Welcome to my blog!

I created this blog to share some of the vast amounts of information about fish, fishing and tips from other fisherman, my own ideas, fishing shows I've seen and information from around the Internet. Feel free to participate and if you have any ideas, tips, tricks or techniques you would like to share, please do so! Think of this blog as a one-stop for all your fishing info.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Settling the scent debate once and for all.

There is plenty of debate among anglers about the importance of scent on baits. Many companies sell attractants or many anglers like myself make their own. How important is scent? In my opinion, VERY. Why is my opinion better? Because it's backed by science. So let's settle the scent debate once and for all! The fact is that fish a) have nostrils, so they can smell and, b) most fish can smell one drop of scent in 100 gallons of water. So I'd say that warrants using scents. I've had mixed results with scents commercial and homemade. None of the commercial scents impressed me and I've had better results with homemade. This summer I learned something new though. Enzymes! A friend of mine tried YUM soft-baits with LPT (Live Prey Technology) Apparently, when a fish, shrimp, crayfish, worm or other live bait is wounded, it releases an enzyme that drives fish into a feeding frenzy. Problem is, a wounded bait only puts out a small amount of this enzyme, enough to attract only nearby predators. Well, the people at YUM have made an artificial replica of this enzyme and use it in their baits. Myself, I'd recommend the spray over the pre-scented packaged soft-baits so you can keep reapplying it to soft baits and other artificial baits too. The spray comes in 3 flavors, Shad, Shrimp and Garlic and all have the same enzyme stuff as the soft baits. They work too! They can attract fish from 20-30 feet away. All the YUM products seem reasonably priced too. A pack of 20 grubs will cost about $4 and a bottle of the spray is about $6. Not bad!

Saturday, November 27, 2010

My first post to my new blog. Here is a glue tip.

This is it! My first post to my new blog and as promised, a tip for all you readers/anglers.


Ever found yourself having a soft plastic slide down the neck of a jig head or hook after a few uses? Have you ever tied a knot (no matter what kind) just to have it undo on you and lose that prize fish? Here is a tip I learned this summer that you can't do without. Crazy Glue! A little dab of crazy glue (brand doesn't matter) on your knot or the neck of your jig head and that will hold it tight. Don't worry about the glue eating/weakening the line or soft plastics either, it's safe for mono, braid or fluorocarbon and is great for joining different types of line together. Haven't lost a fish yet.