just about the time I think I have something I can build on it quits working. I'll find an area that produces a few fish and a way that catches them and I'll set myself a plan to hit that then try soemthing else, and I wind up trying something else because that didn't produce at all. I sympathise with some of the guys who come in here ready to just give up. I've tried to blame my skills, but I hook most fish that I feel or see hit. Sure I describe missing some, but I've found things I can rely on. The Excalibur rotating hooks now decorate most of my topwaters baits. I use the Eagle Claw rotating hooks for most soft plastic applications except light lining jerk baits where they tend to twist line. I know I don't have much of a touch for feeling a bite with the heavy action stuff, but I'm pretty good at watching the line. As for finding fish. In this shallow river and lake system the fish finders are of minimal use. Too much weed and brush growth paired with a lot of shallow water. As Van Dam says I do try to follw the bait. A couple weekends ago I found a school of shad pinned up near the dock in Squaw lake. I caught a mess of small keepers there. Or as any of the trouters would say match the hatch. When I get in waters where I see lots of 3-4 inch bass I throw baby bass pattern baits and catch some fish (most of the time). I just can't seem to find any patterns that will produce consistantly for me on good days much less on a tough day. I go out with 12 - 15 rods rigged with different stuff, and by the end of the day I have fished every one of them. Usually a half dozen other things as well. I try hard points which most anglers here ignore unless they see a feed actually going on. I fish lake mouths and back water mouths when the water is rising or falling. I fish standing under water trees in open water when I can. Another thing that a lot of anglers around here seem to ignore. The things I see others here doing consistantly day in day out is throwing topwater first thing in the morning, and pitching the shore of the main current during the day. Some will also pitch the refuge (when its open) in Martinez lake and the shore line in Ferguson Lake. I've spent whole days doing each of those things trying to figure out what works when. I try and fish with others when ever possible and I try to be a good fishing partner. I'm always quick with the net when my partner has a fish on. I always bring extra sodas and munchies for my fishing partner. If I am fishing out of someody else's boat I always give them extra money for fuel. If I damage something I always point it out and take care of fixing it no matter the cost. I try to keep my mouth shut and not whine if I'm not doing well, and not brag if I'm the one putting fish in the boat. Unfortunately I have found that most of the guys around here in the clubs are either younger and have no interest in fishing with a guy my age who has mediocre skills or are much older and feel the same. Mostly they are 50-70 in the clubs and those of us under 40 are the "young pups." Thats was one of the reasons I decided I wanted my own boat. Atleast I could get out when ever I had the time. As to guys not members of the local clubs that is harder. Of those I have met and who wanted to fish most have few skills, which I actually don't have a problem with. I learned balloon rigging minnows from a guy who couldn't cast a spinning rod in open water. That is a fish catching technique that is unequaled. I taught him my lazy sidearm cast that can put a bait under over hanging brush on the far bank. I learned about slow dragging worms on sandy slopes from a ten year old kid with a broken down spincaster. He also showed me how to use a round head jig to fish a worm in rock piles and riprap. When it works it really works. When I was ten I figured out a trout lake that everybody said was dead anytime after a heavy rain fall. It turned out that with the correct presentation that was the best time to fish. When I was about eight I figured out a technique for fishing under bridges in current from the bank. Everybody can contribute something if they are really interested in fishing. I kind of got turned off of a lot of casual fishing partners though when I realized that most casual fishermen just want an excuse to go out and drink. Quite a number only if I buy the beer, bring my boat, supply the gear, bring the food, pick them up, and don't even offer if they screw up some of my gear. If I wanted to pay somebody to fish with me I would hire a guide. In fact I would but the only local guide I know is laid up with a torn achilles tendon. I'm trying to learn new stuff. I do change up my gear. I try different tactics and different waters regularly. I fish with other people when I get the chance. You can only say so much in a usenet post. I imagine most people reading this one got bored somewhere around the second paragraph. -- Bob La Londe Yuma, Az http://www.YumaBassMan.com ADD YOUR WEB LINK TO THE LINK INDEX ON MY SITE |
#4
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Bob, you just gave a thorough description of what fishing is. Nothing is
ever for sure. The best tackle and baits can give you an advantage, but not always. There is always room to better your performance, and there is always more to be learned. That is why fishing, and the quest for fishing knowledge, is so darn much fun. -- Bob Rickard www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... "Craig" wrote in message om... I agree with Warren. A tough day is only tough because I cannot find what the fish want or what is needed to make them strike (out of anger, fear, instinct). But I have found during these times that my odd ball lures are the ones that draw the strike. Like this worm somebody gave me that has a jig head with what appears to be a Indiana blade sticking out of it. I never use it unless all else fails, because it just doesn't fit my normal style of fishing, but it does work in those tough conditions. I have may be a half-dozen lures that I call odd-balls, and each has produced fish, typically in tough conditions. -- Craig Baugher Living in The United States, and Loving It! Practicing My Freedom of Speech, and Enjoying It! Knowing how to Thank those that paid for it, by Honoring It! Its funny you guys have said that. I have relied pretty heavily on the early morning topwater bite (something that has never produced for me in the past), and then on soft plastics this year. I spent a couple outings throwing nothing but spinner baits and caught a few fish, but nothing spectacular. I spent quite a bit of time thinking about it and I have been thinking about some different things to throw at these fish. Almost everybody here goes to flipping jigs or worms when it gets tough. Thats what I did too. Now I was thinking if the bite was tough why not try some of my old standby stuff. When I was a kid I caught a lot of bass (mostly small ones) on small Kastmaster spoons ripped very fast through the water, and small inline spinners run as slow as I could run them. I even figured out how to run them over weeds without hanging up. There does have to be atleast a few inches of clear water over the weeds though. I would use a light action rig 7' or longer and hold the rod tip as high as I could to keep the lure in a pulled up direction and crank it just fast enough to keep it out of the weeds. I have already decided to have a couple of those tiednon next time I go out. I also ordered a few of the Mepps minnow inlines. I only ever owned a couple of those when I was a kid. At three bucks a pop they were more than I could usually afford so I stuck with the cheaper Rooster Tails or even cheaper generic spinners. I never fished the big stuff when I was a kid tromping through the brush on the Gila River. Crank baits were out of my price range, and I would have never dreamed of throwing topwater. I've listened to all this throw anchor line with boat anchors directly the brush stuff. I've learned that topwaters do produce some nice fish. Finesse worms do work for sight fishing when the fish are biting. I don't know about the jig and trailer being the big fish getter, but I have certainly tried it. Now its time for me to go back to my basics. Its going to be tough with all the weed growth in the water, but I will give it a shot. As to knowing the fish are there... I have seen them. I really can't imagine a back water fish is going to thread his way out of a 8-10 foot deep back lake through a bunch of shallow channels to the main river and hunt the main curent on a slow day. Sure he may move back into heavy cover, or he may move into to deeper water, but the fish I catch in the back waters look different than those I catch in the current. They eat different stuff and they hunt different prey. Blame the bait? No that wasn't my point at all. They didn't make the difference. Sure they are good looking baits, but they did not give me an edge. Further back in the brush? Thats what I do when I pitch. In fact when the regular pitching gear failed to produce for me I started throwing light action stuff back into the brush. By noon or one I was throwing 12 lb (6lb dia) super mono into cover I would normally reserve for 50lb Power Pro. On the edge of the brush and then towards deeeper water. I just wasn't throwing what they wanted. I was amazed though by how easily I got the lighter stuff in and out of the heavy stuff. I figured if I hooked up with it I would have to run the boat right up into the trash to get my fish. That was something I figured I'ld worry about after I actually hooked one. My other stand by when I started to be able to afford stuff was the Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad crank bait. It was a bait that would always get me a fish or two of I just kept thowing it out and cranking it in very slow. It is no longer made, and it catches every weed in the area. With the heavy weed growth its difficult for me to throw a lot of my real confidence baits, but I think I am going try them next time out. My little green Zoom U-Tails didn't even produce this last time out, and they have been my hard corp bait in recent years. Its been a tough season fishing for me. Just about the time I think I have something I can build on it quits working. I'll find an area that produces a few fish and a way that catches them and I'll set myself a plan to hit that then try soemthing else, and I wind up trying something else because that didn't produce at all. I sympathise with some of the guys who come in here ready to just give up. I've tried to blame my skills, but I hook most fish that I feel or see hit. Sure I describe missing some, but I've found things I can rely on. The Excalibur rotating hooks now decorate most of my topwaters baits. I use the Eagle Claw rotating hooks for most soft plastic applications except light lining jerk baits where they tend to twist line. I know I don't have much of a touch for feeling a bite with the heavy action stuff, but I'm pretty good at watching the line. As for finding fish. In this shallow river and lake system the fish finders are of minimal use. Too much weed and brush growth paired with a lot of shallow water. As Van Dam says I do try to follw the bait. A couple weekends ago I found a school of shad pinned up near the dock in Squaw lake. I caught a mess of small keepers there. Or as any of the trouters would say match the hatch. When I get in waters where I see lots of 3-4 inch bass I throw baby bass pattern baits and catch some fish (most of the time). I just can't seem to find any patterns that will produce consistantly for me on good days much less on a tough day. I go out with 12 - 15 rods rigged with different stuff, and by the end of the day I have fished every one of them. Usually a half dozen other things as well. I try hard points which most anglers here ignore unless they see a feed actually going on. I fish lake mouths and back water mouths when the water is rising or falling. I fish standing under water trees in open water when I can. Another thing that a lot of anglers around here seem to ignore. The things I see others here doing consistantly day in day out is throwing topwater first thing in the morning, and pitching the shore of the main current during the day. Some will also pitch the refuge (when its open) in Martinez lake and the shore line in Ferguson Lake. I've spent whole days doing each of those things trying to figure out what works when. I try and fish with others when ever possible and I try to be a good fishing partner. I'm always quick with the net when my partner has a fish on. I always bring extra sodas and munchies for my fishing partner. If I am fishing out of someody else's boat I always give them extra money for fuel. If I damage something I always point it out and take care of fixing it no matter the cost. I try to keep my mouth shut and not whine if I'm not doing well, and not brag if I'm the one putting fish in the boat. Unfortunately I have found that most of the guys around here in the clubs are either younger and have no interest in fishing with a guy my age who has mediocre skills or are much older and feel the same. Mostly they are 50-70 in the clubs and those of us under 40 are the "young pups." Thats was one of the reasons I decided I wanted my own boat. Atleast I could get out when ever I had the time. As to guys not members of the local clubs that is harder. Of those I have met and who wanted to fish most have few skills, which I actually don't have a problem with. I learned balloon rigging minnows from a guy who couldn't cast a spinning rod in open water. That is a fish catching technique that is unequaled. I taught him my lazy sidearm cast that can put a bait under over hanging brush on the far bank. I learned about slow dragging worms on sandy slopes from a ten year old kid with a broken down spincaster. He also showed me how to use a round head jig to fish a worm in rock piles and riprap. When it works it really works. When I was ten I figured out a trout lake that everybody said was dead anytime after a heavy rain fall. It turned out that with the correct presentation that was the best time to fish. When I was about eight I figured out a technique for fishing under bridges in current from the bank. Everybody can contribute something if they are really interested in fishing. I kind of got turned off of a lot of casual fishing partners though when I realized that most casual fishermen just want an excuse to go out and drink. Quite a number only if I buy the beer, bring my boat, supply the gear, bring the food, pick them up, and don't even offer if they screw up some of my gear. If I wanted to pay somebody to fish with me I would hire a guide. In fact I would but the only local guide I know is laid up with a torn achilles tendon. I'm trying to learn new stuff. I do change up my gear. I try different tactics and different waters regularly. I fish with other people when I get the chance. You can only say so much in a usenet post. I imagine most people reading this one got bored somewhere around the second paragraph. -- Bob La Londe Yuma, Az http://www.YumaBassMan.com ADD YOUR WEB LINK TO THE LINK INDEX ON MY SITE |
#5
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So true Bob. I hope Bob L doesn't take this the wrong way, but I think his
basic problem stems not so much from a lack of skills & knowledge of catching bass, but from a possible lack of fish-finding ability. I think he's keeping a closed mind in saying "the fish have to be in the backwaters (or anywhere else)", and ignoring the "main lake", etc. I find bass relatively easy to catch, finding them is the difficult part. The fish you catch in the backwaters look different because they came out of shallower water, not because of thier diet being different. Put those fish in deep water for a day & they'll look like the rest of the deepwater fish. Warren "Bob Rickard" wrote in message m... Bob, you just gave a thorough description of what fishing is. Nothing is ever for sure. The best tackle and baits can give you an advantage, but not always. There is always room to better your performance, and there is always more to be learned. That is why fishing, and the quest for fishing knowledge, is so darn much fun. -- Bob Rickard www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... "Craig" wrote in message om... I agree with Warren. A tough day is only tough because I cannot find what the fish want or what is needed to make them strike (out of anger, fear, instinct). But I have found during these times that my odd ball lures are the ones that draw the strike. Like this worm somebody gave me that has a jig head with what appears to be a Indiana blade sticking out of it. I never use it unless all else fails, because it just doesn't fit my normal style of fishing, but it does work in those tough conditions. I have may be a half-dozen lures that I call odd-balls, and each has produced fish, typically in tough conditions. -- Craig Baugher Living in The United States, and Loving It! Practicing My Freedom of Speech, and Enjoying It! Knowing how to Thank those that paid for it, by Honoring It! Its funny you guys have said that. I have relied pretty heavily on the early morning topwater bite (something that has never produced for me in the past), and then on soft plastics this year. I spent a couple outings throwing nothing but spinner baits and caught a few fish, but nothing spectacular. I spent quite a bit of time thinking about it and I have been thinking about some different things to throw at these fish. Almost everybody here goes to flipping jigs or worms when it gets tough. Thats what I did too. Now I was thinking if the bite was tough why not try some of my old standby stuff. When I was a kid I caught a lot of bass (mostly small ones) on small Kastmaster spoons ripped very fast through the water, and small inline spinners run as slow as I could run them. I even figured out how to run them over weeds without hanging up. There does have to be atleast a few inches of clear water over the weeds though. I would use a light action rig 7' or longer and hold the rod tip as high as I could to keep the lure in a pulled up direction and crank it just fast enough to keep it out of the weeds. I have already decided to have a couple of those tiednon next time I go out. I also ordered a few of the Mepps minnow inlines. I only ever owned a couple of those when I was a kid. At three bucks a pop they were more than I could usually afford so I stuck with the cheaper Rooster Tails or even cheaper generic spinners. I never fished the big stuff when I was a kid tromping through the brush on the Gila River. Crank baits were out of my price range, and I would have never dreamed of throwing topwater. I've listened to all this throw anchor line with boat anchors directly the brush stuff. I've learned that topwaters do produce some nice fish. Finesse worms do work for sight fishing when the fish are biting. I don't know about the jig and trailer being the big fish getter, but I have certainly tried it. Now its time for me to go back to my basics. Its going to be tough with all the weed growth in the water, but I will give it a shot. As to knowing the fish are there... I have seen them. I really can't imagine a back water fish is going to thread his way out of a 8-10 foot deep back lake through a bunch of shallow channels to the main river and hunt the main curent on a slow day. Sure he may move back into heavy cover, or he may move into to deeper water, but the fish I catch in the back waters look different than those I catch in the current. They eat different stuff and they hunt different prey. Blame the bait? No that wasn't my point at all. They didn't make the difference. Sure they are good looking baits, but they did not give me an edge. Further back in the brush? Thats what I do when I pitch. In fact when the regular pitching gear failed to produce for me I started throwing light action stuff back into the brush. By noon or one I was throwing 12 lb (6lb dia) super mono into cover I would normally reserve for 50lb Power Pro. On the edge of the brush and then towards deeeper water. I just wasn't throwing what they wanted. I was amazed though by how easily I got the lighter stuff in and out of the heavy stuff. I figured if I hooked up with it I would have to run the boat right up into the trash to get my fish. That was something I figured I'ld worry about after I actually hooked one. My other stand by when I started to be able to afford stuff was the Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad crank bait. It was a bait that would always get me a fish or two of I just kept thowing it out and cranking it in very slow. It is no longer made, and it catches every weed in the area. With the heavy weed growth its difficult for me to throw a lot of my real confidence baits, but I think I am going try them next time out. My little green Zoom U-Tails didn't even produce this last time out, and they have been my hard corp bait in recent years. Its been a tough season fishing for me. Just about the time I think I have something I can build on it quits working. I'll find an area that produces a few fish and a way that catches them and I'll set myself a plan to hit that then try soemthing else, and I wind up trying something else because that didn't produce at all. I sympathise with some of the guys who come in here ready to just give up. I've tried to blame my skills, but I hook most fish that I feel or see hit. Sure I describe missing some, but I've found things I can rely on. The Excalibur rotating hooks now decorate most of my topwaters baits. I use the Eagle Claw rotating hooks for most soft plastic applications except light lining jerk baits where they tend to twist line. I know I don't have much of a touch for feeling a bite with the heavy action stuff, but I'm pretty good at watching the line. As for finding fish. In this shallow river and lake system the fish finders are of minimal use. Too much weed and brush growth paired with a lot of shallow water. As Van Dam says I do try to follw the bait. A couple weekends ago I found a school of shad pinned up near the dock in Squaw lake. I caught a mess of small keepers there. Or as any of the trouters would say match the hatch. When I get in waters where I see lots of 3-4 inch bass I throw baby bass pattern baits and catch some fish (most of the time). I just can't seem to find any patterns that will produce consistantly for me on good days much less on a tough day. I go out with 12 - 15 rods rigged with different stuff, and by the end of the day I have fished every one of them. Usually a half dozen other things as well. I try hard points which most anglers here ignore unless they see a feed actually going on. I fish lake mouths and back water mouths when the water is rising or falling. I fish standing under water trees in open water when I can. Another thing that a lot of anglers around here seem to ignore. The things I see others here doing consistantly day in day out is throwing topwater first thing in the morning, and pitching the shore of the main current during the day. Some will also pitch the refuge (when its open) in Martinez lake and the shore line in Ferguson Lake. I've spent whole days doing each of those things trying to figure out what works when. I try and fish with others when ever possible and I try to be a good fishing partner. I'm always quick with the net when my partner has a fish on. I always bring extra sodas and munchies for my fishing partner. If I am fishing out of someody else's boat I always give them extra money for fuel. If I damage something I always point it out and take care of fixing it no matter the cost. I try to keep my mouth shut and not whine if I'm not doing well, and not brag if I'm the one putting fish in the boat. Unfortunately I have found that most of the guys around here in the clubs are either younger and have no interest in fishing with a guy my age who has mediocre skills or are much older and feel the same. Mostly they are 50-70 in the clubs and those of us under 40 are the "young pups." Thats was one of the reasons I decided I wanted my own boat. Atleast I could get out when ever I had the time. As to guys not members of the local clubs that is harder. Of those I have met and who wanted to fish most have few skills, which I actually don't have a problem with. I learned balloon rigging minnows from a guy who couldn't cast a spinning rod in open water. That is a fish catching technique that is unequaled. I taught him my lazy sidearm cast that can put a bait under over hanging brush on the far bank. I learned about slow dragging worms on sandy slopes from a ten year old kid with a broken down spincaster. He also showed me how to use a round head jig to fish a worm in rock piles and riprap. When it works it really works. When I was ten I figured out a trout lake that everybody said was dead anytime after a heavy rain fall. It turned out that with the correct presentation that was the best time to fish. When I was about eight I figured out a technique for fishing under bridges in current from the bank. Everybody can contribute something if they are really interested in fishing. I kind of got turned off of a lot of casual fishing partners though when I realized that most casual fishermen just want an excuse to go out and drink. Quite a number only if I buy the beer, bring my boat, supply the gear, bring the food, pick them up, and don't even offer if they screw up some of my gear. If I wanted to pay somebody to fish with me I would hire a guide. In fact I would but the only local guide I know is laid up with a torn achilles tendon. I'm trying to learn new stuff. I do change up my gear. I try different tactics and different waters regularly. I fish with other people when I get the chance. You can only say so much in a usenet post. I imagine most people reading this one got bored somewhere around the second paragraph. -- Bob La Londe Yuma, Az http://www.YumaBassMan.com ADD YOUR WEB LINK TO THE LINK INDEX ON MY SITE |
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Hmmmm.... my last three trips out I focused on backwaters because I have
primarliy fished the main channel and the two big lakes Martinez and Ferguson the last several times out with little success. My last two times in the back waters I caught fish. This time was a total zero. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... So true Bob. I hope Bob L doesn't take this the wrong way, but I think his basic problem stems not so much from a lack of skills & knowledge of catching bass, but from a possible lack of fish-finding ability. I think he's keeping a closed mind in saying "the fish have to be in the backwaters (or anywhere else)", and ignoring the "main lake", etc. I find bass relatively easy to catch, finding them is the difficult part. The fish you catch in the backwaters look different because they came out of shallower water, not because of thier diet being different. Put those fish in deep water for a day & they'll look like the rest of the deepwater fish. Warren "Bob Rickard" wrote in message m... Bob, you just gave a thorough description of what fishing is. Nothing is ever for sure. The best tackle and baits can give you an advantage, but not always. There is always room to better your performance, and there is always more to be learned. That is why fishing, and the quest for fishing knowledge, is so darn much fun. -- Bob Rickard www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... "Craig" wrote in message om... I agree with Warren. A tough day is only tough because I cannot find what the fish want or what is needed to make them strike (out of anger, fear, instinct). But I have found during these times that my odd ball lures are the ones that draw the strike. Like this worm somebody gave me that has a jig head with what appears to be a Indiana blade sticking out of it. I never use it unless all else fails, because it just doesn't fit my normal style of fishing, but it does work in those tough conditions. I have may be a half-dozen lures that I call odd-balls, and each has produced fish, typically in tough conditions. -- Craig Baugher Living in The United States, and Loving It! Practicing My Freedom of Speech, and Enjoying It! Knowing how to Thank those that paid for it, by Honoring It! Its funny you guys have said that. I have relied pretty heavily on the early morning topwater bite (something that has never produced for me in the past), and then on soft plastics this year. I spent a couple outings throwing nothing but spinner baits and caught a few fish, but nothing spectacular. I spent quite a bit of time thinking about it and I have been thinking about some different things to throw at these fish. Almost everybody here goes to flipping jigs or worms when it gets tough. Thats what I did too. Now I was thinking if the bite was tough why not try some of my old standby stuff. When I was a kid I caught a lot of bass (mostly small ones) on small Kastmaster spoons ripped very fast through the water, and small inline spinners run as slow as I could run them. I even figured out how to run them over weeds without hanging up. There does have to be atleast a few inches of clear water over the weeds though. I would use a light action rig 7' or longer and hold the rod tip as high as I could to keep the lure in a pulled up direction and crank it just fast enough to keep it out of the weeds. I have already decided to have a couple of those tiednon next time I go out. I also ordered a few of the Mepps minnow inlines. I only ever owned a couple of those when I was a kid. At three bucks a pop they were more than I could usually afford so I stuck with the cheaper Rooster Tails or even cheaper generic spinners. I never fished the big stuff when I was a kid tromping through the brush on the Gila River. Crank baits were out of my price range, and I would have never dreamed of throwing topwater. I've listened to all this throw anchor line with boat anchors directly the brush stuff. I've learned that topwaters do produce some nice fish. Finesse worms do work for sight fishing when the fish are biting. I don't know about the jig and trailer being the big fish getter, but I have certainly tried it. Now its time for me to go back to my basics. Its going to be tough with all the weed growth in the water, but I will give it a shot. As to knowing the fish are there... I have seen them. I really can't imagine a back water fish is going to thread his way out of a 8-10 foot deep back lake through a bunch of shallow channels to the main river and hunt the main curent on a slow day. Sure he may move back into heavy cover, or he may move into to deeper water, but the fish I catch in the back waters look different than those I catch in the current. They eat different stuff and they hunt different prey. Blame the bait? No that wasn't my point at all. They didn't make the difference. Sure they are good looking baits, but they did not give me an edge. Further back in the brush? Thats what I do when I pitch. In fact when the regular pitching gear failed to produce for me I started throwing light action stuff back into the brush. By noon or one I was throwing 12 lb (6lb dia) super mono into cover I would normally reserve for 50lb Power Pro. On the edge of the brush and then towards deeeper water. I just wasn't throwing what they wanted. I was amazed though by how easily I got the lighter stuff in and out of the heavy stuff. I figured if I hooked up with it I would have to run the boat right up into the trash to get my fish. That was something I figured I'ld worry about after I actually hooked one. My other stand by when I started to be able to afford stuff was the Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad crank bait. It was a bait that would always get me a fish or two of I just kept thowing it out and cranking it in very slow. It is no longer made, and it catches every weed in the area. With the heavy weed growth its difficult for me to throw a lot of my real confidence baits, but I think I am going try them next time out. My little green Zoom U-Tails didn't even produce this last time out, and they have been my hard corp bait in recent years. Its been a tough season fishing for me. Just about the time I think I have something I can build on it quits working. I'll find an area that produces a few fish and a way that catches them and I'll set myself a plan to hit that then try soemthing else, and I wind up trying something else because that didn't produce at all. I sympathise with some of the guys who come in here ready to just give up. I've tried to blame my skills, but I hook most fish that I feel or see hit. Sure I describe missing some, but I've found things I can rely on. The Excalibur rotating hooks now decorate most of my topwaters baits. I u se the Eagle Claw rotating hooks for most soft plastic applications except light lining jerk baits where they tend to twist line. I know I don't have much of a touch for feeling a bite with the heavy action stuff, but I'm pretty good at watching the line. As for finding fish. In this shallow river and lake system the fish finders are of minimal use. Too much weed and brush growth paired with a lot of shallow water. As Van Dam says I do try to follw the bait. A couple weekends ago I found a school of shad pinned up near the dock in Squaw lake. I caught a mess of small keepers there. Or as any of the trouters would say match the hatch. When I get in waters where I see lots of 3-4 inch bass I throw baby bass pattern baits and catch some fish (most of the time). I just can't seem to find any patterns that will produce consistantly for me on good days much less on a tough day. I go out with 12 - 15 rods rigged with different stuff, and by the end of the day I have fished every one of them. Usually a half dozen other things as well. I try hard points which most anglers here ignore unless they see a feed actually going on. I fish lake mouths and back water mouths when the water is rising or falling. I fish standing under water trees in open water when I can. Another thing that a lot of anglers around here seem to ignore. The things I see others here doing consistantly day in day out is throwing topwater first thing in the morning, and pitching the shore of the main current during the day. Some will also pitch the refuge (when its open) in Martinez lake and the shore line in Ferguson Lake. I've spent whole days doing each of those things trying to figure out what works when. I try and fish with others when ever possible and I try to be a good fishing partner. I'm always quick with the net when my partner has a fish on. I always bring extra sodas and munchies for my fishing partner. If I am fishing out of someody else's boat I always give them extra money for fuel. If I damage something I always point it out and take care of fixing it no matter the cost. I try to keep my mouth shut and not whine if I'm not doing well, and not brag if I'm the one putting fish in the boat. Unfortunately I have found that most of the guys around here in the clubs are either younger and have no interest in fishing with a guy my age who has mediocre skills or are much older and feel the same. Mostly they are 50-70 in the clubs and those of us under 40 are the "young pups." Thats was one of the reasons I decided I wanted my own boat. Atleast I could get out when ever I had the time. As to guys not members of the local clubs that is harder. Of those I have met and who wanted to fish most have few skills, which I actually don't have a problem with. I learned balloon rigging minnows from a guy who couldn't cast a spinning rod in open water. That is a fish catching technique that is unequaled. I taught him my lazy sidearm cast that can put a bait under over hanging brush on the far bank. I learned about slow dragging worms on sandy slopes from a ten year old kid with a broken down spincaster. He also showed me how to use a round head jig to fish a worm in rock piles and riprap. When it works it really works. When I was ten I figured out a trout lake that everybody said was dead anytime after a heavy rain fall. It turned out that with the correct presentation that was the best time to fish. When I was about eight I figured out a technique for fishing under bridges in current from the bank. Everybody can contribute something if they are really interested in fishing. I kind of got turned off of a lot of casual fishing partners though when I realized that most casual fishermen just want an excuse to go out and drink. Quite a number only if I buy the beer, bring my boat, supply the gear, bring the food, pick them up, and don't even offer if they screw up some of my gear. If I wanted to pay somebody to fish with me I would hire a guide. In fact I would but the only local guide I know is laid up with a torn achilles tendon. I'm trying to learn new stuff. I do change up my gear. I try different tactics and different waters regularly. I fish with other people when I get the chance. You can only say so much in a usenet post. I imagine most people reading this one got bored somewhere around the second paragraph. -- Bob La Londe Yuma, Az http://www.YumaBassMan.com ADD YOUR WEB LINK TO THE LINK INDEX ON MY SITE |
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Keep at it Bob, you find em & you'll catch em.
Warren -- http://www.fishingworld.com/MesaTackleSupply/ http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com http://www.secretweaponlures.com http://warrenwolk.com/ http://www.tri-statebassmasters.com/ "Bob La Londe" wrote in message et... Hmmmm.... my last three trips out I focused on backwaters because I have primarliy fished the main channel and the two big lakes Martinez and Ferguson the last several times out with little success. My last two times in the back waters I caught fish. This time was a total zero. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... So true Bob. I hope Bob L doesn't take this the wrong way, but I think his basic problem stems not so much from a lack of skills & knowledge of catching bass, but from a possible lack of fish-finding ability. I think he's keeping a closed mind in saying "the fish have to be in the backwaters (or anywhere else)", and ignoring the "main lake", etc. I find bass relatively easy to catch, finding them is the difficult part. The fish you catch in the backwaters look different because they came out of shallower water, not because of thier diet being different. Put those fish in deep water for a day & they'll look like the rest of the deepwater fish. Warren "Bob Rickard" wrote in message m... Bob, you just gave a thorough description of what fishing is. Nothing is ever for sure. The best tackle and baits can give you an advantage, but not always. There is always room to better your performance, and there is always more to be learned. That is why fishing, and the quest for fishing knowledge, is so darn much fun. -- Bob Rickard www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... "Craig" wrote in message om... I agree with Warren. A tough day is only tough because I cannot find what the fish want or what is needed to make them strike (out of anger, fear, instinct). But I have found during these times that my odd ball lures are the ones that draw the strike. Like this worm somebody gave me that has a jig head with what appears to be a Indiana blade sticking out of it. I never use it unless all else fails, because it just doesn't fit my normal style of fishing, but it does work in those tough conditions. I have may be a half-dozen lures that I call odd-balls, and each has produced fish, typically in tough conditions. -- Craig Baugher Living in The United States, and Loving It! Practicing My Freedom of Speech, and Enjoying It! Knowing how to Thank those that paid for it, by Honoring It! Its funny you guys have said that. I have relied pretty heavily on the early morning topwater bite (something that has never produced for me in the past), and then on soft plastics this year. I spent a couple outings throwing nothing but spinner baits and caught a few fish, but nothing spectacular. I spent quite a bit of time thinking about it and I have been thinking about some different things to throw at these fish. Almost everybody here goes to flipping jigs or worms when it gets tough. Thats what I did too. Now I was thinking if the bite was tough why not try some of my old standby stuff. When I was a kid I caught a lot of bass (mostly small ones) on small Kastmaster spoons ripped very fast through the water, and small inline spinners run as slow as I could run them. I even figured out how to run them over weeds without hanging up. There does have to be atleast a few inches of clear water over the weeds though. I would use a light action rig 7' or longer and hold the rod tip as high as I could to keep the lure in a pulled up direction and crank it just fast enough to keep it out of the weeds. I have already decided to have a couple of those tiednon next time I go out. I also ordered a few of the Mepps minnow inlines. I only ever owned a couple of those when I was a kid. At three bucks a pop they were more than I could usually afford so I stuck with the cheaper Rooster Tails or even cheaper generic spinners. I never fished the big stuff when I was a kid tromping through the brush on the Gila River. Crank baits were out of my price range, and I would have never dreamed of throwing topwater. I've listened to all this throw anchor line with boat anchors directly the brush stuff. I've learned that topwaters do produce some nice fish. Finesse worms do work for sight fishing when the fish are biting. I don't know about the jig and trailer being the big fish getter, but I have certainly tried it. Now its time for me to go back to my basics. Its going to be tough with all the weed growth in the water, but I will give it a shot. As to knowing the fish are there... I have seen them. I really can't imagine a back water fish is going to thread his way out of a 8-10 foot deep back lake through a bunch of shallow channels to the main river and hunt the main curent on a slow day. Sure he may move back into heavy cover, or he may move into to deeper water, but the fish I catch in the back waters look different than those I catch in the current. They eat different stuff and they hunt different prey. Blame the bait? No that wasn't my point at all. They didn't make the difference. Sure they are good looking baits, but they did not give me an edge. Further back in the brush? Thats what I do when I pitch. In fact when the regular pitching gear failed to produce for me I started throwing light action stuff back into the brush. By noon or one I was throwing 12 lb (6lb dia) super mono into cover I would normally reserve for 50lb Power Pro. On the edge of the brush and then towards deeeper water. I just wasn't throwing what they wanted. I was amazed though by how easily I got the lighter stuff in and out of the heavy stuff. I figured if I hooked up with it I would have to run the boat right up into the trash to get my fish. That was something I figured I'ld worry about after I actually hooked one. My other stand by when I started to be able to afford stuff was the Storm Thin Fin Silver Shad crank bait. It was a bait that would always get me a fish or two of I just kept thowing it out and cranking it in very slow. It is no longer made, and it catches every weed in the area. With the heavy weed growth its difficult for me to throw a lot of my real confidence baits, but I think I am going try them next time out. My little green Zoom U-Tails didn't even produce this last time out, and they have been my hard corp bait in recent years. Its been a tough season fishing for me. Just about the time I think I have something I can build on it quits working. I'll find an area that produces a few fish and a way that catches them and I'll set myself a plan to hit that then try soemthing else, and I wind up trying something else because that didn't produce at all. I sympathise with some of the guys who come in here ready to just give up. I've tried to blame my skills, but I hook most fish that I feel or see hit. Sure I describe missing some, but I've found things I can rely on. The Excalibur rotating hooks now decorate most of my topwaters baits. I u se the Eagle Claw rotating hooks for most soft plastic applications except light lining jerk baits where they tend to twist line. I know I don't have much of a touch for feeling a bite with the heavy action stuff, but I'm pretty good at watching the line. As for finding fish. In this shallow river and lake system the fish finders are of minimal use. Too much weed and brush growth paired with a lot of shallow water. As Van Dam says I do try to follw the bait. A couple weekends ago I found a school of shad pinned up near the dock in Squaw lake. I caught a mess of small keepers there. Or as any of the trouters would say match the hatch. When I get in waters where I see lots of 3-4 inch bass I throw baby bass pattern baits and catch some fish (most of the time). I just can't seem to find any patterns that will produce consistantly for me on good days much less on a tough day. I go out with 12 - 15 rods rigged with different stuff, and by the end of the day I have fished every one of them. Usually a half dozen other things as well. I try hard points which most anglers here ignore unless they see a feed actually going on. I fish lake mouths and back water mouths when the water is rising or falling. I fish standing under water trees in open water when I can. Another thing that a lot of anglers around here seem to ignore. The things I see others here doing consistantly day in day out is throwing topwater first thing in the morning, and pitching the shore of the main current during the day. Some will also pitch the refuge (when its open) in Martinez lake and the shore line in Ferguson Lake. I've spent whole days doing each of those things trying to figure out what works when. I try and fish with others when ever possible and I try to be a good fishing partner. I'm always quick with the net when my partner has a fish on. I always bring extra sodas and munchies for my fishing partner. If I am fishing out of someody else's boat I always give them extra money for fuel. If I damage something I always point it out and take care of fixing it no matter the cost. I try to keep my mouth shut and not whine if I'm not doing well, and not brag if I'm the one putting fish in the boat. Unfortunately I have found that most of the guys around here in the clubs are either younger and have no interest in fishing with a guy my age who has mediocre skills or are much older and feel the same. Mostly they are 50-70 in the clubs and those of us under 40 are the "young pups." Thats was one of the reasons I decided I wanted my own boat. Atleast I could get out when ever I had the time. As to guys not members of the local clubs that is harder. Of those I have met and who wanted to fish most have few skills, which I actually don't have a problem with. I learned balloon rigging minnows from a guy who couldn't cast a spinning rod in open water. That is a fish catching technique that is unequaled. I taught him my lazy sidearm cast that can put a bait under over hanging brush on the far bank. I learned about slow dragging worms on sandy slopes from a ten year old kid with a broken down spincaster. He also showed me how to use a round head jig to fish a worm in rock piles and riprap. When it works it really works. When I was ten I figured out a trout lake that everybody said was dead anytime after a heavy rain fall. It turned out that with the correct presentation that was the best time to fish. When I was about eight I figured out a technique for fishing under bridges in current from the bank. Everybody can contribute something if they are really interested in fishing. I kind of got turned off of a lot of casual fishing partners though when I realized that most casual fishermen just want an excuse to go out and drink. Quite a number only if I buy the beer, bring my boat, supply the gear, bring the food, pick them up, and don't even offer if they screw up some of my gear. If I wanted to pay somebody to fish with me I would hire a guide. In fact I would but the only local guide I know is laid up with a torn achilles tendon. I'm trying to learn new stuff. I do change up my gear. I try different tactics and different waters regularly. I fish with other people when I get the chance. You can only say so much in a usenet post. I imagine most people reading this one got bored somewhere around the second paragraph. -- Bob La Londe Yuma, Az http://www.YumaBassMan.com ADD YOUR WEB LINK TO THE LINK INDEX ON MY SITE |
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"Craig" wrote in message
om... I agree with Warren. A tough day is only tough because I cannot find what the fish want or what is needed to make them strike (out of anger, fear, instinct). But I have found during these times that my odd ball lures are the ones that draw the strike. Like this worm somebody gave me that has a jig head with what appears to be a Indiana blade sticking out of it. That is called a beetle spin, and Ido have some in one of the boxes. I really didn't think about trying them. I have been considering some of my other small baits like Rooster Tails and Kastmasters. Or even a Mepps Minnow or a small Timber Doodle. |
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![]() Review of the Mesa Tackle baits Group: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: Mon, Oct 13, 2003, 1:22am (CDT+1) From: (go-bassn) When I'm not catchin' em I tend to blame mysself, not my lures or the fish. Warren -- Warren, that was great to hear! I often take contract jobs out at the marina, and listen to the anglers when they come in..both the weekenders and the pros. It's genneraly, the weather, the water, the fish, the equiptment, or the "luck" that beat em....rarely have I ever heard "It ws me!" But when they "win", it's always "me!" big grin! When we question ourselves is the only time we really learn. That's why I know you will be fishing on a lot of the "final" days soon..... JK |
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John wrote:
..rarely have I ever heard "It ws me!" But when they "win", it's always "me!" My favorite is "My fish just never turned on today." What does that mean? Finding fish that won't bite does not make you any better than finding no fish at all. Worse maybe. If you weren't smart enough to take the hint and either do something different or start looking elsewhere, that makes you a dummy. Bear in mind that I've been that dummy more times than I care to admit. But at least I know it was my fault, not the fish's. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
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