<>< Tips And Tricks ><>
<>< Bass Fishing Tips ><> / <>< ><> / <>< Boating Tips ><>
Get Glue
Here's the single best trick I've learned in 50 years of fly tying, which also
applies to making hair jigs for bass. Instead of struggling with complicated
thread knots to finish the fly or lure's head, use superglue. Dab a very small
drop of glue on the outstretched thread just before you finish winding it.
What Colors and Styles to Use
What styles and colors of spinnerbaits should you use? In clear water, use
silver-bladed baits with white skirts. In stained water, use gold blades with
yellow or chartreuse skirts. Round Colorado blades work best with slow retrieves
when fishing deep. Narrow, willowleaf styles work best for faster retrieves near
the surface.
Worms Gone Too Soft?
If large mouths start refusing your soft-plastic worms, here's a trick that will
add action and turn them on. Before rigging a worm, twist it hard several times
around your fingers. The resulting bend in the worm body will cause the worm to
twist and spiral wildly in the water when twitched.
When There Is Wind
When the wind is tearing up your favorite bass lake, you may have to change
lures. Cupped-face surface poppers, for example, dig and hold better on the
choppy surface than walk-the-dog-type surface baits and will help reduce the
amount of wind-blown slack line during a retrieve. The substantial line tension
created by a deeply fished, heavy spinnerbait solves the problem in a similar
way when high winds make slowly fishing a lightly weighted plastic worm
impossible.
For Ultra long Casts
If you routinely need to make ultra long casts with spinning tackle -- in big
Southern tail waters, for example, or shore-casting for Great Lakes salmon -- a
long, heavy leader ahead of a light spinning line will allow more casting force
and distance. For example, try a 14-pound-test monofilament leader 3 feet longer
than your rod, attached to your main 8-pound-test line with a blood knot. That
means there will be about three wraps of heavy line on your spool to better
absorb severe force when you cast.
Two Flies are Often Better
When fishing nymphs deep in lakes or rivers for trout, two flies are often
better than one. Tie one nymph as you normally would to the end of your leader.
Tie an 18-inch section of fine leader material (using an improved clinch knot)
to the hook bend of your first nymph. Then tie a second small fly to the end of
the second leader section. This tangles less often in casting than more
conventional dropper rigs.
Quick Measuring Device
Everybody needs a quick measuring device for checking things like fish length or
leader specs. The handiest such device is your own hand. Measure -- and memorize
-- the number of inches spanned by your widespread fingers and thumb, for
example, and then use that dimension to accurately estimate length.
Ultra light Spinning
If you're new at ultralight spinning, use 4-pound-test mono. Most 6-pound-test
lines are too stiff and large in diameter to cast well with midget spinning
reels. Two-pound-test twists easily and can be hard to handle.
Small Split Shot
Use two (or more, as needed) small split shot instead of a single large one for
added weight when you need to spincast with light lures or bait. Spacing the
smaller shot about a foot apart above your lure will nearly eliminate casting
tangles. A single large shot, on the other hand, will whirl around your lure
when you cast, tying knots in your line.
All Black Spinnerbaits
All-black spinnerbaits -- including black blades -- are hard to find in most
stores and catalogs, apparently because most anglers think bright blades are
essential. But that's not true. Take a black-skirted spinnerbait and paint the
blades flat black. They will still make the bait vibrate when retrieved, but the
flash will be gone. Sometimes that's the answer for fussy fish.
When Done Fishing
When done fishing, don't hook your lure into one of the lower guides on your
rod. The hooks damage and displace the rod guide's smooth inner ring, especially
when the rigged rod is bounced around in transport. Hook your lure into the
guide's external metal frame instead, and you'll do much less damage.
Safety Pins
Combining low cost and high utility, safety pins could be the world's best
fishing tools. Use the point to untangle knots or backlashes, or clear the
paint-clogged eyes of jigs. In a pinch, use pliers and tape to turn the pin's
wire into an emergency rod guide. Fasten pins to your fishing vest or tackle bag
so you'll always have one when you need it.
Hook More Perch
Yellow perch tend to peck quickly at a lure instead of just making a grab.
You'll hook more perch by selecting perch jigs with short, rather than long,
tails. Jigs with tails that end near the hook bend will take more of these
short-striking fish.
Royal Wulff Dries
Royal Wulff dries are perennial bestsellers among the world's trout fishermen.
They don't imitate anything in particular but look sufficiently buggy to often
interest trout. Most important are the fly's large white wings that make it so
easy to see on the water. Keep a range of sizes in your vest, and fish them to
rest your eyes and catch some trout at the same time.
Versatile Tube Lure
Make a soft-plastic tube lure more versatile by stuffing bits of dense foam
packing material into the lure's body cavity, making it float upward when fished
deep on a Carolina rig. Or try adding bits of scent-soaked sponge inside the
lure.
Give Your Trailer More Action
Pork frogs (frog-shaped, brine-cured pork rind) are commonly used as trailers on
bass jigs. Give your trailer more action by slicing away some of the thick,
fatty portion with a knife. While you're at it, score the trailing legs as shown
below. The added wiggle will put more bass in your live well.
Tying a Small Bell
The Christmas inventory of most department stores offers cat fishermen an
important accessory: small bells. Tying a small bell to your rod tip when you
set out baits at night allows you to kick back in a lawn chair, knowing you'll
hear a biting fish when the rod wiggles.
Replacing Treble Hooks
Replacing treble hooks with singles on some lures will allow you to release fish
more easily without dropping your hooking percentage. A Swash single hook on
the back of a spoon is a classic example. You can also make some (but not all)
crankbaits dig deeper by replacing the rear treble with a lighter single hook,
causing the plug to tip a little farther forward when retrieved.
Soft Plastic Worm Colors
There are literally hundreds of soft-plastic worm colors available to bass
fishermen, but you don't need them all. Black and purple (grape) are two
all-time standards. Beyond those basics, try translucent colors like smoke or
pale blue in clear water. Use darker, more opaque colors like June bug or motor
oil in murky or muddy water. For floating worms at the surface, don't forget to
try shockingly bright colors like bubblegum.
Close-Faced Spincasting Reel
When you start a retrieve with a closed-face spincasting reel the internal
line-pickup doesn't always work immediately. When you first crank the reel after
a cast, raise the rod tip sharply at the same time. This pulls the line against
the line-pickup pin and allows your retrieve to start quickly.
Improve Your Fly Tackle
The best and least expensive thing you can do to improve your fly tackle this
spring might be to clean your line before a new season starts. Fill a small tub
or sink with lukewarm water, add dishwashing liquid, and unspool the entire line
into the tub. Scrub it gently with a soft, nonabrasive sponge, and then rinse in
lukewarm water and wipe dry with a soft cloth before putting it back on your
reel. The improvement in castability will amaze you.
Terrific Soft Protectors
Old socks make terrific soft protectors for fishing reels that might otherwise
get dinged in your tackle bag. Just stuff a reel in the toe of a sock, roll it
up, and stow it.
Small Bait Fragment
The addition of a small bait fragment can "sweeten" many artificial lures.
Adding the tail section cut from a fresh minnow to a walleye jig is one common
example. Recently, some freshwater anglers have turned to a common saltwater
bait: Small strips cut from squid, then added to a jig, work as well for
freshwater perch and crappies as they do for saltwater striped bass. See the
frozen-food section of your local market.
Woolly Buggers on the Blank Jigs
Fly fishermen who target trout rely on Woolly Bugger streamers as an all-purpose
fly. Now spin fishermen can do the same. Buy some blank (crappie-size) jigheads
in 1/16- and 1/8-ounce sizes and tie up some Woolly Buggers on the blank jigs.
Can't tie your own? Find a local fly tier through an area tackle shop. These
lures are inexpensive, and they work great.
Article courtesy of Field and Stream.