Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: brad7 on September 13, 2012, 07:16:09 AM
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I was on the chedder yesterday and I found nice spot just full of white springs, they were jumping and swirling all over the place. But be damned If I could get em to hit anything. I threw everything I had in my vest; Colorado blades, red wool, red and white wool, peach wool, bright pink wool. Anybody got any other ideas I could throw in my vest for next time?
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Roe
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Long leader and a 2oz weight lol
just kidding roe should do the trick, you can pick some up probably from any tackle store if you don't have any.
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Long leader and a 2oz weight lol
just kidding roe should do the trick, you can pick some up probably from any tackle store if you don't have any.
DOH - let's not bring that up again!!!
To the OP: did you try using any bait?
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drift net
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jigs, flies
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Anything but wool, I wish people would learn to fish without using wool...
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Why? Wool can be darn effective, especially if we’re talking about springs and you’ve managed to find a ‘honey hole’ where they have stacked up.
To the OP, I’ve also found darker colors of wool (blue or green) to sometimes trigger springs though the peach/red range of colours would be my first thought too. Also Jensen eggs/gooeybob/corkies could be worth a shot. YMMV
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Why? Wool can be darn effective, especially if we’re talking about springs and you’ve managed to find a ‘honey hole’ where they have stacked up.
To the OP, I’ve also found darker colors of wool (blue or green) to sometimes trigger springs though the peach/red range of colours would be my first thought too. Also Jensen eggs/gooeybob/corkies could be worth a shot. YMMV
Alot of people associate the use of wool with flossing
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Don't waste your time using wool. Good roe will outfish wool every day of the week, twice on sundays.
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Why? Wool can be darn effective, especially if we’re talking about springs and you’ve managed to find a ‘honey hole’ where they have stacked up.
To the OP, I’ve also found darker colors of wool (blue or green) to sometimes trigger springs though the peach/red range of colours would be my first thought too. Also Jensen eggs/gooeybob/corkies could be worth a shot. YMMV
I agree. It is unfortunate that flossers have chosen to use wool rather than beads or corkies. In the past couple seasons, it always takes me a day or two to re-lean just how small of a presentation you need when fishing with wool for springs. When submerged, the whole thing should poof out to no bigger than your thumbnail. Also, color really does seem to matter. Two years ago, it was peach, peach/red, or peach/white. Last year, it seemed like all they would bite was pink - bubble gum or hot pink.
Also, you want a short enough leader (18 to 24 inches) so you know your wool is down on the bottom where the fish are, and use enough lead to get it down there.
I fished a whole lot of roe last year, and only hooked one coho on it (and no springs).
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Anything but wool, I wish people would learn to fish without using wool...
Although Sterling is right Bait will outfish wool.. If you dont have bait, wool is a good alternative. old timers on the vedder have been fishing wool long before the days of flossing were around... wool can be effective with a short leader and if presented right.
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Biggest spring i've seen caught on the Vedder was on green wool...........just saying
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Last year i was fishing a run mid river with everything i could think of . Then this fellow came in and within 3 casts had a nice spring to the beach,after releasing it and a few more casts he had another,so i had to go ask what he was using. He showed me his rig it was 10lb fluorocarbon leader with a #4 hook and a tiny piece of hot pink wool. H e then proceeded to tell me that when the water is low and clear you want to go as small as possible as not to spook the fish. Also he said it was important to stay back from the waters edge a bit, cause if you can see them they can see you. So i changed up my rig to what he had and that was the key for that run that day, as we had a great afternoon and about a dozen more fish to hand after that.
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It's personal preference to me just use what baits works best for you
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Pink worms. 6" perferably
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Last year i was fishing a run mid river with everything i could think of . Then this fellow came in and within 3 casts had a nice spring to the beach,after releasing it and a few more casts he had another,so i had to go ask what he was using. He showed me his rig it was 10lb fluorocarbon leader with a #4 hook and a tiny piece of hot pink wool. H e then proceeded to tell me that when the water is low and clear you want to go as small as possible as not to spook the fish. Also he said it was important to stay back from the waters edge a bit, cause if you can see them they can see you. So i changed up my rig to what he had and that was the key for that run that day, as we had a great afternoon and about a dozen more fish to hand after that.
Let me guess, if you use a longer leader that helps with spooky fish too :P
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I was on the vedder yesterday, I used wool at first then a gooybob but got nothing. Then I switched to roe and the bite was on. I recommend roe but I hate how messy it is and how you have to rebait every ten or so cast.
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Big gob of roe,
Or a "cocktail" big gob of roe with a sand shrimp on top.
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Let me guess, if you use a longer leader that helps with spooky fish too :P
When i fish my leader is never longer than 12 to 24 inches . I like to be able to say that i got the fish to bite.
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Don't waste your time using wool. Good roe will outfish wool every day of the week, twice on sundays.
Lol very nice
Roe would work very well.
Try adding sent to the wool. roe flavored sent. ::)