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Gotta stick with what works.... they been catching fish for fifty years or more I throw all the old stuff because these fish get bombarded with these new baits and they forget about the ol plastic worm the jitterbug the hula popper jig and pig etc I guess im old fashioned plus 12 bucks on a average is alot per lure
In my experience, how it swims is a small spart. i had guys right next to me with expensive lures and equipment and switched back to Walmart lures because that's what the fish wanted that day. But I definitely want one in my box looks well made and attractive in the water.
LOVE THIS! As a MN angler, I as super happy with what you are doing with this. Blue gills have been shrinking for years. I'm all for reduced limits if it gets us bigger fish. Thank you for all your hard work on this. My tax dollars well spent here!
It's been known for many decades that selective harvest by anglers affects fish genetics, in this case creating a fitness landscape that selects for smaller size. Bull male bluegills guarding nests are easy to catch and hard to throw back. Nothing meaningful has been done or will be done about it because by design the MNDNR doesn't have the backbone to do what is necessary. The only real way way to preserve "big fish genetics" is to remove or overcome the selection pressure that is causing the issue. To do this you either have to have no harvest or a maximum size limit on harvest on a healthy population, which would reverse size trends discussed in this video occurring due to size selective harvest. Obviously this would not fly for a general regulation so the genetics of protected populations would then need to be seeded into populations experiencing decreasing size at sufficient rates to counter the existing fitness landscape causing the issue. Gene drives could be used to make this process more efficient. This could be done with currently available tech and resources and would very likely be effective but sadly these options will not be explored because our DNR operates 100+ years behind current fisheries science and is mostly concerned with exploiting our resources for revenue instead of conserving them.
Still use the Culprit 7 1/2 inch plastic worm in red and black have been for 45 years down here in Florida many lakes are tannic stained and when they're on the beds in springtime they hit that red and black worm first
I never understood the fun in literally knowing exactly where the fish are and then dropping your line ? Maybe I’m missing something. Is that really fishing ?
I deeply truely envy fisherman who have the luxury of fishing a swim bait using a fully exposed hook year round as it is a utterly deadly presentation Unfortunately in the lakes I do 90% of my fishing in only from about early to mid March to late April can I fish a swim bait using a bare hook and then I absolutely must keep it near the surface of the weed growth Come end of April early May its weedless T-Rigged presentations or reel in a coffee can sized clump of weeds 8/10 casts Don't get me wrong I do exceptionally well on T-rigged flukes and swimbaits all year long but I really miss the 90-95 hookup ratio of a bare hook like with using a chatterbait or jig head or under spin jig head.
First thing I taught my kids about fishing was how to identify and release bull males bluegills. I love this explanation. Someday, I’ll catch (and release) my first 10” bluegill. I’ve been fishing for over 40 years in Minnesota and I don’t have one yet. This DNR initiative will help.
I'm here cause I gut hooked a fish last week and had to cut the line. I felt terrible knowing it was because of my lack of skill and not just "something I can't help". Thanks for the tips! Started crushing the barbs on my hooks as well now.
Pro bass fishing has turned into a video game. Not about fishing. Reading a screen and dropping the bait down to them. While also the boat stays in whatever position they want. Catch them without electronics then that’s skill
Thank you so fuckin much dude, this was my worst fear as a new bass fisherman and I'm sure you just gave me the best advice and lesson anyone could ever give 🙏💯