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Thread: Hit after hit but no hookup?

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Barnacle Bill View Post
    Open the gap on the hook just a little bit. It works.
    Bill I'll open it pretty wide next time to see if it helps. Thanks

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by DockShootinJack View Post
    Bluegills can drive a fella nuts trying to get a hook in one
    Jack no doubt i was seeing schools of bluegill higher in the water column but most of the images were bigger & close to bottom in deeper water. The sonar images looked like crappie to me like we normally catch but this lake has a lot of small 6" or so crappie in it too.

  3. #13
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    If you was using a sinker they may have been hitting it. You can down size the bait (not the hook) but if you was fishing green most of the time what I seen is the speed of your bait. You got to play with the speed and the movement but most of the time speeding it up and/or the movement of it helps this time of year. I was having the same problem too...
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  4. #14
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    Yeah, like Slabeye said ... we were getting some really soft tics a lot of the time. I even caught a lot of my fish lifting my jigs off the bottom (after seeing slack line) and the fish were already holding onto the jig. Our day started out with decent thumps, but slowly tapered off to lite tics as the day progressed. I even got to watching the rod tip later in the day, rather than trying to feel the bite. If it bent more than normal lifting two 1/16oz jigs, I set the hook ... and a lot of the time it was fish.

    A few of the fish we caught were females, but surprisingly they only had pinky fingernail sized egg sacs. (I was expecting them to be a bit larger than that) And their stomachs were empty. Not sure what's causing their picky mood, but hopefully they'll get the message that cold temps are coming and get a bit more aggressive in their feeding mode.

  5. #15
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    Default Opinion what has increased my hooksets of 'nippers' by 100 %

    8 #test braid is equivalent to 4# test mono which in my opinion is necessary to feel the first light strike from a distance. When felt, I slow down, twitching the lure slightly and letting it glide ever so often.

    When it come to lures, light jigs do it for me when fish like to play but not commit. 1/64 oz or 1/32 oz using #6 or #8 hooks, depending on lure length, allows the above imparted action to to happen. Too heavy and the pendulum action of the lure as it sinks toward you is too fast. Once fish become excited - especially schoolies - then the ease of hooksets increases big time.

    Hook size can be very important. My rule of thumb: no more than half the length of the lure where the hook exits and most of the time, 1/4 the length. Lure action is key/ concentrating a fish's attention on the lure and not the jig is very important!

    One thing I discovered by accident: a fish bit off the tail of my curl tail grub, so I figured, why not try casting the body alone? Sho nuff those nippers were nippers no more!!! I even decorated the color using Spike-It pens. That led to more similar designs that caught everything!
    Name:  fat pill yp.JPG
Views: 98
Size:  24.4 KB Name:  grub body only.jpg
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Size:  39.8 KB

    Also try very small tubes:
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    Try it: take the tail off a small grub, rig it on a 1/32 oz jig with #6 or #8 hook and cast it towards the first nip, working it slowly but never with a steady retrieve.

    You can thank me after catching a sh load of nippers and eveything else!
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    Likes S10CHEVY LIKED above post

  6. #16
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    In my experience short strikes. Down size your bait.
    Likes S10CHEVY, skeetbum LIKED above post

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by slabeye View Post
    If you was using a sinker they may have been hitting it. You can down size the bait (not the hook) but if you was fishing green most of the time what I seen is the speed of your bait. You got to play with the speed and the movement but most of the time speeding it up and/or the movement of it helps this time of year. I was having the same problem too...
    Rodney I was on cedar creek. I took a neighbor kid there because I didn’t want to fight the wind all day at green but should have went there anyway. Haven’t had this problem at green though so far. For whatever reason I’ve had it happen at cedar creek more than once. I swear off that place & then end up there again if only going for a short trip or don’t want to go to green or Cumberland for whatever reason. I think I’ll stick to it this time. Unless of course I somehow figure it out.

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    Quote Originally Posted by DrNip View Post
    In my experience short strikes. Down size your bait.
    This is what I do.

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    likely mixed fish of similar smaller size and or just a pack of sunfish , as stated go with a smaller offering .
    I encounter that sometimes myself and just keep going smaller till I can make them pay with lip tissue ....
    and or move to another location if it gets out right ridiculous ....
    sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by NCkenner View Post
    Are you using a split shot above your bait? Crappie will hit the split shot. I saw it several times on live scope yesterday. Since there's no hook on the split shot, no hookups occur....
    This and sometimes when you feel the strike it's to late they're done.

    Sight fishing in MN I could watch them inhale it and spit it out before I felt a anything. It's amazing how fast they can be. Bass same way, when sight fishing if you don't set the hook as soon as the bait disappears it's way to late and your lure will just go shooting past your head when you finally set the hook.!

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