fishing
bait, scent, eggs, krill, attractant, lures, sight, smell, sound
Why
Fish Bite
Rule #1. Fish where the fish are. This sounds rather basic rule, yes it is & I am not trying to be funny but just practical. It my take some experimenting on your part, or it could just be following information as to where the best fishing was last week. You can not however expect to catch salmon in a river in the summer if they are on their northern migration route & in Alaskan waters then, as compared to the fall when they are returning for spawning. Fish will be where the food is. So if you can find baitfish, like herring, anchovies, or shrimp, you will usually find larger fish feeding on them.
Rule #2. The
most important fundamental, if you want to catch salmon, or any other specie for
that matter, the action of your bait or lure is important.
If you have good rolling and erratic action, you will have a much better chance of
catching a fish. When a salmon hits your bait or lure he is looking for dinner.
If your
bait looks like a wounded struggling baitfish you have a much better chance of getting the
fish's attention.
Rule #3.
Salmon have three sensing mechanism they use to find their prey.
They are
Sight, Smell
and lateral line response Sound.
It will behoove you to use these to your advantage.
SIGHT- If you are trolling and your lure passes within a few feet of a salmon and he sees it, you
will probably catch him. The problem is that in the ocean and most other bodies of water
the salmon can't see more than a few feet. This gets worse as you go deeper. If you
are relying on sight alone, you probably won't bring home many salmon.
SMELL - The second sense is
smell. Salmon have an extremely sharp sense
of smell, but if you are trolling a bait forty feet down and the salmon is at fifty five
feet he will never smell the scent trail left by your bait unless he gets right behind it.
There are inline scent dispensers that are used for trolling for fish that you insert a scent into. They have small blades on the body to rotate the unit & small holes to dispense the smell. They are used inline & are about the side of a ball point pen in diameter & a couple of inches long.
Many companies have been founded that produce fishing scent
that is either injected into the lure or smeared onto the outside of it to
produce a scent attractant.
SOUND - The third sensing mechanism is the one you want working for you.
Down a salmon's side and on his head and back there are tiny hair-like projections
called cupula. Each of these has a nerve cell at the end. These cells are used
to pick up vibrations in the water. It is just like when you can feel the
loud music when a teen-ager drives by with his radio on loud.
If a salmon is swimming thirty feet down and a
school of baitfish swims across the surface above him, he knows exactly what's going on.
His lateral line cells pick up the vibrations made by the wiggling tails of the
baitfish. He doesn't see them or smell them but he knows exactly where they are,
just like he is using radar. If
some of them are wounded and swimming erratically he knows he has his next meal.
This is one of the mechanisms you want to take advantage of. If your lure is putting out
erratic vibrations twenty or thirty feet from a salmon you can pull him like a magnet.
He will follow the vibration like a radar beam and attack your bait.
This is why we
say action on your bait or lure is the most important strategy you can use.
Lures like the Crocodile, Coyote spoons or the Apex plug put out the erratic powerful
vibrations that will get you salmon. Some of the newer spoons now have a
small spinner blade attached to the rear at the same location of the hook, this
creates more vibrations. A trolled cut-plug herring creates
basically the same
vibrations as a wobbling spoon.
When using the imitation squid lures that have no action on their own, they need to rely on a flasher for this vibration. Whenever you put a bait or lure in the water you should carefully check its action. If it is not rolling or shaking, don't let it down. Sometimes the bait needs adjusting or a hook is lodged at a funny angle. Another possibility is that your boat trolling speed is not right for the lure you are using. Sometimes all you need to do is speed up.
Currently Pro Troll as come up with what they call an "E-Chip". It is a small round metal tube that apparently inside on one end is a chip. Inside this tube is a small steel ball. The whole thing is then capped off & sealed. What it is supposed to do is when the ball bumps the chip as the lure or flasher rotates or wobbles, it lets off small electrical impulses like a wounded or scared baitfish. This is supposed to RING THE DINNER BELL.
They make a flasher Pro Troll 11 & a Pro Chip 8, quite similar to the Hot Spot flasher & a plug called the Sting King, again similar to the Apex & a rotary helmet with these chips in all of them.
From what I have tried of these, believe me, they do out-fish the plain ones.
SIGHT, SMELL, SOUND ;
Again these are the
three main attractants in fishing, I repeat myself here, from the above, but it is
important.
Sight is any attraction of the flasher,
plus the lure itself.
Smell
will be the use of natural bait or scent.
Sound is created by the Flasher, and the lure
itself, these create a erratic vibrations that may convey to fish that their buddies are attacking baitfish.
For optimum results, all of these should compliment each
other.
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Last updated 06-12-2009
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