
Microfishing Rods
#21
Guest_BenCantrell_*
Posted 22 August 2013 - 01:30 PM
Just like any other hobby, there will always be people who get excited about gear. Shrug.
#22
Posted 22 August 2013 - 03:50 PM
Gerald, I assume you mean members of the Percidae family?
not only percidae... for example, in Georgia spotted sunfish are considered game fish... but L. punctatus is acutally a smaller sunfish and a great aquarium inhabitant. So to capture and keep legally here in Georgia microfishing woudl be the way to go.
#29
Posted 23 August 2013 - 08:53 AM
#30
Guest_AMcCaleb_*
Posted 23 August 2013 - 09:37 AM
#33
Posted 23 August 2013 - 05:22 PM
"No thanks, a third of a gopher would merely arouse my appetite..."
#34
Guest_Skipjack_*
Posted 23 August 2013 - 06:40 PM
#35
Guest_rndouglas_*
Posted 23 August 2013 - 08:57 PM
I like to use a bright pink Gulp PowerBait worm piece as bait, so I just try for a hookset when I see it disappear (I'm awful with the tanago 'smallest' hooks though). That bait doesn't always work though....sometimes only a piece of worm/nightcrawler will catch fish for me. Although, sometimes a rubberband dipped in crawfish scent will catch topminnows/sunfish/etc. for me.
#36
Posted 24 August 2013 - 05:28 AM
Unlike rndouglas' situation, my chunk o' the country is running a water surplus this summer. (Considerable rains every day for a three week stretch in July, an no shortage on either side of that deluge either!) The streams are purt near impossible to fish with standard gear, let alone micro stuff, much of the time. I'm thinking that when the creeks are receding, yet still roiled up, would be a great time to go after smaller bullheads. Does anyone have experience microfishing down on the bottom in muddy waters, whether they be creek, backwater, pond, et cetera?
"No thanks, a third of a gopher would merely arouse my appetite..."
#37
Guest_CMStewart_*
Posted 26 August 2013 - 08:13 AM
But if we agree that a stick can work, why would someone want to pay over 100 when they could pay 10?
It weighs 2 ounces instead of 10, collapses to less than 2' instead of 4', and if you happen to hook a somewhat larger fish, will actually bend so you can get some fight out of the fish rather than just jerking it out of the water. One of the most memorable and exciting fights I've ever had with a fish was probably a 7" creek chub. My gear was light enough I wasn't sure I was going to be able to land it. If what happens between the time you hook a fish and the time you unhook the fish is not at all important or exciting for you, you might as well get a Black Widow from Walmart.
Similar question, Why would anyone get a flat screen TV when the older boxy ones cost half as much? Why drink a "good" beer when you could drink Milwaukee's Best for half the price? Why spend more than the absolute minimum on anything? Because it's better and you enjoy it more. If it's all the same to you, save the money. MIcro fishing is no different than anything else.
#39
Guest_Skipjack_*
Posted 26 August 2013 - 05:57 PM
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