-
Posts
13,859 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Gallery
Store
Everything posted by Sk8man
-
Jason - I stand corrected you are right I was thinking of my Walleye boards not the 44's on that. I had made adjustments in the weighting at the bottom of my 44"s way back when I first got them by making new drill holes that placed the weight right to the front edge of the plastic (half inch further forward?) and forgot that. My apology.
-
I beg to differ that the boards don't need to be adjusted. That is the reason the TX 44's have the adjustable sliding weights at the bottom with the screws. If you are running the same things off them day to day they may not need to be changed (when they work) but sometimes when either running heavier or lighter setups or perhaps dipseys are run during adverse wave conditions it can help to make adjustments.
-
I think there may be a misconception here....CHIRP is not the same as something like structure scan for example. It is basically a "filler" frequency range wise that adds to the capacity for imaging in greater detail mainly as pertaining to things like separating out fish from bait and different sized targets such as fish as well as perhaps picking up the thermocline better.. It basically enhances the image presented on your screen.
-
Run UV spoon colors or non UV spoon colors
Sk8man replied to kingpossible's topic in Tackle and Techniques
I'm with Jerryriggin2 on this one as far as the conclusion being based on what WE are able to see. How did they get the data from the fish? How would they be able to measure what fish see down deep? How did they separate out vibrations, or other movement being accountable for a response? Generalizing vision from one species to another is riddled with problems. -
-
-
-
-
Wanted wanted sutton spoons
Sk8man replied to leadcore troller's topic in Classifieds - Buy, Sell, Trade or Rent
I believe they had problems finding someone to do the silver plating for awhile. They had a good selection of spoons a couple months ago when I was there. -
Thanks great resource.
-
-
I agree with Steve about the possibility of decimation of schools in localities especially like the Sampson area and marina and they are a particularly vulnerable species because of their schooling behavior and tendency to school in same sexed and same sized groupings at certain times of the season.. There are still schools of nice perch and "jumbos" in the lake. It is a big lake and certainly every place holding schools of perch has not been hammered (yet) but fishing presssure has increased greatly over the past few years especially and so have the technical advancements in equipment for locating them and informational knowledge about fishing methods being used and the Internet has massively increased the focus on perch fishing on Seneca as well as other Finger Lakes. Back in the sixtries and seventies we used to catch garbage bags full of large perch (before the limits were imposed) right in the marina but there were only a very few guys that even knew about it then. Contrast that with the ice fishing fiasco out there a couple years ago and it becomes pretty obvious there is a problem.
-
Wanted wanted sutton spoons
Sk8man replied to leadcore troller's topic in Classifieds - Buy, Sell, Trade or Rent
You might want to take a trip to the Sutton Store in Naples as they have most of the heavier weight spoons. They run about $5.50 or so apiece. -
Dick - When I started out quite a few years ago with the TX 44's I had some difficulty getting them to run right too. I found that I had to play around with the positioning of the weights on the bottom and sometimes had to make adjustments when the water conditions changed (e.g. waves etc.). I also tried the modifications suggested by Bloodrun but without success. I know some of the guys have mentioned that the boards should be run directly to the sides of the boat but mine have always run somewhat toward the back but out away from the boat and that to me is the important thing as long as they are away from my other stuff and out of the boat turbulance I don't feel they have to run like "big boards" out there. They do need to cut through the water though and you should be able to achieve that by adjusting the weights (I keep a screwdriver handy) if running hardware that is reasonable. For most of my lighter stuff I have switched over to the Walleye boards and run 4 at a time and they handle most stuff other than the real heavy things (e.g. longer coppers etc which I run down the chute). If you point the tip of your rod toward the water during retrieval you'll eliminate most of the "diving" concern.
-
I'm willing to bet a bunch of us have been there.....good one Kev
-
-
You'll notice the diversity of replies here and it suggests that there is no one strategy that always works for browns. They can be very easy to catch at some tiimes of the year (e.g. Spring) in the shallows in the early hours, in the summer near drop offs and at other times seemingly gone but it also depends on where you are fishing for them. For example, Lake O doesn't have the rapid steep drop offs near shore in most places but the Finger Lakes do so you need to exploit the underwater terrain as well as the edges of colored water. On Lake O much of the brown fishing can be found in the shallow water aong the shoreline sometimes running boards right into just a few feet of water can produce. In the summer where you find about 58 degrees intersecting the bottom can produce or on the Finger Lakes where that temp intersects bottom near a drop off. Browns are often active night feeders so the early morning hours can produce some good ones right near shore sometimes surprisingly close even right around docks etc.. Silver Fox made an excellent point about the colored water and in the Spring trolling in and out of the edges of the colored water especially around creeks or the outside edges of flowing water can produce nice browns. Sometimes even a couple degrees of elevated water temperature can attract them in the Spring. Browns can be quite line shy and this becomes important in the clear water which now days covers a lot of areas but sometimes folks run way too fast for them and use too short distances both away from the boat and in back of it. I've run floating jointed Rapalas 100 yards off my outriggers before and had the browns hammer them and you'd think the sticks wouldn't run right that far back but browns aren't as fond of the turbulance from prop wash and motor noise as steelies or cohos can be A potentially deadly way to troll specifically for them is with lures that go back and forth like a flatfish or quickfish, jointed Rapalas etc. way back behind the boat off boards trolled VERY slow with brief increases in speed and then slowing back down and then turn. It can be easier without boards in this case so I use outriggers and straight toplines here. Often it is the outside line on the turn that will be hit as it speeds up a little. It helps to specifically target them with your setups and trolling tactics rather than running mixed stuff hoping for anything to hit thinking it could be a brown. The main thought here is that all your stuff will be running at a similar speed with minor fluctuations. I use 8 to 10 lb. fluoro leaders with small black good quality ball bearing swivels or use a Spro #8 a few feet up the leader from a small duolock snap or Fast Snap depending on where I fish (e.g. Fingers or Lake O).
-
I just returned from St. Augustine and am now wishing for the ice on Honeoye. I'm also looking at this post in secret so my wife doesn't see it and get ideas from you guys....especially Keith
-
Each type may have advantages dependent on the size of boat and hull shape as well as what material the hull is made from. Rollers can leave indentations in the bottom of the boat if the weight isn't distributed properly or the trailer isn't set up properly for the boat.
-
-
Tit Lok Rod holder with clamp
Sk8man replied to GAMBLER's topic in Classifieds - Buy, Sell, Trade or Rent
-
Tit Lok Rod holder with clamp
Sk8man replied to GAMBLER's topic in Classifieds - Buy, Sell, Trade or Rent
-
replacing copper with weighted steel wire line
Sk8man replied to rolmops's topic in Tackle and Techniques
Forget about the line counter on the rod (e.g. Berkely) it sucks. The line or especially wire pops out of it all the time despite snugging it down -