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#1
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I am going to Maine next week to fish for smallies and I was wondering if
anyone can recommend what to use for topwater? |
#2
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Chug Bug with a yellow belly
"Pat_RI" wrote in message news:rqCpe.69006$sy6.48026@lakeread04... I am going to Maine next week to fish for smallies and I was wondering if anyone can recommend what to use for topwater? |
#3
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Pat_RI wrote:
I am going to Maine next week to fish for smallies and I was wondering if anyone can recommend what to use for topwater? personal favorites for smallies are a #5 up to a #9 floating rapala (black/silver is my fav). Also a Zara Pup , Pop-R, Tiny Torpedo. If it is dead calm I will go with the rapala hands down. Pop-R is also deadly then. Tiny Torpedo is great if it is a little choppy. Also a big white buzzbait can be deadly if the water starts getting choppy. Those are about the only topwaters I use for smallies, except maybe a tube weightless. They seem to work pretty good at times as well. Hope this helps. Chris |
#4
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How about a weightless sluggo has anyone had luck with these? Just want to
make sure I have a nice variety of lures to toss. "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . Pat_RI wrote: I am going to Maine next week to fish for smallies and I was wondering if anyone can recommend what to use for topwater? personal favorites for smallies are a #5 up to a #9 floating rapala (black/silver is my fav). Also a Zara Pup , Pop-R, Tiny Torpedo. If it is dead calm I will go with the rapala hands down. Pop-R is also deadly then. Tiny Torpedo is great if it is a little choppy. Also a big white buzzbait can be deadly if the water starts getting choppy. Those are about the only topwaters I use for smallies, except maybe a tube weightless. They seem to work pretty good at times as well. Hope this helps. Chris |
#5
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![]() "Pat_RI" wrote in message news:rqCpe.69006$sy6.48026@lakeread04... I am going to Maine next week to fish for smallies and I was wondering if anyone can recommend what to use for topwater? Never fished for smallies in Maine, but when they are hitting topwater around here a small popper works great. -- Bob La Londe http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
#6
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Pat_RI wrote:
How about a weightless sluggo has anyone had luck with these? Just want to make sure I have a nice variety of lures to toss. "Chris Rennert" wrote in message .. . Pat_RI wrote: I am going to Maine next week to fish for smallies and I was wondering if anyone can recommend what to use for topwater? personal favorites for smallies are a #5 up to a #9 floating rapala (black/silver is my fav). Also a Zara Pup , Pop-R, Tiny Torpedo. If it is dead calm I will go with the rapala hands down. Pop-R is also deadly then. Tiny Torpedo is great if it is a little choppy. Also a big white buzzbait can be deadly if the water starts getting choppy. Those are about the only topwaters I use for smallies, except maybe a tube weightless. They seem to work pretty good at times as well. Hope this helps. Chris I guess I didn't think of them as a topwater, but as a jerkbait they are dynamite. Another bait that I have caught a lot of fish on is the 3" Senko.. Just absolute dynamite on a 1 or 1/0 hook. I have been using it as a buzzbait or spook follow up and it is has been an amazing multi-species bait. Chris |
#7
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I spent a week on the Penobscot river just above Bangor, and they were only
hitting crawfish colored jigs and crankbaits (light brown) on the river. In the backwaters they killed a small white spinnberbait. As far as topwater we mostly used flyrods and they ate up silver and white poppers with a small amount of tail feathers. You could use something like a rebel POP-R on a spinner also. Good Luck. We caught so many smallies I was actually tired after four days. Great fishing in Main. "Pat_RI" wrote in message news:rqCpe.69006$sy6.48026@lakeread04... I am going to Maine next week to fish for smallies and I was wondering if anyone can recommend what to use for topwater? |
#8
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Don't forget the spitin image, my favorite in open water
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#9
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RATMAN wrote:
Don't forget the spitin image, my favorite in open water Ratman, I have a hard time getting them to walk correctly. I prefer the spook. Truthfully I haven't given the spittin image much time, but I have about a half a dozen of them I got out of a bargain bin a few years ago. I will probably devote a few hours to it coming up. Chris |
#10
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Surface fishing for smallies doesn't get any better than an early season
dusk 'til midnight mission on those long sunny days and warm water temps that keep them to the depths. The wind will die just after seven 'o'clock and this will be the prompt for you to start the thrill that awaits!! Even if you don't land a fish it could be the most memorable time of your life! From the smell of the charcoal fluid, the glowing coals of a BBQ with the fat borders of a steak searing away, cold one in hand while standing on my large sunset vantage deck overhanging the bay of my lake reminiscing of nights spent in my early years, in a boulder field just around the point to my left with grandpa and my own dad bring a feeling of peace that too many will never know overtakes me to a point of fulfilment. (I know too few of us could ever hope for.) A full belly and a hope for a new confrontation on the surface with the biggest meanest "motherhead" while scouring the lakes topo and watching for those tell tale rings on the lakes surface........WOW did I just get caught up in a dilly there or what??? Sorry guys but this is the stuff for the past forty-five plus years I've lived for at this time of year. I don't think there is any form of fishing that will compare if it's action and excitement, bar none! Well maybe night fishing for peacocks on the Amazon or shark fishing naked off the New Jersey coast while water skiing behind a slow moving shrimp boat! Smallies of size usually remain in the depths on days like we have been having of late and move to shores and island shallows just slammin' surface presentations. Long, long casts over shallowish boulder fields and rock structure at night near thirty foot depths of the main lake basins that hold them during the day and move out of when the sun sinks below the horizon. Main basin locations that have lake edges of flats of rocks and spotty healthy weedbeds, weed walls, near flowing currents, island cuts, saddle areas, falldowns, overhanging veg, steep walls with drop offs, banks with pockets canopy covered to attract hiding and young forage and fauna. Lilly pads at night can be good too LOL! Cunning, tantalising presentations include a variety of retrieves to no movement at all. The use of surface rings and ripples encourage deeper laying smallies to move from their shopping trips for emerging crawdads. Splash-down of your lure should be made with great consideration, if it's smallies, that could mean anything though and with bigger smallies they could be spooked by a large splash while on other nights , like when an impending cold front with thunder and lightning is coming I have seen some of the best and biggest crashes hit my lure and splash means nothing, brings the big and hungry a running. Even the ones that think they're big. Color doesn't matter so much as I believe the action on the surface is what they home in on, that being said, I will always use black first and go from there. White can be productive too, a frogs belly is white and I know I can use a frog on the surface at night and draw some bite in ten feet of water near structure or cover on just about any given night any time of the year. Varied retrieves, splashes, twitches, darts, stops and gos is how you will best pattern an evening bite so try different methods to switch it up and go down town. Sometimes using a small surface lure is best while other times the big one will turn up a scaly lip snag. Use a long spinning reel loaded with 10# mono for those extra, extra long casts with a medium action. Lighter line tests, shorter softer rods only make the experience more dramatic and skilful and more likely produce a fish story than anything I know on the face of this earth! TAKE A NET THOUGH!! And for GOD's SAKE, BE CAREFUL, bring back a memory to share with us sometime! And do yourself a favor, take your kids or gandkinds with you, makes it evem more special, you can't take anything better than this with you when you leave this world. In spite of a dwindling libido and athletic abilities, this is something I will do until the good Lord calls me yonder!! -- Steve "Pat_RI" wrote in message news:rqCpe.69006$sy6.48026@lakeread04... I am going to Maine next week to fish for smallies and I was wondering if anyone can recommend what to use for topwater? |
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