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eastcoasttransplant

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Posts posted by eastcoasttransplant

  1. I agree that the fly will DEFINITELY catch fish....particularly high steelhead.

    Now while I'm not a straight pink fan, I bought two watermelon flashers for fishing in the upper water column.

    My suggestion is this.....run the flasher and fly as a combo in the upper 40 feet during late spring and early summer and I think you'll be surprised.

  2. Here was Blood Run's response when I wrote them:

    Our recommendation is to put 50-75 feet of mono backer on the reel first, then tie an albright knot to the wire, and spool the rest of the wire on until the reel is completely full.

    Make sure you apply tension with your fingers or to the wire spool itself, and reel at a medium pace, when spooling the wire onto the reel. It is best to not stop reeling during the spooling process as you can lose tension on the wire and cause it to backspool and kink. Once you start, keep going at the same pace until you are finished..

    Fuguring out backer ALWAYS sucks because i ALWAYS seem to have to adjust my backing from the original length I cut...regardless of how i try to figure out the length properly.

    Thanks again all.

  3. Ok guys.....I had to go back for this one but based on THIS post I bought 3 spools of Blood Run wire to run on my Okuma Convector 30D reels. I see most say no backer is required but how exactly ar you attaching the wire to the reel?

    I believe someone told me to wriap the wire around the spool once and then use electrical tape to secure the wire to the reel. does this sounds right? If so might the tape cause uneven spooling or gum op the lower portion of your wire?

    Any assistance you guys could provide would be greatly appreciated.

    I'm switching this year from the Monel to the standed wire and my father-inlaw just made out with my two Monel wire setups. Thanks again all.

  4. Funny i just brought this up at a show this weekend.

    Most guys I talke to run anywhere from 20-50 ft. Here are the reasonings behing their decisions.....

    The guys who run the longer leads will be using them frequently and cutting them back constantly. Longer just makes this easier. The guys who run shorter leads truly believe that the short leader puts more action to the spoon due to the way the leadcore moves around in the water. Too long of a leader and you lose the extra action.

    For me, I usually run 20-25ft of 15lb flourcarbon leader material but I'm ONLY using clean spoons off my leadcores. I've had no breakage with the lighter flourocarbon and believe the short leader makes my spoon move around much more in the water column.

    I haven't had to cut back much, but I let me leaders get to 15ft before i consider retying the whole thing.

  5. Not really sure yet Russ.

    I just received the Lake Michigan chip today and have not received the NavPlanner 2 program yet. I know my older Premium chart showed wrecks and contour lines but offered not 3D imaging and no real clear indication of reefs other than a circular contour line like on your NOAA charts. The Platinum charts are supposed to show greater detail and provide 3D images of the bottom as well.

    I should get the PC program sometime next week and then will have to tinker with it and see what it offers.

    As for the Mesa.....I think I might be giving up someone's secret spot. One captain told me about it but I couldn't find any reference to it anywhere. I beleive it's somewhere between NP and Kenosha but I'll have to ask him the next time I run into him. I also believe it's in the 100 ft line.

  6. The chip I had last year was an older Navionics Hotmaps Premium East Region chip. It covered IL but not WI. So......when I travelled from North Point to Kenosha I lost the extra benefits of the chip.

    I picked up a Hotmaps Platnium North Region chip which covers WI inland lakes and also picked up a Marine Platinum Plus chart which solely covers Lake Michigan. The chips show contours, depths, shipwrecks, reefs, dropoffs, etc. and these new chips even have 3 dimentional views to really get a picture of the bottom. Now, couple that with the NavPlanner 2, and I should be able to "scout" productive looking bottom before hitting the water, load those spots onto my chips and then head to them while on the water. It will also allow me to take data from the chip, such as waypoints where I hooked fish, and load that onto the computer for review throughout the season.

    All this sounds great in concept but I'll have to see how wll it works once the season begins. I realized last year I was SO happy to hook fish that I nver recorded the waypoints on my chartplotter. I had the trail but not the actual spot where the hits took place. I want to be better this year in keeping records and i hoping this technology will help a bit.

    we'll see.

  7. Thank you Capt. Russ.

    I'm new to Lake Michigan fishing, usually fishng Winthrop Harbor to Kenosha, and think that once I get my charting program I may be able to better identify structures that will hold kings during different times of the year. I hear of offshore structures like the Mesa (no idea where it's located) and some other reefs but feel the time at home looking over the charts may help somewhat.

    Thanks again for taking the time to answer.

  8. During the off season, how much time do you devote to reviewing charts or catch data from the past year?

    I just picked up a Navionics Lake Michigan Chart and am now awaiting to recieve their NavPlanner2 program, which will allow me to review chart data on my home computer, thus taking info from the computer and loading it to the chip or from the chip to the computer.

    Just curious on how a professional captain handles charting and catch data in preparation for a new season.

    Thanks guys.

  9. So I picked up a chart plotter last year and purchased a few different Navionics chips for fishing WI and Lake Michigan. The chips add some nice detail but I wonder in addition to the chips, who here utilizes any chart plotting software while at home on their computer?

    I'm sure there are plenty out there but Navionics has a program called NavPlanner2 that comes preloaded with charts but also gives you the option to link your chips to the program and map out structures ahead of time, before hitting the water. I know we have some real sharpies around here, charter captains included, and thus, I'm curious if they find these programs helpful, if there are other options, etc.?

    Inormally fish the Winthrop Harbor, IL and Kenosha areas but think a program like this could save some time while on the water, particularly in new locations.

    Thank guys.

  10. First SuperTramp....very, very sorry for your loss. If there is anything I can personally do to brighten your day a bit, please do not hesitate to ask.

    Now it would seem easy for a guy like me with a 17ft aluminum but here is my delimma.....

    I keep the boat in storage (inside during the winter) and unload EVERyTHING from the boat before it's put away. I have a few modifications I need to make, seemingly easy, but for me always takes a day or two to get done. Then it's get all the gear back on the boat, charge the batteries and check that everything is up to snuff. My issue is I have to have the storage facility take it from the inside to the outside and once I do that if we get another storm I'll be worrying about the boat, cover, etc.

    Therefore, I'd love to be out early this month but it will probably be later, towards the end of the month.

  11. I am in the process of coloring and tying up 150 Wobble Glo rigs for my father-in-law who fishes for lakers back in New Jersey. Also made him 30 or so custom cowbells as well. His fish normally run just a few pounds but he and his buddy are looking for that elusive teen size fish or greater

    Back in NJ, it was wire line rigs, lead balls, cowbells and peanuts(Wobble Glos). The bottom of the reservoir that holds lakers is littered with trees, old foundations, tons of fishng line and gear, so using riggers is out of the question. Those lakers hug bottom and wire is the most efficient way to get them to hit. It was nice to see Worden's Lures finally put their Wobble Glos up on their website for online sales.

    Now I just need to get a few for myself and give those early season lakers a try.

    I got a 12lber last year on a flasher and fly, which is my biggest laker to date, but I'm sure there are some reel monstors out there.

  12. Torpedo goes on the backing of your leadcore.

    All the different sizes will work to gain added depth but the angle of decent will change. Check with Matt at Torpedo Divers and he will get back to you quickly with his suggestion for diver for your situation. I'm thinking he'll probably suggest the Cuda, which is the second biggest torpedo.

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