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#1
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Ok all, I know it is fall, and I know the Smallies are up shallow
eating. Here is what I am running into! The moment the sun disappeares behind the horizon, boom, nothing, not a bite, or anything. I switch to black crankbaits, black topwaters, black spinnerbaits, etc. etc. When that doesn't fly, I go to natural(shad, crayfish, etc.), white, then chartreuse , next thing will be glow in the dark. I have read articles on night fishing, and here is one question I have. Do smallies stop biting for a certain amount of time as their senses adjust to the lighting conditions. From 5pm to 6:30pm (sunset about 6:15 or 5 minutes in that general time frame). Then nothing at all, and I have gone into 1, 2, and 3 hours after dark. Still nothing. I am still marking balls of baitfishing on my graph, but I have not even had a bite, and I am probably fishing after dark 2 or 3 days a week. Reading those articles, I know people catch fish after dark, and I know people here have mentioned night tournaments. I will say that Winnebago is not by any means clear. I guess I would take any suggestions you guys might have. I don't get out of work till almost 5pm, so if I only fished till dark that would only be about an hour and a half, and that just isn't acceptable :-). Thanks all! Chris |
#2
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"Chris Rennert" wrote in message
. .. Ok all, I know it is fall, and I know the Smallies are up shallow eating. Here is what I am running into! The moment the sun disappeares behind the horizon, boom, nothing, not a bite, or anything. I switch to black crankbaits, black topwaters, black spinnerbaits, etc. etc. When that doesn't fly, I go to natural(shad, crayfish, etc.), white, then chartreuse , next thing will be glow in the dark. I have read articles on night fishing, and here is one question I have. Do smallies stop biting for a certain amount of time as their senses adjust to the lighting conditions. From 5pm to 6:30pm (sunset about 6:15 or 5 minutes in that general time frame). Then nothing at all, and I have gone into 1, 2, and 3 hours after dark. Still nothing. I am still marking balls of baitfishing on my graph, but I have not even had a bite, and I am probably fishing after dark 2 or 3 days a week. Reading those articles, I know people catch fish after dark, and I know people here have mentioned night tournaments. I will say that Winnebago is not by any means clear. I guess I would take any suggestions you guys might have. I don't get out of work till almost 5pm, so if I only fished till dark that would only be about an hour and a half, and that just isn't acceptable :-). Thanks all! Chris I have experienced a drop in the shallow water bite shortly after dark here even in the summer. I usually pack it in, but I have heard that they turn back on a little later. -- Bob La Londe Cheapskate's Ways to Do Fishing Stuff (The Frugal Fisherman) Through the Month of October 2005 http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
#3
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Bob La Londe wrote:
"Chris Rennert" wrote in message . .. Ok all, I know it is fall, and I know the Smallies are up shallow eating. Here is what I am running into! The moment the sun disappeares behind the horizon, boom, nothing, not a bite, or anything. I switch to black crankbaits, black topwaters, black spinnerbaits, etc. etc. When that doesn't fly, I go to natural(shad, crayfish, etc.), white, then chartreuse , next thing will be glow in the dark. I have read articles on night fishing, and here is one question I have. Do smallies stop biting for a certain amount of time as their senses adjust to the lighting conditions. From 5pm to 6:30pm (sunset about 6:15 or 5 minutes in that general time frame). Then nothing at all, and I have gone into 1, 2, and 3 hours after dark. Still nothing. I am still marking balls of baitfishing on my graph, but I have not even had a bite, and I am probably fishing after dark 2 or 3 days a week. Reading those articles, I know people catch fish after dark, and I know people here have mentioned night tournaments. I will say that Winnebago is not by any means clear. I guess I would take any suggestions you guys might have. I don't get out of work till almost 5pm, so if I only fished till dark that would only be about an hour and a half, and that just isn't acceptable :-). Thanks all! Chris I have experienced a drop in the shallow water bite shortIly after dark here even in the summer. I usually pack it in, but I have heard that they turn back on a little later. Bob, I am considering staying out till about mid-night or so one of these nights just to see what i can dig up, and giving the fish a chance to settle into the environment.. With that said, why type of lights do you guys recommend for night fishing. Meaning, a black light, or small flashlight. I remember RichZ commenting about screwing up your night vision by using a flashlight , so would a blacklight do me better. I have had issues with retying, etc. Thanks again! |
#4
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A blacklight wont help a bit with your vision. It only illuminates
flourescent articles... Warren "Chris Rennert" wrote in message . .. Bob La Londe wrote: "Chris Rennert" wrote in message . .. Ok all, I know it is fall, and I know the Smallies are up shallow eating. Here is what I am running into! The moment the sun disappeares behind the horizon, boom, nothing, not a bite, or anything. I switch to black crankbaits, black topwaters, black spinnerbaits, etc. etc. When that doesn't fly, I go to natural(shad, crayfish, etc.), white, then chartreuse , next thing will be glow in the dark. I have read articles on night fishing, and here is one question I have. Do smallies stop biting for a certain amount of time as their senses adjust to the lighting conditions. From 5pm to 6:30pm (sunset about 6:15 or 5 minutes in that general time frame). Then nothing at all, and I have gone into 1, 2, and 3 hours after dark. Still nothing. I am still marking balls of baitfishing on my graph, but I have not even had a bite, and I am probably fishing after dark 2 or 3 days a week. Reading those articles, I know people catch fish after dark, and I know people here have mentioned night tournaments. I will say that Winnebago is not by any means clear. I guess I would take any suggestions you guys might have. I don't get out of work till almost 5pm, so if I only fished till dark that would only be about an hour and a half, and that just isn't acceptable :-). Thanks all! Chris I have experienced a drop in the shallow water bite shortIly after dark here even in the summer. I usually pack it in, but I have heard that they turn back on a little later. Bob, I am considering staying out till about mid-night or so one of these nights just to see what i can dig up, and giving the fish a chance to settle into the environment.. With that said, why type of lights do you guys recommend for night fishing. Meaning, a black light, or small flashlight. I remember RichZ commenting about screwing up your night vision by using a flashlight , so would a blacklight do me better. I have had issues with retying, etc. Thanks again! |
#5
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Any white light will impair your night vision, not much you can do about
it. You could use red lights, they have little affect on night vision. But what I do when night fishing is use an indirect light (battery operated florecsent), so I never look directly into the light...works pretty good for me. JK |
#6
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Not true for all fluorescent lamps, Warren. I've fished more nights than
days over the last twenty years, so I have some experience with them. Black lights usually put off enough light across the spectrum to illuminate the bank, the area of boat around them, and certainly the water in front of the lens. They put out sufficient light to find things on the boat deck, to retie lures, sort through tackle, etc. I've used five different brands of black lights over the years. The best was a homemade job that Bubba Martin, my partner, made in his sign shop in Memphis. Of commercially-made lamps, I prefer the Zorro models, made by Stan Sloan. Mine has a second, small incandescent bulb with rheostat. Charles has one with just the fluorescent bulb. They're both excellent choices. Joe "go-bassn" wrote in message ... A blacklight wont help a bit with your vision. It only illuminates flourescent articles... Warren "Chris Rennert" wrote in message . .. Bob La Londe wrote: "Chris Rennert" wrote in message . .. Ok all, I know it is fall, and I know the Smallies are up shallow eating. Here is what I am running into! The moment the sun disappeares behind the horizon, boom, nothing, not a bite, or anything. I switch to black crankbaits, black topwaters, black spinnerbaits, etc. etc. When that doesn't fly, I go to natural(shad, crayfish, etc.), white, then chartreuse , next thing will be glow in the dark. I have read articles on night fishing, and here is one question I have. Do smallies stop biting for a certain amount of time as their senses adjust to the lighting conditions. From 5pm to 6:30pm (sunset about 6:15 or 5 minutes in that general time frame). Then nothing at all, and I have gone into 1, 2, and 3 hours after dark. Still nothing. I am still marking balls of baitfishing on my graph, but I have not even had a bite, and I am probably fishing after dark 2 or 3 days a week. Reading those articles, I know people catch fish after dark, and I know people here have mentioned night tournaments. I will say that Winnebago is not by any means clear. I guess I would take any suggestions you guys might have. I don't get out of work till almost 5pm, so if I only fished till dark that would only be about an hour and a half, and that just isn't acceptable :-). Thanks all! Chris I have experienced a drop in the shallow water bite shortIly after dark here even in the summer. I usually pack it in, but I have heard that they turn back on a little later. Bob, I am considering staying out till about mid-night or so one of these nights just to see what i can dig up, and giving the fish a chance to settle into the environment.. With that said, why type of lights do you guys recommend for night fishing. Meaning, a black light, or small flashlight. I remember RichZ commenting about screwing up your night vision by using a flashlight , so would a blacklight do me better. I have had issues with retying, etc. Thanks again! |
#7
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I didn't see the word Senko anywhere in your post. That's what I catch them
with and the action really heats up after sundown. Is this a lake or a river? Duane "Chris Rennert" wrote in message . .. Ok all, I know it is fall, and I know the Smallies are up shallow eating. Here is what I am running into! The moment the sun disappeares behind the horizon, boom, nothing, not a bite, or anything. I switch to black crankbaits, black topwaters, black spinnerbaits, etc. etc. When that doesn't fly, I go to natural(shad, crayfish, etc.), white, then chartreuse , next thing will be glow in the dark. I have read articles on night fishing, and here is one question I have. Do smallies stop biting for a certain amount of time as their senses adjust to the lighting conditions. From 5pm to 6:30pm (sunset about 6:15 or 5 minutes in that general time frame). Then nothing at all, and I have gone into 1, 2, and 3 hours after dark. Still nothing. I am still marking balls of baitfishing on my graph, but I have not even had a bite, and I am probably fishing after dark 2 or 3 days a week. Reading those articles, I know people catch fish after dark, and I know people here have mentioned night tournaments. I will say that Winnebago is not by any means clear. I guess I would take any suggestions you guys might have. I don't get out of work till almost 5pm, so if I only fished till dark that would only be about an hour and a half, and that just isn't acceptable :-). Thanks all! Chris |
#8
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Chris, in my own experience, the bite does drop off after dusk, but it
improves after about 11 PM, and then drops off toward 4 AM. It picks back up again as the sky begins to brighten in predawn. It stays that way until the sun rises high enough to shine directly on the water. For that reason, there are quite a few night anglers in the south that catch a nap in the evening and then hit the lake just before midnight. I fished at night year round in Mississippi, and the best night (for catching big bass, not comfort) was definitely January. Not too many boats on the water at night that time of year either... very peaceful, and quiet.... except for the chattering of teeth and creaking of joints. Joe ------------------------- "Chris Rennert" wrote in message . .. Ok all, I know it is fall, and I know the Smallies are up shallow eating. Here is what I am running into! The moment the sun disappeares behind the horizon, boom, nothing, not a bite, or anything. I switch to black crankbaits, black topwaters, black spinnerbaits, etc. etc. When that doesn't fly, I go to natural(shad, crayfish, etc.), white, then chartreuse , next thing will be glow in the dark. I have read articles on night fishing, and here is one question I have. Do smallies stop biting for a certain amount of time as their senses adjust to the lighting conditions. From 5pm to 6:30pm (sunset about 6:15 or 5 minutes in that general time frame). Then nothing at all, and I have gone into 1, 2, and 3 hours after dark. Still nothing. I am still marking balls of baitfishing on my graph, but I have not even had a bite, and I am probably fishing after dark 2 or 3 days a week. Reading those articles, I know people catch fish after dark, and I know people here have mentioned night tournaments. I will say that Winnebago is not by any means clear. I guess I would take any suggestions you guys might have. I don't get out of work till almost 5pm, so if I only fished till dark that would only be about an hour and a half, and that just isn't acceptable :-). Thanks all! Chris |
#9
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If you find a good place where the fish are really playing in the daytime, you can go to the same place that night and get better results!
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#10
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![]() "Chris Rennert" wrote in message . .. Ok all, I know it is fall, and I know the Smallies are up shallow eating. Here is what I am running into! The moment the sun disappeares behind the horizon, boom, nothing, not a bite, or anything. I switch to black crankbaits, black topwaters, black spinnerbaits, etc. etc. When that doesn't fly, I go to natural(shad, crayfish, etc.), white, then chartreuse , next thing will be glow in the dark. I have read articles on night fishing, and here is one question I have. Do smallies stop biting for a certain amount of time as their senses adjust to the lighting conditions. From 5pm to 6:30pm (sunset about 6:15 or 5 minutes in that general time frame). Then nothing at all, and I have gone into 1, 2, and 3 hours after dark. Still nothing. I am still marking balls of baitfishing on my graph, but I have not even had a bite, and I am probably fishing after dark 2 or 3 days a week. Reading those articles, I know people catch fish after dark, and I know people here have mentioned night tournaments. I will say that Winnebago is not by any means clear. I guess I would take any suggestions you guys might have. I don't get out of work till almost 5pm, so if I only fished till dark that would only be about an hour and a half, and that just isn't acceptable :-). My best smallie fishing at night has been late night. I've never done well at dusk and the several hours after for smallies, muskies, walleyes and largemouth, but for whatever reason, not smallies. The best night I had catching smallies was one night muskie fishing. It was back in my days of "If it's not a muskie, it's not a fish" mind-set and I was throwing a large, jointed muskie surface lure. I had two smallies slam the lure within a 30 minute period, both were carbon copy fish. I measured them both on my board and they measured an even 25 inches! Both were fat, healthy and obviously hungry. Looking back now, I realize that I probably turned loose fish that might have been state records! They were caught at 2:00 and 2:30 a.m...... I don't night fish a lot anymore, but what little I have done pretty much mirrors that experience. Late night and large, steady moving surface lures. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
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