Red Childress
10-03-2010, 07:16 AM
I had read an article in an issue of MHM a few years ago (I think) about leaving your bait in the water an extra 30-60 seconds after you have finished the retrieve, so I have been doing it and picking up some nice bonus fish that may not have eaten otherwise.
After every ten casts or so or when I am re-positioning the boat with the trolling motor, I have just been leaving the lure in the water and the current gives it a little "life" without even moving the bait cuz the water is moving faster than the boat as we slip drift downstream. With these longer rods, I can have a foot or two of rod submerged right beside the trolling motor (added vibration/sound right beside my bait).
As I had just spoken to some walleye trollers motoring by yesterday, my DC-10 submerged right beside the trolling motor and my head turned backwards talking to my clients, a 44-incher slammed it. Who knows if that fish had followed me (or one of the other 3 rods going) but nonetheless, the fish was netted. At the time the fish ate, my blades were not even going in full rotation but were just fluttering in the current as I was slowly pulling us away from the shoreline. This is the 6th time that this has happened to me since June. The other 5 times I had on Hellhounds, Mantas or MagDawgs so it appears it is effective when using baits that are just "sitting" there too.
Is it the trolling motor that attracts the fish to the bait or had they followed the bait on a prior cast and were just "lurking" under the boat?? Still not sure......All I know is that for just an extra 30 seconds of keeping my bait in the water as a "deadstick", we picked up an extra half dozen fish.
After every ten casts or so or when I am re-positioning the boat with the trolling motor, I have just been leaving the lure in the water and the current gives it a little "life" without even moving the bait cuz the water is moving faster than the boat as we slip drift downstream. With these longer rods, I can have a foot or two of rod submerged right beside the trolling motor (added vibration/sound right beside my bait).
As I had just spoken to some walleye trollers motoring by yesterday, my DC-10 submerged right beside the trolling motor and my head turned backwards talking to my clients, a 44-incher slammed it. Who knows if that fish had followed me (or one of the other 3 rods going) but nonetheless, the fish was netted. At the time the fish ate, my blades were not even going in full rotation but were just fluttering in the current as I was slowly pulling us away from the shoreline. This is the 6th time that this has happened to me since June. The other 5 times I had on Hellhounds, Mantas or MagDawgs so it appears it is effective when using baits that are just "sitting" there too.
Is it the trolling motor that attracts the fish to the bait or had they followed the bait on a prior cast and were just "lurking" under the boat?? Still not sure......All I know is that for just an extra 30 seconds of keeping my bait in the water as a "deadstick", we picked up an extra half dozen fish.