• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Fishing!

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I do most of my fishing in fresh water, primarily in northwest Ontario. I use braided line for just about everything but deep water trout fishing. It creates too much resistance in the water for trolling at 80-120 feet deep.

I find it really stands up to bouncing on rocks and getting nicks much better than monofilament. I loose less lures as I don't have to worry as much about those nicks in the last 5 feet of line being an issue. I don't generally use a monofilament leader either.

Here's a shot of a haul this spring ice fishing.

IMG_2928.jpg
 
Mostly Gun Lake. Brothers and I are renting a house on the water and a boat for a week. We might hit some rivers around that area. For sure, we are ready for some fishing. Little late in the season, but the one brother just can't get away in the summer. Don't mind too much, I prefer to miss the crazies and their skidoos.

That's a short drive from Founders.....

That's a nice area, you should have a good time!
 
I just bought a baitcasting reel. Anyone have experience with these? It's something new to me.

I played around with the spool control, trying to eliminate the birds nest of line during casting. It's a pretty tricky reel. I've got a Michigan fishing trip coming up and I was hoping to use it for bass, but after some awful testing in my pool, I might also bring along one of my trusty spinning reels.
Practice Practice Practice... At first you will want it to feel like you are casting straight up in the air, then make your adjustments. Thumbing the spool takes hundreds of casts (for me anyway) to master.
Make sure that your line is ALWAYS wound onto the spool tightly and straight. Never try to cast with loose loops on the spool.
Use good line.
If you have magnetic cast control use it, but don't learn to rely on it and turn it all the way down as soon as you feel comfortable.
Learn how to adjust your reel based on the weight of the object that you are casting.
Buy a plastic casting weight for practice.
 
@Neobrew Without scale it's tough to guess how big those are but DAAAAANG those two must be huuuuge Northerns on the right, considering they are like twice the size of the others which were obviously keepers in their own right. Nice!
 
@Neobrew Without scale it's tough to guess how big those are but DAAAAANG those two must be huuuuge Northerns on the right, considering they are like twice the size of the others which were obviously keepers in their own right. Nice!

The largest one was 42". My nephew caught that one. It was an exciting moment. That one went for taxidermy! The next other one is probably about 36-38". That one is in my freezer and is slated for a big ol batch of fish chowder.
 
Went kayak fishing today. Great day to be on the water.

I re-wound my baitcaster with braided line. Man, I love that stuff. Caught a nice sea trout on it. I am going to do all my poles with it i think. I think I've got the hang of the baitcaster now.
 
The largest one was 42". My nephew caught that one. It was an exciting moment. That one went for taxidermy! The next other one is probably about 36-38". That one is in my freezer and is slated for a big ol batch of fish chowder.

Actually, I take that back. The 42" northern was on a different day that trip. The two larger ones shown there were in the upper 30"s.
 
kayak fishing Love it Porgies are good eats. I gut them in the kayak, when I get home, I score, them, rub with a olive oil, salt/pepper and herb mix, then throw them on the Akorn Kamado whole, about 300°- 350°. When done, the skin peels off and you can get the meat from the bones. messy but worth it.

Heading out on the kayak in the morning to see if there are any blues/stripers on the bait yet. If not. i'll switch over for jumbo porgies, sea bass, weakfish. Tried this on friday, and had a blue bite through the porgie rig. Caught a short fluke, which was safely returned for two reasons (shorts and a day late).

Blackfish opens next week. Will try this year to make some long paddles to the wrecks.
 
Yes, porgy for eating, can't keep the small ones. They're not everyone's favorite, but some people on the boat were from a southern state where the season had already closed! Looking forward to black fish too.
 
I had an eye opening experience this past weekend and fishing will never be the same for me.

I went up state in MI to do some river fishing, hoping to catch some salmon or steelhead. I've done a lot of panfishing, bass fishing, and pike and walleye fishing, as well as some brook trout fishing, but I have NEVER seen anything like this. I got out into the water and was watching the fish dart right past my legs. In the first five minutes in the river I had a huge Coho brush right up against my leg as he swam upstream.

We talked to a bunch of locals to try to figure out how to do it, and I've got to say everyone was very generous because we had no idea what we were doing and they taught us a bunch. These salmon are just incredible to catch, diving around like a pike, jumping like a bass. All on relatively light tackle considering the kind of fish we were catching.

Had quite a few hooked but only managed to land one, mostly because we didn't figure out how to catch them until the trip was mostly over. I can't wait to go again - I don't think I want to bother with any other kind of fishing again.
 
I had an eye opening experience this past weekend and fishing will never be the same for me.

I went up state in MI to do some river fishing, hoping to catch some salmon or steelhead. I've done a lot of panfishing, bass fishing, and pike and walleye fishing, as well as some brook trout fishing, but I have NEVER seen anything like this. I got out into the water and was watching the fish dart right past my legs. In the first five minutes in the river I had a huge Coho brush right up against my leg as he swam upstream.

We talked to a bunch of locals to try to figure out how to do it, and I've got to say everyone was very generous because we had no idea what we were doing and they taught us a bunch. These salmon are just incredible to catch, diving around like a pike, jumping like a bass. All on relatively light tackle considering the kind of fish we were catching.

Had quite a few hooked but only managed to land one, mostly because we didn't figure out how to catch them until the trip was mostly over. I can't wait to go again - I don't think I want to bother with any other kind of fishing again.

My two brothers and I spent last week fishing a lake in central Michigan. Caught one non-keeper Northern pike (first pic). We caught a lot of large bass, big yellow belly perch, and some record bluegills (really!). And I was afraid it was a little late in the season. Haha. I've fished that same lake a lot back when I was young and never had such luck fishing.

IMG_0115-X3.jpg


IMG_0169-XL.jpg


IMG_2049-X3.jpg


IMG_0204-XL.jpg


IMG_0219-XL.jpg
 
Ah man you guys are making me want to go FISHING! No can do right now. Gear has been packed up and put in storage in anticipation of our move.

Once we get settled in, I'm heading for a lake - never done that kind of fishing, I've only done deep-sea and then our surf fishing here - so looking forward to trying it out!

NICE work on these pictures - love looking at them. Thanks for letting me live vicariously for the moment!
 
A Few weeks ago I had trouble with my kayak and long story short, spent 17 hours adrift before making it to a light house and then rescue. PFD saved my life. Last weekend I broke out the surf gear and went to the beach where the kayak capsized and decide to change the narrative of last visit to it:

The 9ft spinner with a popper
IMG_0039.jpg


The 11ft with an old school Penn Squidder I refurbished as a winter project last year including adding magnets. Chunked bunker with this.

IMG_0040.jpg



I did have some trepidation looking at the landmarks across the water (I was taken by the tides from Long Island to Connecticut), but soon enough I was enjoying the day at the beach
 
image.jpeg
Happy Thanksgiving, I saw the sunrise today from a fishing boat underway to a wreck for black fishing. I caught two shorts, but hubby brought home the dinner ( for tomorrow) with this one.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top