Members livingtofish Posted April 12, 2016 Members Posted April 12, 2016 I say go when you can go. I had a good friend tell me once you never know till you go and that has been true many times. Last weekend I was down and the wind was from the northeast which is usually bad especially after a front, but I had one of my better trips as far as keepers go. So who knows just go and enjoy. Lifes2Short, Basschomper and Old plug 3
dprice Posted April 12, 2016 Posted April 12, 2016 nIce job Living to fish do you care to give a tip? did you fish in any diferent manner? Dprice priceheatingair.com
Members livingtofish Posted April 12, 2016 Members Posted April 12, 2016 last Saturday every keeper I caught were on swimbaits rigged on a 1/4 head. Fish were staging on points with a little wind. Lucky Saturday the wind didn't howl. My guess they will be on that bite until spawn which could be soon looking at the weather forcast
Walcrabass Posted April 13, 2016 Posted April 13, 2016 The reason fish don't bite is the same reason we don't feel like eating........ tummy ache. Whatever makes the stomach upset makes the appetite go away. With fish this is first and foremost their air bladder. Imagine having a balloon in your body right by your stomach and having it over-inflate or suddenly under-inflate. It would be kind of like getting punched in the stomach. This is what I feel happens with pressure changes in the atmosphere where fish are concerned. Thus when cold or storm fronts are coming in it is easy to see why it knocks them off for awhile. Just my opinion. No scientific manuals or paragraphs to quote. Have a good laugh if you want...... Walcrabass
fishinwrench Posted April 13, 2016 Posted April 13, 2016 1 hour ago, Walcrabass said: The reason fish don't bite is the same reason we don't feel like eating........ tummy ache. Whatever makes the stomach upset makes the appetite go away. With fish this is first and foremost their air bladder. Imagine having a balloon in your body right by your stomach and having it over-inflate or suddenly under-inflate. It would be kind of like getting punched in the stomach. This is what I feel happens with pressure changes in the atmosphere where fish are concerned. Thus when cold or storm fronts are coming in it is easy to see why it knocks them off for awhile. Just my opinion. No scientific manuals or paragraphs to quote. Have a good laugh if you want...... Walcrabass I'll buy that. Some days you can just tell that the fish don't want to eat. Something comes over them.
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