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Long Lining
Can anybody explain this technique and if I could use it drifting in a kayak? I don't have one of those fancy paddle jobs so is have to paddle up wind and drift back down... should I tie drop rigs at various depths with different lure colors or a single lure on each rod drifted various distances behind the kayak? Probably a simple question, but I can't find any great info online.
And maybe "tight-lining" would be better with drop type rig since the drift would be inconsistent without propulsion?
Any recommendations would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
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I mainly longline all i can, and whenever. problem for me is there are only 2 lakes near me with any room to do it, but it works.The main problem you will have is not enough constant speed to stay at correct depth. you will need to rig up with various weights to find out what might work. i know that in my case the best speed is between .7 mph and someetimes 1.0, start out with 1/64th jig heads and throw about 40ft behind boat, only 1 jig per rod. check your depth. if you see the rod bouncing like jig is dragging bottom, reel in line until it stops bouncing. this might work for you in depths up tp about 8ft. as you go into deeper water change jig weights up and distance back from boat. closer behind the boat equals not as much weight. My thought is tightline would be better for your situation. you can also use slipcorks and adjust depth you want, just cant troll as many rods. thing is . with longlining you keep adjusting colors size and depth and you wll hit on perfect combos. i have fished 7 rods at a time on back of my boat and had all of them hooked up many times. it is a fun day on the water. dont give up, just keep on trying. my preference is curly tail grubs. i now have to fish tidal rivers and that is a whole different ballgame, but i can tell you that i have adapted to them and now catch plenty of crappie, longlining in special areas. i have had days on jordan lake and randleman when i have caught 300 fish, only keep enoughh for me and wife to eat. never keep a big female. the above is just my method there are many on main forum, and they all work. remember to keep jigs from hitting bottom, crappie are always looking above them.
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Enoman knows of what he speaks. Good to see you still on here Enoman, I too have relocated since last seeing you on the water. Back in Ga.
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your right shoal donkey without consistant propulsion youd be better off fishing straight down so you can know/control your depth, but u could rig up a small trolling motor and open up options or find a consistant breeze
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Sounds like i should probably just drop shot at different depths and drift along.Thanks for the input!
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What may help is the Navionics app on your phone
It will tell you how fast you're going.
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Does anyone use a drift sock to help control speed?
TW
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I fish out of a kayak. Get you a some scotty rails and rod holders and tightline. It's so easy to get turned sideways in a kayak, even with just the slightest breeze, so long lines are easily tangled. Slip corks are alright with shorter rods, but if you've got 10+ foot rods I'd just use regular old carolina rigs. dropped to the depth where you're marking fish or brush. About to be slip cork casting time tho!! Already is down east, going next weekend myself.
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If your not fishing real deep water. Set your baits under floats at different depths and drift. Used to be the way we fished all the time before all this fancy stuff came out
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i have a couple Scotty holders and the molded holders in my kayak.. i think ill do the slip bobber thing and drop lines in tandem to see what works.. don't have any fancy electronics, so ill just be guessing. Probably drift Beaver Dam when the water goes back down... thanks again
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