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  1. #1
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    there is a difference

    I used to be what is called a "spoon plugger" it was a system that a guy named Perry[i think] used for bass fishing.It involved a lot of thought, and trolling, not just washing baits but but following a system. Cold fronts do effect fishing, and probably fishermen. What DJ says has been proven many times, just before a big weather change, fish go nutz. two days after is bad fishing. But thats not true of all water[imho] rivers and shallow murky lakes come back quicker. But there is one fact that remains true. "the harder you fish, the luckier you get" and they wont come looking for you.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by kygorski View Post
    I used to be what is called a "spoon plugger" it was a system that a guy named Perry[i think] used for bass fishing.It involved a lot of thought, and trolling, not just washing baits but but following a system. Cold fronts do effect fishing, and probably fishermen. What DJ says has been proven many times, just before a big weather change, fish go nutz. two days after is bad fishing. But thats not true of all water[imho] rivers and shallow murky lakes come back quicker. But there is one fact that remains true. "the harder you fish, the luckier you get" and they wont come looking for you.
    That's old school...but ****, I believe it is pretty much spot on

  3. #3
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    The indicaters on my Barometer shows that low presseure is associated with rain amd storms and high pressure is associated with fiar skyes and good weather. In his book SPOONPLUGING, Buck Perry, the Fahther of Structure Fishing (the guy Kygorski was referring to) worte that: "During your fishing, YOU SHOULD NOT THINK OF WEATHER IN TERMS OF TEMPERATURE. .. . . YOU SHOULD VIEW WEAHTER IN THEMS OF LIGHT. . . . THE LIGHER OR BRIGHER IT IS, THE TOUGHER THE FISHING WILL BE. THE DARKER THE CONDITIONS, THE BETTER IT WILL BE." Low pressuer equates to dark skys and high pressure equates to bright skyes.

    Buck goers on to explain that the best fishing is prior to the passage of a COLD FRONT (which also corralates to LOW PRESSUER). The PRE-COLD FRONT conditions are usually associated with dark conditions and good fishing, whereas POST COLD FRONT contiions are usually associated with BLUE SKYEW and lots of light.

    The bottom line is that the best days for the FISHERMAN is fair weather and clear bright skyes but the best days for CATHCING FISH is pre-frontal dark, cloudy days. That is what Buck says and it has been my exeriance also.

    Grumpy

  4. #4
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    I Agree 100%

    I know a couple of buddys have been with me on Green & I've told them it was getting ready to shut down when I saw the backend of the cloud line where a front was pushing through & it did. WE were catching good fish each time & when the cloud line passed we hardly got another bite the rest of the night when fishing until early am the next morning.I believe it messes it up worse than any other lake I fish. Could be wrong, but I absolutley believe in the barometric pressure in the case of a cold front causing a shut down after or a feeding frenzy before it passes through.

  5. #5
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    The fact is that rising or dropping barometric pressure has little effect on the fish....they experience way more pressure change when they change depths than any pressure changes associated with changing barometric pressure would have on them.

    The dropping barometric pressure with the associated lower light conditions actually effects the plankton (zoo and phyto planktons) by concentrating them higher in the water column in larger numbers which provides a smorgasborg of food for the baitfish and they begin to actively feed...the preditor gamefish is then turned on by this feeding activity and thus join in on the feeding frenzy. Rising pressure after the frontal passage has the opposite effect with the brighter light conditions, then you couple this with some other factors that can be associated with post frontal conditions such as dropping water temperatures which will have an adverse effect on the fish by dropping their body temperatures and slowing the metabolism at a time when they have full bellies from the prefrontal feeding...etc....etc...

    Basically, rising and dropping barometric pressure does not really effect the fish, but the conditions that are associated with these conditions can and does have positive and negative effects on the food chain which can have a positive or negative effect on your fishing.

    This is the kind of stuff I teach in my class on Eliminating Water....understanding the food chain and recognizing how changing environmental conditions of the different seasons of the year as well as other environment condition changes that can occur from one day to the next or one hour to the next can have an effect on the food chain and your targeted species is how you learn to make decisions on the when's, how and where you need to be fishing to increase your odds of catching your fish....of course in my class I focus on Bass as the target species since that is what I target every day during my guide season.

  6. #6
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    Have never really heard the angle in which Dave just posted. Quite frankly it makes perfect sense to me. I always believd and knew that pre-frontal was always the best time to fish and it will remain my thinking until I die... Now I know why.

    You get the baitfish excited and on the move and it in turn makes the bigger fish all happy happy happy. Which makes me Happy Happy Happy.

    Very nice Dave and thanks I will remember what I just read...

  7. #7
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    negative fish

    Theres probably a lot of reasons why fish go deep,and when they stay deep fishing isn't that great.When I used to ice fish,a few guys had flasher units they would put in the holes, you could watch deep fish ignore baits. But let them come up a few feet, and it could turn into a zoo at feeding time. I believe light conditions had a lot to do with that. Even on a blue bird day, If I wasn't up to trolling I'd anchor on the windiest side of the lake, and catcj something,but that was due to plankton and bait fish following the food into shallow dingy water.Heres something I used to check, major fishing events tried to coincide with "best fishing days",these can be planned weeks ahead of times, but a weather event could put the wjammy on it sometimes.

  8. #8
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    Dr Keith Jones, head of research at Berkley, has a book out called Knowing Bass. If you appreciate the scientific viewpoint on things, this is a great read. If science just isn't your thing, though, this book might make your head explode.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by hairball View Post
    Dr Keith Jones, head of research at Berkley, has a book out called Knowing Bass. If you appreciate the scientific viewpoint on things, this is a great read. If science just isn't your thing, though, this book might make your head explode.
    I appreciate the scientific viewpoint, but I'm not into reading stuff overloaded with complicated terminology I'd have to look up. Nor a bunch of raw data etc.

    Would you still recommend this book?

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by jcb View Post
    I appreciate the scientific viewpoint, but I'm not into reading stuff overloaded with complicated terminology I'd have to look up. Nor a bunch of raw data etc.

    Would you still recommend this book?
    Probably not - it gets pretty nerdy.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grumpy View Post
    The indicaters on my Barometer shows that low presseure is associated with rain amd storms and high pressure is associated with fiar skyes and good weather. In his book SPOONPLUGING, Buck Perry, the Fahther of Structure Fishing (the guy Kygorski was referring to) worte that: "During your fishing, YOU SHOULD NOT THINK OF WEATHER IN TERMS OF TEMPERATURE. .. . . YOU SHOULD VIEW WEAHTER IN THEMS OF LIGHT. . . . THE LIGHER OR BRIGHER IT IS, THE TOUGHER THE FISHING WILL BE. THE DARKER THE CONDITIONS, THE BETTER IT WILL BE." Low pressuer equates to dark skys and high pressure equates to bright skyes.

    Buck goers on to explain that the best fishing is prior to the passage of a COLD FRONT (which also corralates to LOW PRESSUER). The PRE-COLD FRONT conditions are usually associated with dark conditions and good fishing, whereas POST COLD FRONT contiions are usually associated with BLUE SKYEW and lots of light.

    The bottom line is that the best days for the FISHERMAN is fair weather and clear bright skyes but the best days for CATHCING FISH is pre-frontal dark, cloudy days. That is what Buck says and it has been my exeriance also.

    Grumpy
    if any of you have never read buck perrys spoonpluggin book I highly recomend it, you may have to read and reread a lot and go out and fish and reread this is the most insightful book on fishing I have ever read, buy it, read it , it is awsome, and I can't belive it was written so long ago, a lot of what you read in magazines and books these days is based on bucks work.

  12. #12
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    Right on! Buck Perry the father of structure fishing. Very smart man. He also wrote a lot of the good articles for Fishing Fact's Magazine back in the 1970's. Spoon plugs work!! They help you cover a lot of ground very fast.

    I troll them using lead core fishing line and heavy duty rods and reels on KY lake. A good plug retriever is a handy device to keep on the boat. I found that trolling crank baits also works well. And I'm learning where the fish (Bass) hang out in the hot summer months.

    Quote Originally Posted by linedrager View Post
    if any of you have never read buck perrys spoonpluggin book I highly recomend it, you may have to read and reread a lot and go out and fish and reread this is the most insightful book on fishing I have ever read, buy it, read it , it is awsome, and I can't belive it was written so long ago, a lot of what you read in magazines and books these days is based on bucks work.

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