Those look good.. I've heard of people drilling holes in the tubes for bait fish to get inside of.. I've never built what you've got above but I have some of that pipe laying around.. You may have sparked an idea.
I have been thinking about building some buckets to drop. My first time doing anything like this.
Looking around here and looking around my shop came up with something like this.
Do you think these would work ?
Should I drop the buckets to .....or......take the buckets off and just have concrete with no buckets ?
Or could build some square boxs and reuse them.
The Drainage tube are cut 3" and 4'.....could even cut them 5'
Any suggestions ? Thanks
Those look good.. I've heard of people drilling holes in the tubes for bait fish to get inside of.. I've never built what you've got above but I have some of that pipe laying around.. You may have sparked an idea.
You think I like to duck hunt? I love to crappie fish!
Looks great. Like the last picture best. Good luck
Take you kids fishing today!!! They will be grown (and married and have children of their on) tomorrow. Then you can take your GRANDKIDS!
Podunkideas Pro Staff
Cornfield Crappie Gear Pro Staff
The fish will love those.
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass along
Mike
I used a lot of drainage tube for BIG Crappie....IN OUR LAKE, we found that branches, stakes, and small diameter wood or plastic, tend to attract mostly smaller Crappie. When you drop BIG DIAMETER stuff the BIG SLABS used it...especially for ambush points if you set it around smaller cover that attracted baitfish, close to feeding flats, or where they rested during the day in drops or deeper water.
I set mine in plastic trays like your wooden base, the trays could hold 5 tubes, I paid my son (a Favorite pair of Nike's) to sand all of the tube that I had, so the algae stuck good...I got a bunch of the trays for free, so I just dumped the entire unit! The best part about these is how light they are for the size....this is the easy way to build a STUMP FIELD!
GOOD FISHING!
Keitech USA Pro Staff
They look good. I like the last one you can just keep using the same wood forms to build more.
Be safe and good luck fishing
My only concern would be that the corners of the cement in the boxes might be prone to breaking off; that said if a pair of horizontal holes were drilled about 1" up on the outside of each piece taking advantage of the pipe`s natural curve and tied together tightly with VHD weed eater line and THEN cemented the chances of it even partially coming apart would be greatly diminished even if a couple of corners broke off...Have to wonder if could just flatten 1 end and jam these into a cement block ? Looks like need to do some "experimenting"...The basic idea is SUPERB ! Cheap, relatively fast, easy to mass produce, easy to load on a boat and "splash"...
Here is an improved one....I think this will work. Just leave them in the bucket and I have the handle in the middle. Drill some holes for bait fish and some in the bottom for concrete to get into the tube to hold tight.
Looks good but here plastic has not worked as good as wood. Let us know how they work for you.
Moderator of Beginners n Mentoring forum
Takeum Jigs
Well....I'm on my way to making as many as these as I want. I got the green light from the local Corp of Engineers so the door is open.
I just have some questions..
How much weight do you think the drainage tubes would take to sink ?
And the wood slats ?
I want to make sure I get enough in them. The concrete I used wasn't the best thing for the tubes...it was course and hard to get down in the bottom of the bucket. I wonder if a mortar mix would be more pourable ?
Any suggestions on how to hold the wood slats upright while the concrete cures ? I'm sure I will get the hang of it after I get going.
I like the tubes but I can get all the wood I want for free from my local saw mill .....which I have bought from for years.....so I know them well.
I'm going to try both for now.