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Post them sumbitches! This place needs more fish porn! Besides, your pics might convince me to head east one of these days. |
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I will say right now that if you're looking for very technical, very challenging fishing, Ham's Fork is the place. relatively small water, slow moving and clear, overgrown steep-sided banks, 6x or smaller tippet a necessity and torpedoes the main quarry. |
Guys I could use some pointers. Just moved back to KC (Overland Park area). Been years so I don’t remember the local scene real well. Where are some good spots close by to fish? I would love to take my sons out over the next few weeks. Also if any of you live in the area and have kids in the 8-12 range, and you want to do a fishing meetup, let me know. Thanks
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I haven't lived in kc for years but that used to be a thing |
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Anybody found this site. Jimmy is a really great communicator. He gives a little inspiration every morning along with a fishing tip. It's a good way to start the day. He lives in Oklahoma. Wonder if he's a Chiefs fan?
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My tip for hot and clear mid afternoon conditions is throw the book at shade and cover Fished the local, beaten to death lake last week and got a nice 4 pound largemouth... I’d thrown everything at this shady bay, particularly the shady side of this one big overhanging tree My trusty beetle spinner, a Texas rig plastic and a Rapala crank bait... and NOTHING worked til I went old school with live red wigglers and a bobber on a tiny bait hook |
Man lives in OK.
My tip for August fishing: Stay home with the A/C turned way down. Just kidding. Something me and my friend Howard came up with: Tie a gold/silver double barrel swivel to your line, then tie about a foot of line to the other end of the swivel. Then tie on a 1/0-2/0 hook and slip (Texas rig) a 6-inch straight tail onto the hook. Note: this is what we used to call a 'weightless T-rig,' and you have to use either a spinning rig or an ultralight baitcasting rig to cast the thing. Anyway, cast to weeds, deadfalls, shadelines, rip-rap, some kind of structure that would get fish out of direct sunlight. Then on a semi-tight line allow the rig to fall on a count. I usually started with ten seconds, and worked my way up to as much as 30 seconds. This rig drops at about a half foot per second. Then as slowly as possible, reel it in. Like turn the handle about a quarter turn for every 5 seconds kind of slow. Short 3-4 seconds pauses every full turn. All the way back to you, or until the rig is in full sunlight again. The swivel is a tiny prey item that the worm is stalking. This can and will provoke a predatory response from bass, even when they aren't all that interested in actually eating. They just can't resist getting in on the hunt. You can make the thing very enticing depending on how fast you reel, but it should always be pretty slow. Try casting it into the shallows and watch how the worm behaves when you reel that slow; it kind of glides, hovers, twitches into motion then glides some more. It won't take long for you to get the idea. 2nd note: This is a light line technique. Most spinning rigs aren't spooled with more than 8-lb. test anyway, but just in case, I wouldn't go higher than 10-lbs to the swivel. Off the back of the swivel I'd try to go a bit lighter. like from 8-lbs. to 6-lbs. Or 10 to 8. That being said, obviously you aren't going to be fishing this in heavy cover, but rather along cover, maybe a foot or two off. Which is why you need to allow it to drop on semi-tight line, so you can feel any take and set the hook quickly before that fish runs back into his hole. Anyway, I've caught some nice fish on the thing, and more importantly for this time of year, I've been able to get some action when everyone else is just straining water. |
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