welcome and good to see you are learning grasshopper. also some great baked parmesean recipes and other methods that are simple and fantastic plus healthier.
Like stated use a cast iron skillet if your just cooking for two people. A 10inch cast iron skillet will be less than $20 and will last several lifetimes. The method you are using is called a jig and bobber. It is a very effective method for catching both crappie and white bass in the spring when they go up creeks to spawn. Get the bobbers from Walmart because they are dirt cheap. Get the smallest one you can get away with based on the jig size your using. I fixed float is good for fishing 4ft or less and a slip bobber is good for deeper water. Crappie fishing is a great sport.
shurt LIKED above post
welcome and good to see you are learning grasshopper. also some great baked parmesean recipes and other methods that are simple and fantastic plus healthier.
shurt, SpeckledSlab LIKED above post
we use a big cast iron for 2 .5 people when we fry them
we use a cookie sheet when we bake them
luck to ya
sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales
I like the bobber and float. But Oregon especially Central Oregon is not big on fishing for crappie. So finding those little floats mentioned above I couldn't do. I did find some round cork floats though, 1" and 1 1/4" and they worked fine and were pretty inexpensive! Last week I ran into those other floats and got a couple to try out on a couple of my spinning rods. The cork balls worked great and not a thing I could see wrong with them. These other one's I would think are more sensitive if that's possible. Thing I noticed about using the floats is if there's a little ripple on the water, not need to move them around much. Just let them sit and the water moves them for you.
That is a favorite way to fish from the bank in the spring.
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass along
I started making some floats from wine corks and bamboo skewers. Bend and cut down a paperclip to make a loop on the bottom tied in place with wound thread and topped of the thread with UV glue. Can be painted as you see fit for visibility. After I get the shaft secured in place I turn the float on my bench top drill press and use sand paper to shape and get the size I want. To make it a stay in place float I use a Piece of tubing for a sling shot to hold the line in place. Same float, best of both worlds, Slip float and stay in place without crimping the line...
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Do you know what the size to weight ratio is? Such as 1/4 oz 2.5", 1/8 oz 2" and so forth.
I believe Thill has some floats that are marked for weight
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass along
I usually use thill or BPS balsa quill floats. I was just wondering about trying the more economical comal foam floats so it doesn't hurt so bad when i get hung up so far back in the brush I can't retrieve it. Was wondering about the ratio so I don't need to buy half a dozen different sizes trying to get it right.
Compared to the other equipment you buy floats are cheap.
Buy what works for you.