11-14-2013, 10:26 AM | #21 | |
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Was he on the radio a few weeks ago? If he was try using one of his 'best' halibut rig tips: use a 6-8 foot leader for you hook(s) I'd like to see someone trying to gaff a PB best hali or any hali with a 6-8 leader on it. Like Greg said, I'm sure it works great on a boat but trying it on a kayak will require playing the Benny Hill theme song in the background.
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11-14-2013, 10:38 AM | #22 |
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Rockcod rick asked him how to immediately kill a halibut...and he responded...just bleed it out and it will die within minutes....
After he made that statement I knew for sure he was full of shit...!
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11-14-2013, 11:08 AM | #23 | |
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11-14-2013, 11:14 AM | #24 | |
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I know I get it, I posted up something so those who don't like me are going to bash what I say. Cool, that's a great way to be closed minded. I've said all I'm going to say. I tried helping some out, and you all spat on it so. You all wonder why this site is losing people this is why.
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11-14-2013, 07:36 PM | #25 | |
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Atta boy....At least you're still at it...Too bad on the break off...40lb club is in your cross hairs for sure.. Ok, take care..... |
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11-16-2013, 09:39 AM | #26 |
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Im surprised nobody mentioned the bounce ball. I've had some good luck with those. I make my own to modify leader lengths because I've had problems in the past with getting em tangled up. But a great technique in open water for flatties.
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11-16-2013, 02:20 PM | #27 | |
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I'm thinking you're being a bit thin skinned Jimmy. Not sure why that direct response off of your post was taken personally. These guys aren't trying to chase anyone off. The first time I met them formally was at last year's Sewer open invite at Irvine Lake. Before that, a pm from Jorge helped me get my first yak WSB. He had no idea who the heck I was. Irvine is trout fishing in a mud hole but there's no better way to get to meet and hang with some of SoCal's best yak fisherman who also happen to be...pinche loco. It's not too late to jump in on next week's get-together. I've had some incredible butt fishing with these guys this year down here and up there. The Sewer boys POUND WATER FOR HOURS...on the yak. They're approachable, opinionated and...and...and..."colorful". They've accumulated mucho info in which they freely share to others. Even amongst themselves each one has their go-to set-ups and preferences. I remember the first time they came down to fish butts with me in an area I recommended and it turned out to be a bust. I took some heat from them for a couple of months. It was all in good fun...I think. And then there was the time Sewer came back down on a spot I found but Matt couldn't make it that trip...bahahahahahaha!!! :chee rs1: Jim
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Recreational Fisherman's Catch...2% Commercial Fisherman's Catch- 98% Recreational Fishing Kayakers Catch- .00001% "The reality is that the wall was built to keep all Asians ~specifically Japanese and those that think they're japanese~ out of the U.S" Last edited by Deamon; 11-16-2013 at 04:23 PM. |
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11-16-2013, 02:41 PM | #28 |
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Jimmy,
It's all about fishing. Don't get upset because someone does not agree with someone else's ways of fishing. The flip side of this is that just because someone wrote a book or posted something online does not mean that their techniques are applicable to what we do on the water. I don't know jack......that's been established a long time ago. However,, When someone like Greg talks about kayak halibut fishing, I would just close my mouth and keep my ears open. Tight lines. |
11-16-2013, 02:45 PM | #29 |
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I haven't been hali hunting much lately but the techniques that work best for me have been a Carolina style sliding sinker rig for shallow water and a dropper loop or 3 way swivel rig for deeper water. Depth and speed of drift dictate what weight to use but I like to fish heavy enough to keep the line close to vertical.
Some times you get the bait you get. Big fish get caught on chovies, but I like dines or macks for targeting bigger fish. Really, who wants to target small fish. Maybe I'm old school or just missed the memo, but I never use a trailer/stinger hook, ever. I've found that trailers restrict the baits movements, allow you to catch more short fish, and seriously gut hook sand bass and other fish. Big halibut will eat a bait. I fish a light wire circle hook, sized to the bait, set in the baits nose. For halibut I slow every thing down. longer free spool at bite, slow rod lift to "set" the circle hook, slow steady pressure on the fish, slow pumps of the rod (or none at all). You can keep a hali calm, usually, by raising her steadily from the bottom. Aggressive pulling or pumping can get the fish shaking her head. Never a good thing. Lastly, it's easy to say but stay calm. IMO, except for maybe sharks, at landing big halibut are the most anxiety inducing fish we have. I've had em lay there, get gaffed, and dragged in to the hatch with out a twitch. Also had em go off like bombs. I know, long reply. These are techniques that have worked for me. Mike |
11-16-2013, 02:50 PM | #30 |
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I haven't been hali hunting much lately but the techniques that work best for me have been a Carolina style sliding sinker rig for shallow water and a dropper loop or 3 way swivel rig for deeper water. Depth and speed of drift dictate what weight to use but I like to fish heavy enough to keep the line close to vertical.
Some times you get the bait you get. Big fish get caught on chovies, but I like dines or macks for targeting bigger fish. Really, who wants to target small fish. Maybe I'm old school or just missed the memo, but I never use a trailer/stinger hook, ever. I've found that trailers restrict the baits movements, allow you to catch more short fish, and seriously gut hook sand bass and other fish. Big halibut will eat a bait. I fish a light wire circle hook, sized to the bait, set in the baits nose. For halibut I slow every thing down. longer free spool at bite, slow rod lift to "set" the circle hook, slow steady pressure on the fish, slow pumps of the rod (or none at all). You can keep a hali calm, usually, by raising her steadily from the bottom. Aggressive pulling or pumping can get the fish shaking her head. Never a good thing. Lastly, it's easy to say but stay calm. IMO, except for maybe sharks, at landing big halibut are the most anxiety inducing fish we have. I've had em lay there, get gaffed, and dragged in to the hatch with out a twitch. Also had em go off like bombs. I know, long reply. These are techniques that have worked for me. Mike |
11-16-2013, 03:25 PM | #31 |
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OOOOOOH JIM EE ZEE ONE TWO THREE
WE'RE JUST TRYING TO MAKE NEW FISHING FRIENDS If you took part in any one of our very intellectual and highly productive conversations you'd ask yourself why anyone would fish with us. We will dissect, critique, disassemble, analyze, re-write, and question every suggestion, policy and procedure that goes against what we know..............why? Because we're all experts in some way, shape or form Don't take any personal.....its just fishing
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