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#1
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First, I want to mention that I am not a rookie to catching smallies,
and have a pretty good grasp on presenting a bait to fish in different moods. But here is the situation I have run into all year so far on Winnebago. The fish are on a crayfish bite. I can catch them on tubes like there is no tomorrow. On Saturday during our tourney it was no different. The fish were all over tubes, and we caught every single fish on tubes. But it wasn't for the lack of trying other baits. I threw spinnerbaits, rocket shad, zara spook, buzzbait, norman deep tiny N crankbait, twister tails (1/8,1/4 3" & 4"), Tubes (2.5", 3", 4" , 1/8, 1/4 (all worked), 3" lizards, 3" senkos. My partner and I would come through a spot, hammer em on tubes, then come through the spot again with other baits and get nothing. Even baby brush hogs, & spider grubs. We would then fish these baits through a new area and get nothing, come through with tubes and hammer em again, through the area we just came through with other baits. I tried flukes, x-raps, husky jerks. I couldn't buy a fish on any other baits. I usually won't throw that many baits at these fish, but nothing else would hit. The thing that threw me off was , I figured they were feed on crayfish because of the type of area we were in, but in the livewell were what looked to be 3" shiners. Plus a few fish puked them up on the way in. So I would like to get your thoughts on why these fish were not hitting any kind of shad imitation bait. Granted the water was crystal clear (for Winnebago), you could see 6' down. I was fishing over chunk rock that changed to pea gravel and then just spaced out rock and sand. The fish were mostly coming on the sand/rock to chunk rock transition, including walleyes. We landed nearly 60 fish, but every single fish came on a tube. My partner would continue throwing a tube while I experimented with other baits, and vice versa. I know if it ain't broken, why fix it, but it blows my mind they wouldn't even touch anything else. Another killer was, color of the tubes didn't seem to matter either. I switch between a black/multi flake and a pumpkinseed, and my buddy threw a purple/red flake from berkley. Like I said, we went through 2 size heads 1/8 & 1/4, and 1/4 seemed to produce more fish. I know switching between a lot of different baits didn't give me the time to work them as effectively and thouroughly as I should have, but with as many fish as were in the area, I couldn't believe I couldn't catch them on anything else. I would just like to get your opinions on what may have influenced these fish, or maybe you have had similar experiences? I will tell you this, it wasn't an isolated incident, I have been running into it all year. So much that, whenever I am throwing a different bait (not a tube) off the front of my boat, and I am by myself , I am dragging a tube behind me, and I cannot tell you how many fish I have caught this year (I could actually tell you, but it is not important). Thanks guys.. sorry for the long dragged out post. Chris |
#2
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"Chris Rennert" wrote in message
.. . First, I want to mention that I am not a rookie to catching smallies, and have a pretty good grasp on presenting a bait to fish in different moods. But here is the situation I have run into all year so far on Winnebago. The fish are on a crayfish bite. I can catch them on tubes like there is no tomorrow. On Saturday during our tourney it was no different. The fish were all over tubes, and we caught every single fish on tubes. But it wasn't for the lack of trying other baits. I threw spinnerbaits, rocket shad, zara spook, buzzbait, norman deep tiny N crankbait, twister tails (1/8,1/4 3" & 4"), Tubes (2.5", 3", 4" , 1/8, 1/4 (all worked), 3" lizards, 3" senkos. My partner and I would come through a spot, hammer em on tubes, then come through the spot again with other baits and get nothing. Even baby brush hogs, & spider grubs. We would then fish these baits through a new area and get nothing, come through with tubes and hammer em again, through the area we just came through with other baits. I tried flukes, x-raps, husky jerks. I couldn't buy a fish on any other baits. I usually won't throw that many baits at these fish, but nothing else would hit. The thing that threw me off was , I figured they were feed on crayfish because of the type of area we were in, but in the livewell were what looked to be 3" shiners. Plus a few fish puked them up on the way in. So I would like to get your thoughts on why these fish were not hitting any kind of shad imitation bait. Granted the water was crystal clear (for Winnebago), you could see 6' down. I was fishing over chunk rock that changed to pea gravel and then just spaced out rock and sand. The fish were mostly coming on the sand/rock to chunk rock transition, including walleyes. We landed nearly 60 fish, but every single fish came on a tube. My partner would continue throwing a tube while I experimented with other baits, and vice versa. I know if it ain't broken, why fix it, but it blows my mind they wouldn't even touch anything else. Another killer was, color of the tubes didn't seem to matter either. I switch between a black/multi flake and a pumpkinseed, and my buddy threw a purple/red flake from berkley. Like I said, we went through 2 size heads 1/8 & 1/4, and 1/4 seemed to produce more fish. I know switching between a lot of different baits didn't give me the time to work them as effectively and thouroughly as I should have, but with as many fish as were in the area, I couldn't believe I couldn't catch them on anything else. I would just like to get your opinions on what may have influenced these fish, or maybe you have had similar experiences? I will tell you this, it wasn't an isolated incident, I have been running into it all year. So much that, whenever I am throwing a different bait (not a tube) off the front of my boat, and I am by myself , I am dragging a tube behind me, and I cannot tell you how many fish I have caught this year (I could actually tell you, but it is not important). Thanks guys.. sorry for the long dragged out post. Chris Could have just been the size and way a tube spirals down. I have had the same thing happen on senkos. Couldn't buy a bite on another bait eve if I rigged two identical rods with identical line and carefully weighted the second bite side by side to get exactly the same fall rate. It happens that way sometimes. The other thing is confidence. I basically have confidence in three baits, and as a result hat is all I seem to be able to catch fish on. There are a few others that I have confidence in certain circumstances. For instance fishing a wind blown bank I like to throw a crank bait or a spinner bait. In one recent tournament we were fishing a wind blown tulie line. I new a s pinner bait was the thing to throw. Moderately fast with a stop and go retrieve (almost like fast jigging) worked for me. My partner thought I was nuts. He was dead sticking flukes and catching fish. We had several doubles. I spent twenty minutes trying to dead stick a fluke and caught nothing. I had confidence in that spinner bait. Dead sticking isn't even an off technique for me. I dead stick senkos all the time with great success. Anyway, it was probably a combination of confidence and presentation. IMHO. I have very little confidence in tubes myself. I don't think I have ever caught a fish on them in open water, but I have caught some using them as a flipping bait t-rigged. For me its just another creature bait for flippin'. -- Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com |
#3
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Question for you - if you "hammer" them on a bait in a tourney, why
change-up at all? WW "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . First, I want to mention that I am not a rookie to catching smallies, and have a pretty good grasp on presenting a bait to fish in different moods. But here is the situation I have run into all year so far on Winnebago. The fish are on a crayfish bite. I can catch them on tubes like there is no tomorrow. On Saturday during our tourney it was no different. The fish were all over tubes, and we caught every single fish on tubes. But it wasn't for the lack of trying other baits. I threw spinnerbaits, rocket shad, zara spook, buzzbait, norman deep tiny N crankbait, twister tails (1/8,1/4 3" & 4"), Tubes (2.5", 3", 4" , 1/8, 1/4 (all worked), 3" lizards, 3" senkos. My partner and I would come through a spot, hammer em on tubes, then come through the spot again with other baits and get nothing. Even baby brush hogs, & spider grubs. We would then fish these baits through a new area and get nothing, come through with tubes and hammer em again, through the area we just came through with other baits. I tried flukes, x-raps, husky jerks. I couldn't buy a fish on any other baits. I usually won't throw that many baits at these fish, but nothing else would hit. The thing that threw me off was , I figured they were feed on crayfish because of the type of area we were in, but in the livewell were what looked to be 3" shiners. Plus a few fish puked them up on the way in. So I would like to get your thoughts on why these fish were not hitting any kind of shad imitation bait. Granted the water was crystal clear (for Winnebago), you could see 6' down. I was fishing over chunk rock that changed to pea gravel and then just spaced out rock and sand. The fish were mostly coming on the sand/rock to chunk rock transition, including walleyes. We landed nearly 60 fish, but every single fish came on a tube. My partner would continue throwing a tube while I experimented with other baits, and vice versa. I know if it ain't broken, why fix it, but it blows my mind they wouldn't even touch anything else. Another killer was, color of the tubes didn't seem to matter either. I switch between a black/multi flake and a pumpkinseed, and my buddy threw a purple/red flake from berkley. Like I said, we went through 2 size heads 1/8 & 1/4, and 1/4 seemed to produce more fish. I know switching between a lot of different baits didn't give me the time to work them as effectively and thouroughly as I should have, but with as many fish as were in the area, I couldn't believe I couldn't catch them on anything else. I would just like to get your opinions on what may have influenced these fish, or maybe you have had similar experiences? I will tell you this, it wasn't an isolated incident, I have been running into it all year. So much that, whenever I am throwing a different bait (not a tube) off the front of my boat, and I am by myself , I am dragging a tube behind me, and I cannot tell you how many fish I have caught this year (I could actually tell you, but it is not important). Thanks guys.. sorry for the long dragged out post. Chris |
#4
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go-bassn wrote:
Question for you - if you "hammer" them on a bait in a tourney, why change-up at all? WW "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . First, I want to mention that I am not a rookie to catching smallies, and have a pretty good grasp on presenting a bait to fish in different moods. But here is the situation I have run into all year so far on Winnebago. The fish are on a crayfish bite. I can catch them on tubes like there is no tomorrow. On Saturday during our tourney it was no different. The fish were all over tubes, and we caught every single fish on tubes. But it wasn't for the lack of trying other baits. I threw spinnerbaits, rocket shad, zara spook, buzzbait, norman deep tiny N crankbait, twister tails (1/8,1/4 3" & 4"), Tubes (2.5", 3", 4" , 1/8, 1/4 (all worked), 3" lizards, 3" senkos. My partner and I would come through a spot, hammer em on tubes, then come through the spot again with other baits and get nothing. Even baby brush hogs, & spider grubs. We would then fish these baits through a new area and get nothing, come through with tubes and hammer em again, through the area we just came through with other baits. I tried flukes, x-raps, husky jerks. I couldn't buy a fish on any other baits. I usually won't throw that many baits at these fish, but nothing else would hit. The thing that threw me off was , I figured they were feed on crayfish because of the type of area we were in, but in the livewell were what looked to be 3" shiners. Plus a few fish puked them up on the way in. So I would like to get your thoughts on why these fish were not hitting any kind of shad imitation bait. Granted the water was crystal clear (for Winnebago), you could see 6' down. I was fishing over chunk rock that changed to pea gravel and then just spaced out rock and sand. The fish were mostly coming on the sand/rock to chunk rock transition, including walleyes. We landed nearly 60 fish, but every single fish came on a tube. My partner would continue throwing a tube while I experimented with other baits, and vice versa. I know if it ain't broken, why fix it, but it blows my mind they wouldn't even touch anything else. Another killer was, color of the tubes didn't seem to matter either. I switch between a black/multi flake and a pumpkinseed, and my buddy threw a purple/red flake from berkley. Like I said, we went through 2 size heads 1/8 & 1/4, and 1/4 seemed to produce more fish. I know switching between a lot of different baits didn't give me the time to work them as effectively and thouroughly as I should have, but with as many fish as were in the area, I couldn't believe I couldn't catch them on anything else. I would just like to get your opinions on what may have influenced these fish, or maybe you have had similar experiences? I will tell you this, it wasn't an isolated incident, I have been running into it all year. So much that, whenever I am throwing a different bait (not a tube) off the front of my boat, and I am by myself , I am dragging a tube behind me, and I cannot tell you how many fish I have caught this year (I could actually tell you, but it is not important). Thanks guys.. sorry for the long dragged out post. Chris Right Warren, that is what I was saying with the "if it ain't broken don't fix it". Why would these fish be so keyed into a certain bait that they wouldn't even touch another? My reasoning for switching it up was to maybe show some bigger fish a little something different, maybe find a bait that is catching them even better. We never really went away from throwing tubes, but it wasn't necessary for both of us to be throwing them the whole time, we knew we had about 13lbs (11.84 as it turned out) but we knew we needed 18lbs about to win (17.72 won). Oh well, It isn't really important, just wanted to hear input. Besides moving, I was wondering if maybe we could have done something else. thanks Chris |
#5
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You probably had your spot "maxed out", meaning the potential to increase
the weight of the limit was slim to none. Smallmouths in particular usually run together in similar sizes. It was time to move, not switch baits buddy. Warren "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . go-bassn wrote: Question for you - if you "hammer" them on a bait in a tourney, why change-up at all? WW "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . First, I want to mention that I am not a rookie to catching smallies, and have a pretty good grasp on presenting a bait to fish in different moods. But here is the situation I have run into all year so far on Winnebago. The fish are on a crayfish bite. I can catch them on tubes like there is no tomorrow. On Saturday during our tourney it was no different. The fish were all over tubes, and we caught every single fish on tubes. But it wasn't for the lack of trying other baits. I threw spinnerbaits, rocket shad, zara spook, buzzbait, norman deep tiny N crankbait, twister tails (1/8,1/4 3" & 4"), Tubes (2.5", 3", 4" , 1/8, 1/4 (all worked), 3" lizards, 3" senkos. My partner and I would come through a spot, hammer em on tubes, then come through the spot again with other baits and get nothing. Even baby brush hogs, & spider grubs. We would then fish these baits through a new area and get nothing, come through with tubes and hammer em again, through the area we just came through with other baits. I tried flukes, x-raps, husky jerks. I couldn't buy a fish on any other baits. I usually won't throw that many baits at these fish, but nothing else would hit. The thing that threw me off was , I figured they were feed on crayfish because of the type of area we were in, but in the livewell were what looked to be 3" shiners. Plus a few fish puked them up on the way in. So I would like to get your thoughts on why these fish were not hitting any kind of shad imitation bait. Granted the water was crystal clear (for Winnebago), you could see 6' down. I was fishing over chunk rock that changed to pea gravel and then just spaced out rock and sand. The fish were mostly coming on the sand/rock to chunk rock transition, including walleyes. We landed nearly 60 fish, but every single fish came on a tube. My partner would continue throwing a tube while I experimented with other baits, and vice versa. I know if it ain't broken, why fix it, but it blows my mind they wouldn't even touch anything else. Another killer was, color of the tubes didn't seem to matter either. I switch between a black/multi flake and a pumpkinseed, and my buddy threw a purple/red flake from berkley. Like I said, we went through 2 size heads 1/8 & 1/4, and 1/4 seemed to produce more fish. I know switching between a lot of different baits didn't give me the time to work them as effectively and thouroughly as I should have, but with as many fish as were in the area, I couldn't believe I couldn't catch them on anything else. I would just like to get your opinions on what may have influenced these fish, or maybe you have had similar experiences? I will tell you this, it wasn't an isolated incident, I have been running into it all year. So much that, whenever I am throwing a different bait (not a tube) off the front of my boat, and I am by myself , I am dragging a tube behind me, and I cannot tell you how many fish I have caught this year (I could actually tell you, but it is not important). Thanks guys.. sorry for the long dragged out post. Chris Right Warren, that is what I was saying with the "if it ain't broken don't fix it". Why would these fish be so keyed into a certain bait that they wouldn't even touch another? My reasoning for switching it up was to maybe show some bigger fish a little something different, maybe find a bait that is catching them even better. We never really went away from throwing tubes, but it wasn't necessary for both of us to be throwing them the whole time, we knew we had about 13lbs (11.84 as it turned out) but we knew we needed 18lbs about to win (17.72 won). Oh well, It isn't really important, just wanted to hear input. Besides moving, I was wondering if maybe we could have done something else. thanks Chris |
#6
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![]() "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . go-bassn wrote: You probably had your spot "maxed out", meaning the potential to increase the weight of the limit was slim to none. Smallmouths in particular usually run together in similar sizes. It was time to move, not switch baits buddy. Warren "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . go-bassn wrote: Question for you - if you "hammer" them on a bait in a tourney, why change-up at all? WW "Chris Rennert" wrote in message et... First, I want to mention that I am not a rookie to catching smallies, and have a pretty good grasp on presenting a bait to fish in different moods. But here is the situation I have run into all year so far on Winnebago. The fish are on a crayfish bite. I can catch them on tubes like there is no tomorrow. On Saturday during our tourney it was no different. The fish were all over tubes, and we caught every single fish on tubes. But it wasn't for the lack of trying other baits. I threw spinnerbaits, rocket shad, zara spook, buzzbait, norman deep tiny N crankbait, twister tails (1/8,1/4 3" & 4"), Tubes (2.5", 3", 4" , 1/8, 1/4 (all worked), 3" lizards, 3" senkos. My partner and I would come through a spot, hammer em on tubes, then come through the spot again with other baits and get nothing. Even baby brush hogs, & spider grubs. We would then fish these baits through a new area and get nothing, come through with tubes and hammer em again, through the area we just came through with other baits. I tried flukes, x-raps, husky jerks. I couldn't buy a fish on any other baits. I usually won't throw that many baits at these fish, but nothing else would hit. The thing that threw me off was , I figured they were feed on crayfish because of the type of area we were in, but in the livewell were what looked to be 3" shiners. Plus a few fish puked them up on the way in. So I would like to get your thoughts on why these fish were not hitting any kind of shad imitation bait. Granted the water was crystal clear (for Winnebago), you could see 6' down. I was fishing over chunk rock that changed to pea gravel and then just spaced out rock and sand. The fish were mostly coming on the sand/rock to chunk rock transition, including walleyes. We landed nearly 60 fish, but every single fish came on a tube. My partner would continue throwing a tube while I experimented with other baits, and vice versa. I know if it ain't broken, why fix it, but it blows my mind they wouldn't even touch anything else. Another killer was, color of the tubes didn't seem to matter either. I switch between a black/multi flake and a pumpkinseed, and my buddy threw a purple/red flake from berkley. Like I said, we went through 2 size heads 1/8 & 1/4, and 1/4 seemed to produce more fish. I know switching between a lot of different baits didn't give me the time to work them as effectively and thouroughly as I should have, but with as many fish as were in the area, I couldn't believe I couldn't catch them on anything else. I would just like to get your opinions on what may have influenced these fish, or maybe you have had similar experiences? I will tell you this, it wasn't an isolated incident, I have been running into it all year. So much that, whenever I am throwing a different bait (not a tube) off the front of my boat, and I am by myself , I am dragging a tube behind me, and I cannot tell you how many fish I have caught this year (I could actually tell you, but it is not important). Thanks guys.. sorry for the long dragged out post. Chris Right Warren, that is what I was saying with the "if it ain't broken don't fix it". Why would these fish be so keyed into a certain bait that they wouldn't even touch another? My reasoning for switching it up was to maybe show some bigger fish a little something different, maybe find a bait that is catching them even better. We never really went away from throwing tubes, but it wasn't necessary for both of us to be throwing them the whole time, we knew we had about 13lbs (11.84 as it turned out) but we knew we needed 18lbs about to win (17.72 won). Oh well, It isn't really important, just wanted to hear input. Besides moving, I was wondering if maybe we could have done something else. thanks Chris Thanks Bob & Warren. I will eventually figure those smallies and their movemonts on this lake out. One thing I really need more than anything is better electronics. Before anything else I Need to get a better dash mount graph. That would have helped big time. Thanks again guys, I will keep hackin Chris Ask your question in some of the forums too. A lot of different guys will repsond. If I have one that is stumping me I'll ask in all of the forums. -- Bob La Londe http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
#7
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Bob La Londe wrote:
"Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . go-bassn wrote: You probably had your spot "maxed out", meaning the potential to increase the weight of the limit was slim to none. Smallmouths in particular usually run together in similar sizes. It was time to move, not switch baits buddy. Warren "Chris Rennert" wrote in message t... go-bassn wrote: Question for you - if you "hammer" them on a bait in a tourney, why change-up at all? WW "Chris Rennert" wrote in message . net... First, I want to mention that I am not a rookie to catching smallies, and have a pretty good grasp on presenting a bait to fish in different moods. But here is the situation I have run into all year so far on Winnebago. The fish are on a crayfish bite. I can catch them on tubes like there is no tomorrow. On Saturday during our tourney it was no different. The fish were all over tubes, and we caught every single fish on tubes. But it wasn't for the lack of trying other baits. I threw spinnerbaits, rocket shad, zara spook, buzzbait, norman deep tiny N crankbait, twister tails (1/8,1/4 3" & 4"), Tubes (2.5", 3", 4" , 1/8, 1/4 (all worked), 3" lizards, 3" senkos. My partner and I would come through a spot, hammer em on tubes, then come through the spot again with other baits and get nothing. Even baby brush hogs, & spider grubs. We would then fish these baits through a new area and get nothing, come through with tubes and hammer em again, through the area we just came through with other baits. I tried flukes, x-raps, husky jerks. I couldn't buy a fish on any other baits. I usually won't throw that many baits at these fish, but nothing else would hit. The thing that threw me off was , I figured they were feed on crayfish because of the type of area we were in, but in the livewell were what looked to be 3" shiners. Plus a few fish puked them up on the way in. So I would like to get your thoughts on why these fish were not hitting any kind of shad imitation bait. Granted the water was crystal clear (for Winnebago), you could see 6' down. I was fishing over chunk rock that changed to pea gravel and then just spaced out rock and sand. The fish were mostly coming on the sand/rock to chunk rock transition, including walleyes. We landed nearly 60 fish, but every single fish came on a tube. My partner would continue throwing a tube while I experimented with other baits, and vice versa. I know if it ain't broken, why fix it, but it blows my mind they wouldn't even touch anything else. Another killer was, color of the tubes didn't seem to matter either. I switch between a black/multi flake and a pumpkinseed, and my buddy threw a purple/red flake from berkley. Like I said, we went through 2 size heads 1/8 & 1/4, and 1/4 seemed to produce more fish. I know switching between a lot of different baits didn't give me the time to work them as effectively and thouroughly as I should have, but with as many fish as were in the area, I couldn't believe I couldn't catch them on anything else. I would just like to get your opinions on what may have influenced these fish, or maybe you have had similar experiences? I will tell you this, it wasn't an isolated incident, I have been running into it all year. So much that, whenever I am throwing a different bait (not a tube) off the front of my boat, and I am by myself , I am dragging a tube behind me, and I cannot tell you how many fish I have caught this year (I could actually tell you, but it is not important). Thanks guys.. sorry for the long dragged out post. Chris Right Warren, that is what I was saying with the "if it ain't broken don't fix it". Why would these fish be so keyed into a certain bait that they wouldn't even touch another? My reasoning for switching it up was to maybe show some bigger fish a little something different, maybe find a bait that is catching them even better. We never really went away from throwing tubes, but it wasn't necessary for both of us to be throwing them the whole time, we knew we had about 13lbs (11.84 as it turned out) but we knew we needed 18lbs about to win (17.72 won). Oh well, It isn't really important, just wanted to hear input. Besides moving, I was wondering if maybe we could have done something else. thanks Chris Thanks Bob & Warren. I will eventually figure those smallies and their movemonts on this lake out. One thing I really need more than anything is better electronics. Before anything else I Need to get a better dash mount graph. That would have helped big time. Thanks again guys, I will keep hackin Chris Ask your question in some of the forums too. A lot of different guys will repsond. If I have one that is stumping me I'll ask in all of the forums. Which other forums????? I guess this is the only one I really frequent , besides steves on Outdoorfrontiers.com. Thanks Bob Chris |
#8
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![]() "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . Bob La Londe wrote: "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . go-bassn wrote: You probably had your spot "maxed out", meaning the potential to increase the weight of the limit was slim to none. Smallmouths in particular usually run together in similar sizes. It was time to move, not switch baits buddy. Warren "Chris Rennert" wrote in message et... go-bassn wrote: Question for you - if you "hammer" them on a bait in a tourney, why change-up at all? WW "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .net... First, I want to mention that I am not a rookie to catching smallies, and have a pretty good grasp on presenting a bait to fish in different moods. But here is the situation I have run into all year so far on Winnebago. The fish are on a crayfish bite. I can catch them on tubes like there is no tomorrow. On Saturday during our tourney it was no different. The fish were all over tubes, and we caught every single fish on tubes. But it wasn't for the lack of trying other baits. I threw spinnerbaits, rocket shad, zara spook, buzzbait, norman deep tiny N crankbait, twister tails (1/8,1/4 3" & 4"), Tubes (2.5", 3", 4" , 1/8, 1/4 (all worked), 3" lizards, 3" senkos. My partner and I would come through a spot, hammer em on tubes, then come through the spot again with other baits and get nothing. Even baby brush hogs, & spider grubs. We would then fish these baits through a new area and get nothing, come through with tubes and hammer em again, through the area we just came through with other baits. I tried flukes, x-raps, husky jerks. I couldn't buy a fish on any other baits. I usually won't throw that many baits at these fish, but nothing else would hit. The thing that threw me off was , I figured they were feed on crayfish because of the type of area we were in, but in the livewell were what looked to be 3" shiners. Plus a few fish puked them up on the way in. So I would like to get your thoughts on why these fish were not hitting any kind of shad imitation bait. Granted the water was crystal clear (for Winnebago), you could see 6' down. I was fishing over chunk rock that changed to pea gravel and then just spaced out rock and sand. The fish were mostly coming on the sand/rock to chunk rock transition, including walleyes. We landed nearly 60 fish, but every single fish came on a tube. My partner would continue throwing a tube while I experimented with other baits, and vice versa. I know if it ain't broken, why fix it, but it blows my mind they wouldn't even touch anything else. Another killer was, color of the tubes didn't seem to matter either. I switch between a black/multi flake and a pumpkinseed, and my buddy threw a purple/red flake from berkley. Like I said, we went through 2 size heads 1/8 & 1/4, and 1/4 seemed to produce more fish. I know switching between a lot of different baits didn't give me the time to work them as effectively and thouroughly as I should have, but with as many fish as were in the area, I couldn't believe I couldn't catch them on anything else. I would just like to get your opinions on what may have influenced these fish, or maybe you have had similar experiences? I will tell you this, it wasn't an isolated incident, I have been running into it all year. So much that, whenever I am throwing a different bait (not a tube) off the front of my boat, and I am by myself , I am dragging a tube behind me, and I cannot tell you how many fish I have caught this year (I could actually tell you, but it is not important). Thanks guys.. sorry for the long dragged out post. Chris Right Warren, that is what I was saying with the "if it ain't broken don't fix it". Why would these fish be so keyed into a certain bait that they wouldn't even touch another? My reasoning for switching it up was to maybe show some bigger fish a little something different, maybe find a bait that is catching them even better. We never really went away from throwing tubes, but it wasn't necessary for both of us to be throwing them the whole time, we knew we had about 13lbs (11.84 as it turned out) but we knew we needed 18lbs about to win (17.72 won). Oh well, It isn't really important, just wanted to hear input. Besides moving, I was wondering if maybe we could have done something else. thanks Chris Thanks Bob & Warren. I will eventually figure those smallies and their movemonts on this lake out. One thing I really need more than anything is better electronics. Before anything else I Need to get a better dash mount graph. That would have helped big time. Thanks again guys, I will keep hackin Chris Ask your question in some of the forums too. A lot of different guys will repsond. If I have one that is stumping me I'll ask in all of the forums. Which other forums????? I guess this is the only one I really frequent , besides steves on Outdoorfrontiers.com. outdoor frontiers is a good one. Fish Talk on Bill Dances site is pretty good. Lots of activty. A couple guys visit mine at Yuma Bass Man who are always helpful. The forum at Bass Pro shops has lots of activity. Allcoast is ok for sal****er stuff. The Texas Fishing Forums is one of the busier ones. Bass Boat Central is the place to go with boating questions, and they do have some fishing baords. NAFC fishing club is good ( I think you have to be an NAFC member to visit that one) -- Bob La Londe http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
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Chris Rennert wrote:
Bob La Londe wrote: "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . About 10,000 words cut - hey guys, I know top posting is not the cool way to go, but you don't have to copy the WHOLE thread - my finger gets tired scrolling through it all for the 10th time. |
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"go-bassn" wrote in message
... You probably had your spot "maxed out", meaning the potential to increase the weight of the limit was slim to none. Smallmouths in particular usually run together in similar sizes. It was time to move, not switch baits buddy. Warren Oh, and its tough too. Its pretty hard to leave biting fish to go find fish. The last tournament I fished was an open and we spent half a day wondering if my balance beam was broken because all the fish were the same size. Finally managed to hit another spot and pick up a bigger fish that got us a small check for second place big fish. Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com |
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