01-06-09, 07:02 AM | #1 |
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baits that produce ?
If you were to recommend lures that constantly work day in and day out for you and are easy to use from a beginners point of view, what would you recommend ?
I would recommend a Senko type bait.I prefer a Yamamoto 5" senko in #214 color but I also have the Waveworm brand tiki sticks as well. You can rig it so many ways. I prefer to just fish it weightless with a 4/0 offset hook. Cast it out there and slowly fish it back.Its so easy , even I can catch fish with it. A Manns baby-1 crankbait.This is a good bait to throw almost anywhere and it will catch alot of fish for you just by throwing it out and reeling it back.I usually throw the baby bass or firetiger colors. P N J |
01-06-09, 08:16 AM | #2 |
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Broken record on my behalf.....zoom speed worm in watermelon/red without the tail, texposed weightless on a 2/0 hook, slow fall and deadsticking presentation.....no internal salt to make it fall faster, a very nice slow falling bass grabber....
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01-06-09, 08:47 AM | #3 |
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my favorites are zoom finesse worm in the watermelon color weightless on a 1/0 EWG hook. also the zoom super flukes rigged weightless on a 3/0 EWG hook. good luck..
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01-06-09, 12:32 PM | #4 |
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a texas rigged plastic worm, probably a power worm. i would also say a spinnerbait but wind really helps the spinnerbait bite and so i can't say it works day in and day ouy. same with a crankbait plus you also need to make contact with the bottom or stumps or rocks ect. and for a beginner that could be tricky.
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01-06-09, 12:36 PM | #5 |
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A Bandit 100/200 crankbait and a t-rigged Junebug Babybrushhog.
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01-06-09, 01:43 PM | #6 |
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01-06-09, 01:58 PM | #7 |
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01-06-09, 02:39 PM | #8 | |
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Quote:
Those are what I fish mostly, but I use the bullfrog color for the finesse worm and the pearl white for the super fluke. I do need to switch to the 1/0 hook when fishing the finesse worm so it stands up more. |
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01-06-09, 02:52 PM | #9 | |
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Quote:
But of course, that´s for us guys down here in the South. |
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01-06-09, 05:56 PM | #10 |
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HAHAHA C-RIG!!! ya got that right buddy! still got quite a few of em, and gonna keep em too, ROTLMFAO!!!!! now that it has become so popular....i am gonna put the box in a very nice, secure safe till i get old and then sell em on ebay to the highest bidder. make me a fortune huh?
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01-06-09, 05:59 PM | #11 |
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now to answer the question in a serious way. i would recomend a worm or lizard for a beginner. it is a great producer and teaches the beginner to be patenct. i know...spekking, maybe ol zooker will fix that for me. i perfer the 7" zooms.
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01-06-09, 06:05 PM | #12 |
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Bama, they would also make a great gag gift for your fishin buddys too. LOL
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01-06-09, 06:06 PM | #13 |
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already done that woody. at the FIRST get together.
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01-06-09, 06:34 PM | #14 |
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That's easy. A 5 inch stickbait tex-posed weightless fishing shallow weeds once past the spawn. I'd also tie on a 3/8 oz spinnerbait for a little variety.
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01-06-09, 10:16 PM | #15 |
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1/4 oz tandem spinnerbait w/indiana blade and a 5/16 finesse jig fihsed around grass works good.
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01-06-09, 10:25 PM | #16 |
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5 inch yum dinger in junebug or a 7 inch pwoer worm in blue fleck , then white/char spinnerbait with tandem willow blades in gold . my best day in and out .
Jim
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01-16-09, 09:29 AM | #17 |
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If the fish aint shallow go get a Buckeye Spot Remover (shaky head), find a drop off, throw it out there, be patient, drag it over rocks or any other cover, stop it, and wait. this will teach the younf angler how to feel the bottom, how to wait for fish to "take it", and it can really easily produce. a wacky worm, like you mentioned is a great choice though.
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01-16-09, 11:55 AM | #18 |
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if they fish are shallow, a zoom watermellon finesse worm wiethless and just pop it and real it, but if they are deep, texas rig the same worm and work the bottom....this worm will work any weather condition around here.....me and my fishing partner challanged another pair of fishermen...we were on land and had one bag of bait, this bait...and the others had a boat with 4 tackle boxes worth of baits....they could get anywhere we could and we could only cover about 2% of the lake....final count 22 to 6....It is forever known as our magic bait....
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01-16-09, 06:45 PM | #19 |
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Dunno bout where you live but if you wanna catch a lot of fish around here, a shakey head is the way to go. Wont catch big fish round here but if lookin for quantity and not quality you cant go wrong with a shakey head
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01-16-09, 07:46 PM | #20 |
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3/16 oz shakey rig with 5 1/4" Zoom finesse worms are probably about as easy as it gets. Don't get me wrong, pig-n-jig, I love the Senko style baits and fish it pretty much like you do, I also love the Super Flukes fished weightless too! However if I wanted put someone in my boat that didn't know squat about fishing I would hand them one of my spinning rods with the shakey head. You can teach them to cast quickly and it, like the senko baits, are basically a "do nothing" presentation that works extremely well.
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01-16-09, 08:21 PM | #21 |
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[quote=pig n jig;216574]If you were to recommend lures that constantly work day in and day out for you and are easy to use from a beginners point of view, what would you recommend ?
Easy stuff to use like a spinnerbait, crankbait, or some kind of top bait like a junebug or pop'r. |
01-17-09, 02:19 PM | #22 |
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