BentRod
10/15/2012 10:19:00 AMHOOKEDONFISHING
10/15/2012 11:45:00 AMsalmonlander
10/15/2012 12:39:00 PMthe piranha
10/15/2012 1:04:00 PMjumpinjim
10/15/2012 1:05:00 PM@Hookedonfishing - Simples x2 - They have a modified Crab Pot with an extra big opening, they Snag the fish using snaggified buzz bomb then drag it over to the crab pot where it is then hoisted up to the bridge for further processing. It is a simple yet effective operation, so much so that it is worth buying Gloomis rods!
BentRod
10/15/2012 1:17:00 PMHOOKEDONFISHING
10/15/2012 1:32:00 PMjumpinjim
10/15/2012 2:55:00 PMOf course despite all this knowledge you would think they would know the difference between a King and a Coho. When I asked him what the biggest one he had ever snagged was, he proudly said in over 20lbs, it was almost to big for the pot, but clarified that the bigger ones look and taste different so they prefer the smaller ones....
knotabassturd
10/15/2012 3:25:00 PMShrug... ('OL GREY DOG style)...
hopelesscanuck
10/15/2012 4:31:00 PMToday I decided to join the WA Lakes forum. Myself and a fellow coworker have been diligently following your walake posts and youtube posts demonstrating how you tie your deadly jigs (thank you for sharing btw - not many would do this). That said, we have tied I can't tell you how many of these and tried them to no avail. (ok my colleague has hooked a few and landed one). Myself on the other hand have been out about 20-30 times this season and have only a few follows to show for it. This is embarassing. I'm Canadian... I feel like I should be able to do better. I mean you would think I might have lucked out and hooked something by now right?!! Furthermore as a fellow Jesus fan, I've said prayers in the hopes the good Lord might help out!! Perhaps I need to cast my line to "the other side" of the river?!?! Should you have pity and care to explain more the action you provide these majestic jigs of yours I would be ever so grateful!!
Sincerely,
hopelesscanuck (Loren)
HOOKEDONFISHING
10/15/2012 4:50:00 PMThe Quadfather
10/15/2012 9:24:00 PMjumpinjim
10/15/2012 10:29:00 PM1. Jig - (color pattern, material, size, wgt, etc)
2. Method of Movement (Twitched, Snapped, Flicked, Jerked, Pulled, Shaken etc..)
3. Timing of Movements
4. Depth of Movements
5. Presentation Method (Under a Float, Free Casted)
The location you are fishing and what your fishing for, and the current attitude of the fish in the system is going to determine almost all of the above. Coho in one river will not respond to the same thing that Coho do in another river, perhaps in select cases but there are techniques that I employ on the Olympic Pen. Rivers that are looked at by Coho in the Green and not even given a second glance. Coho in the green respond best to an initial Jerk that gets the fishes attention, then very light twitching as the jig falls deeper a light jerk up and more twitching. DO NOT jerk that jig even close to a school moving up, sudden motions of jerking in schools on the green will spook them and they will scatter like a shotgun shell. There are too many snaggers lurking at every bank that these fish have learned to be wary, although schools on other less abused rivers will respond with absolute explosive aggression to big nasty jerks as they are moving in to view. Next thing is that the ocean run fish in just about any river generally use the banks to navigate, so if you are just tossing the jig in the middle and going for it , your probably wasting your time, coho generally like structure too, but on the green they mostly move through the lower system before getting the hunker down, mill around in a hole behavior that they display elsewhere quicker. Knowing this you need to get to know your area of the river, how they like to run, what times, and then how they approach the run, and how they move out of the run. See your going to get about 3 shots to get them interested. First shot is as the approach your area, that is when you want to be presenting your jig as schools move in, then as they pass you should be working them, and finally make a last effort to get your jig well ahead of the school and give a presentation as the leave your area. If you don't know the routes they like to travel doing those three presentations is hard. Often I catch fish on that last cast as they are leaving, several fish have seen it a few times, the last cast it is in the water well before they arrive (dropping jigs on top of a moving school -not milling- rarely works, and can end up in snags). So
jumpinjim
10/15/2012 11:32:00 PMPast Report with Jiggity clips
BentRod
10/16/2012 9:21:00 AMhopelesscanuck
10/16/2012 9:48:00 AM@JJ - My coworker here at REI read your advice and wanted me to say thanks Professor! I also thank you! This gives me a good starting place, and hopefully I'll get one this season!