Thanks, that's informative. Yeah I live in Durham. I'm bank fishing but I just got some waterproof boots and plan on getting waders soon so that should extend my range a little. Talked to a guy at Field & Stream and he gave me some pointers as well as some lure advice so I'm excited for the rain to clear out.
I've never converted one, but I see plenty of them on the St Croix and Mississippi rivers. Personally, that's not something I'd feel safe going out on the big river in, but plenty of guys do. On a side note, a buddy and I used to skip class and take his 12' jon boat out in college. I weighed about 220 and he weighed about 260ish at the time. With the battery for the trolling motor and all of our gear, there wasn't much space between the gunwales and the waterline. Add in the case of beer we always polished off in the boat and it's a miracle that neither of us ever went overboard or capsized it.
We were on vacation in both places and the one thing I always want to do, when it's available, is go deep sea fishing for something awesome. $2,500 later, on those 2 trips, we caught a pair of dolphin and that was it. Went out for snapper and grouper last week in Naples and killed it so at least the shit streak is over
Have caught a few sailfish before- a lot of fun. Have also puked my guts out, and thought we were surely all going to die while on the way in from sailfishing one time. Have also been skunked on multiple guided trips for various fish- and there is no worse feeling than paying up after for a slow boat ride.
Never got the chance to fish out of Naples when I lived there. Boca on Friday will be the furthest south I've been to fish. Going on a drift boat that the guy I fish with went on last week and he highly recommended it. Not a fan of trips like that and nor is he, but he told me to fully expect to come home with dolphin and snapper, maybe a cobia or a grouper. Going to do the 8am-12pm trip and considering doing the 1pm-5pm trip immediately after.
Yeah I've done party boats before and they generally suck, but the fishing generally improves when you're drifting and not hitting wrecks that are fished heavily all the time. Line tangles and shit are certainly a pain in the ass. Also hoping that there won't be many on Friday AM, being that it will be New Year's Day. Forecast also calling for 2 foot waves and that's pretty rare for this time of year so I'm taking advantage.
I just bought this: http://www.patagonia.com/us/product...um=affiliate&utm_campaign=Custom+Link&src=avl very excited to join this thread in the spring, Appalachia and the blue ridge mtns have an abundance of good water for fly fishing I've read
Apparently people are slaying crappie right now on guntersville/Weiss up in small flooded creeks and flooded lowlands. Gonna try and make it over there this weekend to top off the freezer
Here's a really good article about some ice fishing tips by one of the top ice fishermen in the world. I'm definitely going to try his vertizontal rig that he mentions. http://www.in-fisherman.com/panfish...utm_term=infisherman&utm_content=enlfeatured2 Spoiler Some anglers equate ice fishing to a game of checkers. Tony Boshold views the experience as a fluid chess match and he’s typically the one calling checkmate. The Wisconsin resident is a fishing guru, tournament champ, and ice fishing guide with enough tricks to make anyone a better ice angler. Among Boshold’s achievements are top-10 finishes in six of the last seven NAIFC championships in which he’s competed, including first places in 2005 and 2013. He was a member of the 2010 USA Team that won the gold medal at the World Ice Fishing Championship (WIFC). World competitions have taken him to such exotic locations as Kazakhstan and Ukraine, adding to his bag of tricks and overall fishing philosophy. Lesson 1: Late starters are welcome Boshold’s fishing accomplishments are significant for any angler, but even more so for someone who didn’t start ice fishing until age-29. He converted his open-water knowledge into an ice-fishing career, leaving behind preconceived notions about ice fishing. For him, it’s all fishing. Keep this in mind the next time you struggle to make your next move on the ice. Lesson 2: Keep moving Boshold was fortunate to join some of the finest ice fisherman when he got started, including seasoned tournament angler Mike McNett and Greg Wylczinski, inventor of the strike indicator for St. Croix’s Legend ice rods. Boshold explains, “Greg’s nickname is The Prowler. He doesn’t wait for fish. The Prowler goes and gets them. Essentially, staying mobile and seeking an active bite is his theme. In shallow water, pepper weedflats with holes and fish them all. In deep water, drill holes 20 to 30 paces apart and cover tons of water. Don’t spend much time in any one hole and move, move, move! Keep your bait higher off the bottom so more fish can see it from a distance.” Boshold equates drilling holes to making casts. “Would you make the same cast to the same spot all day on open water? Despite all our modern mobility tools, I see too many anglers camped over a hole, heater on, content with the occasional bite while tons of fish swim through the area. They tinker with presentation, tipping options, and downsizing rather than moving and targeting the most aggressive fish. The first fish from fresh holes are the easiest to catch. Keep this saying in mind: ‘Some food gets eaten in the living room but full meals take place in the dining room.’ You have to find that dining room.” Lesson 3: Use the right line Boshold suspects many ice anglers ignore basic tenets when selecting the optimal line and bait. He shares some examples of line selections in various settings. “I use 2-pound-test Sufix Ice Magic when I go small. It excels in all-around line strength and diameter. During tough bites and in ultra-clear water, I go to fluorocarbon for its stealth and low-stretch properties. I also pre-stretch my monofilament to reduce memory and twist, and it helps improve deep-water hook-sets. It’s a trick widely used on the tournament scene.” Hi-vis yellow line comes into play when line-watching in less clear settings. “I use 3-pound Sufix for added strength when fishing near cover or when running bigger 5mm Fiskas. Finally, I step up further to 4-pound Sufix to slow things down when fishing for crappies and perch or any big-mouthed minnow feeders when I’m ripping spoons in deeper water.” This thicker line slows the descent of the presentation and keeps it in the fish’s feeding zone longer. So don’t think that the lightest line is always the best option. Take into consideration all of the characteristics of line and how they affect presentations. Boshold continues, “I also use plastic and livebait combos to slow things down. When fish are looking for big easy meals, I bulk up the bait package, much like slowing the fall rate of your jig-and-pig combo when bass fishing. I can’t tell you how many times upsizing and getting more aggressive with jigging motions is the best approach. “Although I get labeled as a finesse expert who downsizes and uses 1-pound thread, based upon my international experiences, my approach on North American waters is the opposite. Here I liken my use of artificials to targeting the biggest and most aggressive fish in the school. Livebait can get more bites, but artificial baits take the biggest fish.” Lesson 4: Keep an open mind and an open ear To become a better angler, use every article, television program, sport show, tournament, and minute on the ice as a learning opportunity. Coming from a tournament background, Boshold notes how much good fishing information is disclosed even in competitive settings, such as tournament weigh-ins. “The words ‘listen’ and ‘silent’ contain the same letters. If you’re open to listening at weigh-ins, ask questions, and pay attention to successful anglers, you can learn a ton. At tournaments, teams often spill their guts at weigh-ins and you might discover that they beat you by being just a foot deeper or shallower or they were on a transition spot, or stumps, or they were using a special color.” Silence becomes a virtue when you’ve figured out a location or presentation and want to preserve it. In this age of viral social media posts, one wrong comment or photo can destroy a bite in days that may have lasted for weeks some years ago. To translate one good bite into multiple future bites, Boshold suggests taking notes and keeping a journal as part of your fishing routine. “One of my favorite fishing quotes is from bass fishing great, Rick Clunn, “‘Good notes reveal patterns; patterns reveal new spots.’ If you can dissect a lake map and get away from community holes, you have an even greater advantage.” Lesson 5: Go “vertizontal” and other tricks The “vertizontal” is Boshold’s tough-time rig. It can take several forms, but primarily consists of a vertical hanging jig with a plastic tail threaded up the shaft of the hook with most of the tail hanging horizontal and at a right angle to the hook shank. This rig swings off to the side on the drop, and when the fall is stopped, the jig swings back to center. This pendulum action excites big panfish. “Especially when guiding, this rig has saved the day on countless occasions,” he says. “A vertical jig like the Little Atom Mega Glo Jig paired with the Little Atom Skimpie or Duppie is dynamite. Or try wacky stacking Wedgees and Micro noodles on the hook for a larger profile.” Boshold continually experiments with tandem rigs, knot styles, and lure placements. His many jig boxes contain every imaginable jig style, size, and configuration. From 18-karat gold and jeweled versions fit for a display case, to the latest prototypes, no stone is left unturned. He has hard plastic Purist jigs that are unchanged since the 1950s and boxes of flies for use on double rigs. He has nearly unlimited options with which to tinker. “Adding flies on a loop knot above an ice jig in the style of a Michigan rig, or on the dropper line of my ToJo Rig, is about as dainty an offering as I make in North America,” he says. “At times flies take upwards of 75 percent of the biggest fish of the day. Scuds, gnats, and nymphs in olives, browns, black, and obnoxious neon are among my favorites.” The ToJo Rig is Boshold’s signature rig, consisting of a hole-in-the-head jig, like a Fiskas, with the mainline through the hole and tied with a snell knot on the shaft of the hook so it hangs horizontally. A 2- to 4-inch tag end is left to accommodate another small jig or fly. His latest experiment is the ToJo Foodchain Rig, which consists of two or three teardrop jigs tied at various intervals apart to accommodate more lure color and size options at once. “Using a snell knot on turned-eye jigs like Fiskas results in supreme balance and precision from the jig without any fussing with knots. A balanced jig gives better hook-set percentages and keeps the jig from spinning.” Lesson 6: Match rods to applications Since most waters offer multiple productive bites during the course of the day, Boshold takes an open-water approach when selecting rods and he packs several to handle shallow and deep bites, and everything in between. For precise presentations, his favorite rod is the St. Croix Legend. “The Legend, with strike indicators of various sensitivities, is available in models from a 17-inch ‘sight rod,’ to the 48-inch ‘long rod,’ with 24- and 30-inch options in between. On windy days I like short rods for the control I get when I hold them tight to my body, instead of having the rod tip out and blowing in the wind. I can keep my back to the wind and use my body to block the wind to help detect the lightest of bites. “When fishing from a shelter, the 24- and 30- rods are ideal. For ‘sword fighters’ who stand and dip from hole to hole in shallow water, a Schooley reel secured on the 48-inch model helps reduce line twist. In deeper water, I use a spinning reel on the 48-inch rod and cover a greater part of the water column with the long rod and pick up line quickly for deep-water hook-sets.” Ice anglers can take many lessons from Tony Boshold, but perhaps the most important is to see the big picture. Stay on the move. Don’t hesitate to think big. Experiment with various line sizes, jig styles, and presentations. When you finally start to approach a frozen lake as if it were a sunny summer day, you’re on the right track.
Excellent, thanks man. Pretty clear to see that this article, Genz, IDO, etc. preach a lot of the same sermons. I can see how important that power auger is too.
going to Beaufort tomorrow for redfish. had planned to go for smallmouth but the rains have ruined everything. am excite
my buddy is bringing his 10wt and his 8wt. plus the spin gear. found out some guides from LA have been spraying gulp on their shrimp flies. we are gonna try it I think.
if you want to get some novelty weights and also support a childhood buddy of mine with a venture, check his saggers out. if you don't, that is cool too. this is actually SFW, no worries www.ballsdeeptackle.com
Fishing in Boca was a bit of a bust. Caught 2 yellowtail snapper and gave them away. Wasn't worth the effort getting them back to Orlando. Grouper season also closed that day so I lost some quality meat there. Still saw some really cool shit, though. Had a 7' bull shark cruise right by the boat, and then some 7 year old ended up hooking it for about 20 minutes. Pretty awesome. Then some 4 year old kid was complaining the entire trip about something "pulling really, really hard" on his line, eventually he became the little boy who cried wolf. Then I saw a big ass sail come out of the water; sure enough, this little bastard had about a 90 lbs. sailfish on the line. Eventually broke him off, but still pretty cool since that was the first I'd ever seen a sail in real life. Jumped out of the water once or twice and then gone. We were probably a mile offshore so it was pretty crazy to see one that big that close in.
Picking up some tilefish tomorrow after we go for reds and trout. Anyone ever tried it? I've heard nothing but good things.
It's awesome. I deep drop for them in the gulf. Golden Tiles are possibly the best white meat fish I've ever had.
Going to try and get some reds and trout to blow up some topwaters tomorrow. I've yet to have any luck thus far
First day out on the ice. Main lake is still a little sketchy due to the warm December so we were targeting bluegills in a canal. Heading back out this afternoon.
ice fishing seems like a whole lot of suffering and effort for tiny bony fishes now if it was catfish or perch or something I could understand, but damn give me sunshine and sweat
We'd be fishing perch if we hadn't had such a warm winter so far. Like I said a lot of sketchy ice outside of canals which don't hold a lot other than pan fish. Not a lot of sweat and sunshine to be had outdoors in Michigan in January. Also I'd eat bluegill over catfish all day everyday. Correct. Walleye, perch, and northern pike seem to be the most popular to target around here. Other species elsewhere in the state are those you mentioned and burbot/eelpout. Haven't tried most of it yet but excited to do more as it gets colder.
you can lay into a catfish sandwich and not worry about choking on a bone. those little fellas like sunfish make me nervous unless cleaned by an expert carver. I might hit the ice for flounder or tilapia, but closest river to me is the Potomac and it almost never freezes over. last thing I want to do is fall through ice into freezing water and get trapped underneath until spring time. catch plenty of catfish when it's warm, and they are fine eating, but nothing beats a fried founder sandwich with hot sauce thanks for the info
Lakers aren't in the lakes where I fish, but some of the lakes in northern MN have them and they guy who let us hunt his land a few years ago said we could fish one of the lakes on his property that has them. Only problem is that it's 4 hours away and as a married father, I have to pick an choose when I have my fun. I'm jealous, you fucking queer. I'm finishing the repairs on my house this coming weekend and we should have it out on the ice next weekend. I'll make sure to post pics when we get it finished. thanks for the info[/quote] What in the wide, wide world of sports are you talking about? Filleting a sunfish is so easy I taught my wife to do it. Little fish? Nah, homie.
Went fishing today not knowing what to expect. We had historic rains from mid December until close to NYE so I hadn't been out in a while and was getting cabin fever to put it lightly. The main creek is still entirely too swollen and muddy, so I immediately left to search out some of the feeder tributaries that are generally pretty good to me but a bit tougher to fish. Due to the amount of sediment, debris, etc. the flooding pushed in, the morphology of these smaller tributaries has completely changed, though the water was back to being gin clear. Where there used to be chest deep pools there are now ankle deep sandbars, and vice versa. It's going to take a while for me to figure it all out again, but will make for a fun project once it gets a little warmer. I fished for about 2 hours, landed 6 or so sunfish, and spent a stupid amount of time nymphing for shiners . I saw one bass, and it was maybe 5". Still beats the shit out of working or staying indoors.
Fished Falcon Lake between Laredo and Mcallen today. 21 Bass between the two of us. Pretty good considering we didn't know wtf we were doing out there. Unreal fishery
Biggest we landed was 5 lbs, had one tht was probably 8-10 bury itself into a submerged mesquite tree. Could not get him out. Im going back in February
the east side of the lake looks like bass paradise. Flooded Mesquite trees everywhere--flipper's paradise I'd share some pics but I don't have any. ATT sent me a message around 9 am that I am roaming in mexican cellular service. I cut my phone off after that
Anyone made homemade fish attractors? I am going to make some this year to put behind my in laws and a few places we go camp.