Very good info!
I've been using the Ahi Pro Series 200 line nets. I use a 10 ft in the slip and an eight foot to cast. The nets are very soft\smooth and the knots are almost non detectable. This is a key if you want to minimize damage to your bait. Those Bass Pro nets will catch bait in a slip just as good as any but they will really damage the bait. Run your hand across them and it's like sand paper and will scrap scales off your bait in a hurry.
Another thing to consider is weight. I bought these nets because they had more weight (1.35 pounds per foot). More weight means faster fall and better for deeper gait, right? Maybe not.. At first I had a heck of a time getting deeper bait when everyone else was doing well. Lance and I talked about it and we decided the extra weight was causing the net to close on the fall faster making a smaller catch area when the net reached the bait. I ended up removing every four (or fifth?) weight. This isn't a net that's cast but set up in a slip so the loss of weight didn't really affect the "opening" of the net at cast since it isn't "cast" anyway. The net now falls in a wider pattern and is easier to pull up with the less weight. You want one that makes a pocket but not one that makes a narrow cone and I feel one pound per foot works the best. Now this is for a 3/8" mesh net. Going up to a 1/2 inch net may really do a great job with that 1.35 pounds per foot as there is less drag from the net on the fall. The down size there is more "usable sized" bait snagged in the larger mesh.
As for my eight footer I'll leave the extra weight on. It's for shallow water gizzards and can move down on the sides to trap faster baits where a slower dropping net might not get down to trap them in time.
So my net specs for alewives is:
3\8" mesh
soft quality netting
Larger horn
longest pull line I can get (Mine has 30 ft with another 30 ft added)
Pie panels
One pound per foot weights.
Here is some information on a guy that is the absolute authority and designer of castnets. You tell him what you want to catch and the conditions and he builds the net for you...
Tim Wade
http://www.lagooner.com/photoPages/wadetim/



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