Has anyone tried casting soft plastic swimbaits on heavy jigs for staging salmon or steelhead in big river situations (ie: lower Niagara)? I'm thinking you could throw these anywhere you would cast a 3-way with a Kwikfish or a heavy spoon. I haven't seen much written about such applications but based on how they do on lakers, I can't see why they wouldn't work. Thoughts?
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Swimbaits for Slamon and Steelhead?
#1
Posted 26 August 2016 - 09:54 AM
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#2
Posted 26 August 2016 - 10:15 AM
I've tried it with some powerbait swimbaits and it didn't work even though i was fishing a pool that definitely had fish in it. It seems from my experience 9 out of 10 times, staging salmon will only bite a lure out of irritation. Which is why crankbaits and spoons work so well, because they displace more water and make noise, all of which my irritate a salmon into biting.
#3
Posted 26 August 2016 - 11:01 AM
N8orDie,
Swim baits definitely catch trout and salmon. If you are trying them in the lower Niagara you could potentially catch anything on them. Give the Berkley Ripple shads a try or Keitech swimbaits. White and/or chartreuse has worked for me.
Good luck!
#4
Posted 26 August 2016 - 11:37 AM
#5
Posted 26 August 2016 - 12:43 PM
3 inch senko would work.white or rainbow color. but would use a marabou jig over swimbaits if i want salmon.
#6 Guest_tossing iron_*
Posted 26 August 2016 - 01:37 PM
Salmon NOT Slamon.
Don't know why but irritates me like crazy.
Lol
#7 Guest_tossing iron_*
Posted 26 August 2016 - 01:46 PM
Uhggggggg
My rant for today
#8
Posted 27 August 2016 - 10:50 AM
Thanks for the input everybody
#9
Posted 28 August 2016 - 06:58 PM
Hopefully they'll work for some slamonns
#10
Posted 02 October 2016 - 08:15 PM
Swimbaits have been a major game changer for trout species.Trout should be more active with swimsuits earlier and later in the year when they become a bit more aggressive. I would start with a quality swimsuit with lots of action in the tail and try it on lighter line. This will allow the bait to sink down a bit while giving it a slow retrieve. Always make sure you rig the swimbait as straight as possible. Hope this helps
Cheers Henry
#11
Posted 02 October 2016 - 10:48 PM
Swimbaits have been a major game changer for trout species.Trout should be more active with swimsuits earlier and later in the year when they become a bit more aggressive. I would start with a quality swimsuit with lots of action in the tail and try it on lighter line. This will allow the bait to sink down a bit while giving it a slow retrieve. Always make sure you rig the swimbait as straight as possible. Hope this helps
Cheers Henry
So I need a swimsuit and a swimbait? Rgr that
#12
Posted 03 October 2016 - 09:23 AM
#13
Posted 06 October 2016 - 05:25 PM
I've heard enough to give'r a try this season. Thanks.
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