Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: Long_Cast on August 14, 2013, 11:53:39 AM
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Are there significant differences in terms of catches for pinks in the Fraser River with pink coloured lures and non-pink coloured lures?
I have more non-pink coloured lures in my tackle box right now, so I wonder if I will get a lot less bites for pinks with non-pink coloured lures. My non-pink collection consist of Buzz-Bombs, Zzingers, Luhr Jensen Krocodile, Rapalas, Gibbs Silvex and Super Vibrax spinners.
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you can only catch pink salmon with pink lures. Go spend lots of money in your nearest tackle store on everything pink. They will love to help you out.
Well they do like the color pink i get hits on almost anything. blue and silver, silver, orange and silver, gold and silver. If you are worried a lot just sand some of them down and paint them pink. A quick search on google will show you how. I've used to buy only plain silver or gold spinners and spoons and just pain them what ever i was running out of.
Mind you i don't use spoons or spinners any more for pinks. Just flies.
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yes, they love pink color the most.
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Using jigs I haven't found a difference between pink, chartreuse, white or yellow.
Same for spoons I just buy the 4 pack of mixed colours. I painted a bunch of spoons pink last year and didn't notice a difference.
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I do remember watching In-Fisherman TV show back in the early 90's and they did a feature where they tested different coloured lures in murky lake/river conditions.
The result?
All colours looked the pretty much the same using their underwater cam when they did underwater testing for different coloured lures.
It made no difference in strikes when one colour is used over another.
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I've caught pinks of everything under the sun.
When everyone uses pink, I use chartreuse or something else.
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yes, all colors work, but pink works the best!
chartreuse is second!
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when it comes to pink fishing, yea they bite pink. In my experience light green or light blue spinners have worked well. also there will be so many pinks in the water that it's just a matter of timing rather than gear. just make sure to go durring high tide and your set.
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Bubble gum will work, pink worm.
One thing I found is that squamish pinks prefer smaller lures than the Vedder ones.
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Just buy some pink lure tape and stick them on your existing spoons.
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People fixate on the color of the lure, but often times the only reason they are catching them on pink lures is because that is what they are using. It doesn't take rocket science to figure that one out. Perhaps the most concrete statement I could make about color preference and fish is that in turbid/murky water, brighter colors tend to outdo darker colors, simply for the fact that fluorescent colors penetrate through the mud a lot easier than dark colors do. I find that the lure size, reeling speed, and weight are often more important factors than color.
Think about it.
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Buy yourself some lure tape in pink and Chartreuse and your set. Just tape your lures so that the outside has the tape and the inside is still flashy (silver, gold, brass....) You can if you want make the entire lure pink or green but I find having some flash to help
Im thinking of doing a pink face, charteuse back lure and see how they like it ;D
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People fixate on the color of the lure, but often times the only reason they are catching them on pink lures is because that is what they are using. It doesn't take rocket science to figure that one out. Perhaps the most concrete statement I could make about color preference and fish is that in turbid/murky water, brighter colors tend to outdo darker colors, simply for the fact that fluorescent colors penetrate through the mud a lot easier than dark colors do. I find that the lure size, reeling speed, and weight are often more important factors than color.
This pretty much nails it for me. The whole "pink is the best colour for pink salmon" thing makes me laugh. Honestly, pink salmon have no preference for the colour pink, it's simply that most people use pink lures most of the time, and pink happens to be a bright, easy-to-see colour.
Use whatever you have confidence in - if it happens to be pink, knock your socks off! ;)
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my go to colour is actually Charteuse for pinks. I only use pink if its not working. Of course these are Fraser water clarity flies. If im fishing the Vedder or Harrison the flies are a much more subtle toned down colour like olive with some flash. Ive tried bright flies but it seemed to just spook them instead
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REALLY?, CHARTREUSE? (caught my wife with that too!!)
(http://www.cocktailgogo.com/post/chartreuse.jpg)
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When everyone uses pink, I use chartreuse or something else.
Agreed. Some times I am lead to believe the pinks avoid everything that looks the same, so I switch it up to other gear that looks different in shape (I.e. blades) and not just colour as noted in the murky waters, colours do not really differ.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Flq-gV68ar8
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This season while fishing the Squamish, I rotated through bright orange, hot pink and chartreuse flies in same size and pattern and found bright orange to out perform both hot pink and chartreuse for some reason. My guess is that bright orange fly looked like krill which is one of the main diet for pinks while feeding up in Alaskan waters. I just could not keep them off the orange fly.
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I was fishing the North Arm in the Port Man area yesterday and I saw a guy using a pink plastic worm and a size 1 red hook under a float and he landed 2 pinks in less than 20 minutes when the rest of the guys didn't catch anything!! Has anybody successfully used pink plastic worms in tidal Fraser and has any recommendations on the setup and retrieve??
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North Arm ends in New West.
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my friend was using small pink worms and hook trying to get some trout and pinks kept biting the worm. great fight on a 5'6" rod and 4lb test.
I then tied on a blue clouser pattern I used for bonefish in belize and proceeded to catch 2 pinks in 15 minutes.
if you can get the lure, fly, blade or spoon into the strike zone. a pink will bite it