myspacedave
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2014
- Messages
- 154
So, firstly I must thank all of you who reached out to offer advice, hints, tips, tricks, jokes, and even the comments that didn't make sense, made me think.
Secondly, I wanted to ask some more experienced anglers their opinions/beliefs (hopefully factual) on how the temperature, not necessarily the weather in general, but Degrees Celsius/Farenheit.
Last week we had some cool nights. I think it was around 12 or 14 for about 5 nights or so before it began heating up again. I read that this is something to look for as an indicator of a run/staging in lieu of rain, and it appears to be the case.
My question is if the temperature heats up again, and still no significant rainfall has dropped, which is what is happening this week, do the fish then move back farther out into the lake, or do they hold their positions and hug the mud?
The reason I'm asking is I don't have a boat. I unfortunately do not yet have the luxury to just go where the fish are. I have to wait for them to come to me... I bide my time with bass/pike/walleye season, but not the same.
Oo! Another question just came to mind: Does the angle of retrieve affect the bite? It looks like the boaters were getting all the fish, leaving shore fisherman skunked. I know they have better depth control, but does the angle of retrieve affect the fish's willingness to strike? I guess it looks unnatural for fish to swim out of current. Any ideas to help with this? I was trying some methods that I selfishly don't wish to share for the general public, as the piers bring out the crazy in people, and my methods are often unorthodox.
Secondly, I wanted to ask some more experienced anglers their opinions/beliefs (hopefully factual) on how the temperature, not necessarily the weather in general, but Degrees Celsius/Farenheit.
Last week we had some cool nights. I think it was around 12 or 14 for about 5 nights or so before it began heating up again. I read that this is something to look for as an indicator of a run/staging in lieu of rain, and it appears to be the case.
My question is if the temperature heats up again, and still no significant rainfall has dropped, which is what is happening this week, do the fish then move back farther out into the lake, or do they hold their positions and hug the mud?
The reason I'm asking is I don't have a boat. I unfortunately do not yet have the luxury to just go where the fish are. I have to wait for them to come to me... I bide my time with bass/pike/walleye season, but not the same.
Oo! Another question just came to mind: Does the angle of retrieve affect the bite? It looks like the boaters were getting all the fish, leaving shore fisherman skunked. I know they have better depth control, but does the angle of retrieve affect the fish's willingness to strike? I guess it looks unnatural for fish to swim out of current. Any ideas to help with this? I was trying some methods that I selfishly don't wish to share for the general public, as the piers bring out the crazy in people, and my methods are often unorthodox.