Hollywood
is part black.
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2007
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I haven't been fishing since I was a kid but find myself wanting to take it up. Anyone have suggestions on where to start? Poles, lures, bait, etc.
I like the lazyman fishing Russ mentioned, kicking back with a cold one while hanging out with friends or family and catching trout or catfish, but I would like to do more fishing. Any opinions on telescopic rods? Are they complete crap or worth it to get one when I wanna take a ride on a side by side or ATV packing minimal gear?
I could google it but figured I'd ask here as well. How do you fish for bass, for example, with a lot of weeds and vegetation in the water? I've never been bass fishing but it looks like a ton of fun.
Maybe start with the basics, like one of these and work your way up.
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Seriously though, like someone mentioned start with some of the local city lakes. Just make sure you have a license. Also, the game and fish (i think) site will list when lakes are going to be stocked.
I was the king of hooking minnows to the bamboo poles around the dock when I was a kid. Too bad I never liked the taste of the fish I caught. Grandpa was quite happy to take care of my surplus.
I like the lazyman fishing Russ mentioned, kicking back with a cold one while hanging out with friends or family and catching trout or catfish, but I would like to do more fishing. Any opinions on telescopic rods? Are they complete crap or worth it to get one when I wanna take a ride on a side by side or ATV packing minimal gear?
I could google it but figured I'd ask here as well. How do you fish for bass, for example, with a lot of weeds and vegetation in the water? I've never been bass fishing but it looks like a ton of fun.
I used to do a lot of cane pole fishing when I was younger. Hook, worm, sinker, & bobber attached to a line at the end of a pole. Don't get much simpler than that. Caught many blue gill & perch like that.
About 10 years ago "inline" rods were really a thing, they had no guides the line threaded through the rod blank and came out the other end. Much less friction so the rods cast better. The problem is it's just too damn easy to drop the line to where it falls out of the top of the rod and then if you can't find your threading tool it's a pain in the butt to thread the line back through. Also they had lots of breakage issues. My guess is the rods were built poorly, taking guides off a rod shouldn't inherently make it weaker, but they were weaker, so my guess is the blanks were made where to make the hole in the middle bigger, they reduced the thickness of the walls and they broke.
Telescopic rods just don't feel right IMO.
You can get 3 or 4 piece rods that break down very small, hell I have a 4 piece big boat trolling rod that I used to take to Loreto in Baja that worked well.
Around weeds, topwater works better, so things like spinner baits or jerk baits. There are some huge topwater baits that are great too but they're very expensive and difficult to cast so tight to weeds is difficult. The first one I used we were striper fishing in the California Delta. I made a cast, the spinning reel got line looped all over it. As I was backing line off the reel to get the nest out, a 4 pound striper came and hit the lure which was sitting still in the water! I hand lined it in.
YOu can also fish on top of the vegetation, frog lures work really well for that, are fairly weedless, and get explosive strikes from bass hiding below.
I much prefer a sectional rod than a telescoping. Sectional has much better feel to it and they pack up just as small, jmho
Eagle Claw Rod
Thanks a lot for the info, I'm gonna look into a 4 piece rod instead.
https://tforods.com/traveler-rods/
Looks like prices have gone up since I last looked. I love TFO rods my 2nd flyrod was a TFO. My dad and I later got to know the CFO of the company he was on multiple trips to Loreto we were on. IN fact I think the 3 piece spinning rod I have he actually gave me for free I don't think I had to buy it. Works really well and it's a 3 piece so still pretty small when broken down.
Another tip, spinning rods in multi piece take bigger rod cases than bait casting rods do, the reason is the first guide on a spinning rod, the one closest to the reel, is MUCH larger than the first guide on a casting rod. It's because of how flat the line lays to the rod with a baitcast reel compared to a spinning reel. So no matter what when broken down, the spinning rod takes up more room because of the size of that guide.
So if space is a big concern, if you can cast a baitcasting reel well, get a baitcaster setup./
I personally can't stand baitcasting, just drives me nuts trying to thumb the line and prevent overruns, I can spin cast, I can fly cast, but I've never been any good at baitcasting get overruns regularly, or no distance if I don't get an overrun. Good casters with bait casters make it look easy, for whatever reason I don't.
I was just watching a Youtube video on baitcasting! They look so easy and smooth casting those, and the one time I tried it I made a giant mess of it. I apologized to my buddy and never was allowed to touch it again.
I'll have to look at those rods. It's not so much space as length, a problem I'm unfamiliar with . I wanna be able to put it in a pack or in the box of a Ranger, for example. I saw a sweet setup yesterday that someone made. They used pvc pipe to make rod holders sitting right behind the backseat of a Ranger crew. Rods looked to be under 6' long, so they didn't have to be broken down.