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#1 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Fullerton
Posts: 1,361
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Quote:
Is the sabiki 501 the left-handed model? Or is it the knockoff from teh swapmeet? |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Chula Vista
Posts: 1,589
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Making bait has been frustrating for me all summer rspecially when massive bait schools all around. Ive had the best success with the very small sibikis w/o beads. The size 12 and 14 I use in the bay for smelt. I've been moving fast hitting bait schools until i find one that bites. Sitting on a school hadnt worked for me. Guys are having success with chum. I've seen some guys loading up with the little chum pots on their sibikis. I used cat food a few times this summer and it seamed to increase the green vs Spanish catch. 2 weeks ago I had a dog steal my bait and while winding in bare hook a greenie bit it. So maybe a string of 4/0 black circle hooks would be the call. Mike
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2015
Posts: 326
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I always use these:
http://www.basspro.com/Offshore-Angl...product/89603/ I also cut them down to three hooks per rig when fishing my longboard to make it easier to handle. When you pull a Christmas tree of maks up you end up wearing a hook from time to time otherwise. I feel I have less luck with the ones that have a plastic skirt. If I were really concerned I would put little squid tags (smalls cut squares of squid) or keep frozen anchovies (favorite mak food) at home and take like two each trip. In my marlin fishing days, we found that cheap canned dog food spooned into the water worked better than cat food, tuna, or cut bait. It has small particles that spread around and high oil content that produces a lot of odor. I also didn't learn any of this by asking on a forum but by years and years of fishing. Maybe some time and trial and error will help. |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: San Diego
Posts: 115
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I've recently been wondering about the red vs green. The general consensus is that it doesn't matter. I've only ever used green, but have a couple reds that I'll use before I buy more sabikis.
I've never baited my hooks and have always caught bait pretty well. The worst I've done is caught 5 baits in a little under an hour. I would say most days I average 7-10 spanish macks in a little over a half an hour then I'm off to chase yt. And as for chumming, it absolutely works! I remember catching bait a few weeks ago and it was slow. I saw some guy reeling up 3-5 greenbacks at a time, every drop... Every few drops, he would mix up his chum. I started talking to him and sat near him and got all the bait I needed for the day in just a few minutes. I think he was eating them or saving to make frozen bait because I didn't see a bait tank, and even if he had one, it was way to small to hold that many. Last edited by Goose1993; 10-05-2015 at 07:53 PM. |
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#5 | |
Xcoastie
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Westminster
Posts: 285
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Quote:
I believe your referring to me. I do not eat bait!! And I have a Hobie bait tank that I loaded up with about twenty Greenbacks. Enough for the day and some to chum for the next outing. I fill the tank to the top and the lid closed and the macs keep just fine as long as you they don't get injured while unhooking.. |
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#6 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: San Diego
Posts: 115
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Quote:
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Ventura, CA
Posts: 376
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Hook size matters. I run a 14. If that doesn't work I go to a 6 or 8. I have sat side by side and watched other kill it...I switched sizes and killed it. I have chummed with cat food and cut frozen bait. It helps. As said above...not all schools bite. Oh...I also troll my sabiki out, or a cast master or a small lucky craft. I run a 2oz glow sinker on the bottom of my sbaiki.
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#8 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Inland Empire
Posts: 370
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Options
First, I dislike the sabiki on a kayak because of the tangles and multiple hooks that fly around when fish are on it. That being said I am seeing it has a place in my line-up because sometimes it works when my first choice does not. Various models of sabiki have worked and I generally prefer something with the flashy metallic threads. Also, I use a 3-oz weight which helps mitigate the tangles. I am finally going to invest in a dedicated sabiki rig as well so that I can keep them longer.
The option I currently prefer most for targeting GBMs (assuming that's what you want) is a 1/4-oz to 1/2-oz kastmaster (KM) on a light spinning rig (6-lb mono...yes!). You can quickly work a larger area of water this way as well. I sometimes use a slightly larger rig with a 3/4-oz KM for deeper waters (La Jolla). You will get some amazing fights on other fish as well (Bonita, Bass, Baracuda). Sometimes I use a 12-inch 10-to-12-lb mono or 15-lb flouro leader just in case of toothy critters. Small KMs cost less than sabikis too if you consume sabikis quickly. Last week I was dragging a fully squid tipped sabiki and simultaneously throwing the KM. The KM beat the sabiki by 8/2 for the target species. The sabiki however landed some weird different fish. At 10-GBMs in the tank I stop. Well....other-times lately I have stopped at 3x due to the difficulties. Also, the Spanish Macs seem to never hit the KM. It's good to avoid the by-catch of Spanish when you really want GBMs. If only Spanish are around then sabiki it is. From my opinion, squid tipped sabiki does help the bite and chumming has only worked selectively and is thus not required. Red beads or green beads, etc....no matter. Hook sizes of 8 to 12 have worked. All of that said..I have not tried the sabiki-500! |
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