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Mike G

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Posts posted by Mike G

  1. On 4/22/2018 at 7:11 AM, Mike G said:

    John,

    This looks like a good deal. A boat with MSRP of $300 going for $159. It might not satisfy all the items on your wish list, but you will have some money left for your son's college text books.

    https://www.google.com/shopping/product/3251280582588915820?lsf=seller:6583990,store:15748444081696496845&prds=oid:15504562982251758637&q=farm+and+fleet+kayak&hl=en&ei=0HjcWtebOaXVjwS5r6Yo&lsft=gclid:Cj0KCQjw5fDWBRDaARIsAA5uWTjxvIw5_R196onaat3tdGTEBQgBbt-X8uSsjF6T1gU1w7rVY7YFg0AaAhWQEALw_wcB

    The sale is on again as of this A.M. $159 for the Angler. Same model without rod holders $139.

  2. On 5/17/2018 at 8:01 AM, Eric said:

    That perch pattern will definitely catch fish! So will the “Air Ick” cork in the right circumstances.

    The Whopper Plopper has turned on a whole new generation of bass fishermen to that style of lure. I’m sure it has made River 2 Sea a pretty penny in the processs, but it has also helped people catch a lot of fish ... increasing their confidence and enjoyment in the sport.

    A lot of budding bass anglers are too young to remember the originals that may have inspired the WP, or simply aren’t / weren’t exposed to musky lures.

    It amazes me just how much the bass fishing landscape has changed overall. Growing up, seems like there were only a handful of rod, reel, and line manufacturers. Many of the dozens of new brands look so unfamiliar to me! You hear the younger crowd talking about Dobyn’s rods, P-Line, Sun Line, etc.

    And spending $14.99 on a frog lure or $12.99 on a Whopper Plopper is nothing. Kids have a $100+ per month cell phone habit. 

    Probably tough for a generation of anglers who grew up pouring their own lead head jigs to save a few bucks to fathom. And I don’t blame ‘em.

     

    Eric,

    Thanks for reminding me of the Gallo Plopper.

    40631800982_92da7f05c8_z.jpgRototail by Michael Gerharz, on Flickr

    I should be able to do some head to head comparisons when the topwater bite is on.

    Now I am not sure about comparing modern lures to cell phones. Can I test Uber on a Whopper Plopper?  

  3. On 5/17/2018 at 6:33 AM, rich mc said:

    mike i would have bet you that you would have it painted red head and white in honor of Lefty

     

    Rich,

    A simple R/W would work and put the cost under $8 hooks and all. 2 for the price of one 4 3/8" Wopper plopper.

  4. On 5/16/2018 at 11:42 AM, Scott Ferguson said:

    After you buy the knock off blank lure, split rings, hooks,  jig skins, shipping and your time to put them all together, are you really saving much money?  Those jig skins are pretty interesting. I've never been too keen on photo realistic paint jobs, but I know a lot of guys are.  How durable are they? Do they go on the baits easily?  The baits that work very well for me seem to do as well or better ter when most of the paint has been knocked off, but if I was to come across lures that were cheap enough and I really hated the colors, I can see trying them.

     

    Scott,

    Part of the equation that makes this work for me is that I like to tinker with lure building. Thus my time is not a problem ,and I already have the rings hooks and tools to finish the lure left from other projects.  I could have gone with a simpler paint job. I splurged $2 on the jig skin because I wanted to see how they work. It also leaves me with a lure that compares with the $16.99 4 3/8" Perch finish Wopper Plopper.  

    BTW the skin is fairly easy to put on and really tough.  I used a brand new Xacto blade for some minor trimming around the shrink. It still required a lot of pressure to cut the stuff. 

  5. poes-awaker-hero.jpg

     

    Who would have thought that Poe Lure’s 8” Awaker would inspire a Bass bait half its size? Who would have thought that the bass bait would cost almost as much? Since Dahlberg’s Whopper Plopper is firmly established as a fish getter, I was glad to see a lower cost plopper appear in Barlow’s lure lineup. If you are handy at basic lure building and painting, you can get in the plopper game without taking a second mortgage to cover the $15 cost of the Dahlberg model.

    870177.jpg

    It comes in 3.5”, 4” and 5” sizes for $7.00, $7.50, and $8.00 respectively. You do have to finish the body and add hooks. Since clear baits have become popular, you might consider just painting on eyes and gills.

     

    For the one I built, I decided to try out the new Jig Skin system-a sleeve that slips over the lure body and shrinks tight over the body when dipped in boiling water. I used their Perch pattern. Here’s what I started with.

    28278147558_5f011fe573_z.jpgPartsA by Michael Gerharz, on Flickr

    Here is the lure ready to go into the boiling water.

    27279763947_fcc49342f9_z.jpgReadytoshrink by Michael Gerharz, on Flickr

     

    The results.

    41249912925_a0ae8376f9_z.jpgFinishedplopperB by Michael Gerharz, on Flickr

     

  6. Google Booby Fly, and like magic you will get all the info you need.  From the images that come up it looks like, you replace the hour glass lead eye with a section of cylindrical foam and, if you like, paint eyes on the ends. I see all kinds of patterns, streamers, buggers, bunnies... mostly using marabou wings and tails. Hats off to you as casting a sinking line is not for the faint of heart. 

  7. On 4/19/2018 at 6:52 AM, rich mc said:

     i can see furled tail and body of eyelash yarn  under the foam head

     

    Rich,

    after fasting and abstaining from no-alcoholic drink, I got the same vision you had. Substitute an eyelash leech for the complex Zoo Cougar body. Brilliant!

    Tom

    Enlightening! I never knew you could fluff up eyelash like that. Now I hope I can find my old suede brush. The blue shoes are long gone. If I don't find the brush, I will use rich's trick.

    Mike's trick: when wrapping eyelash on a body, I keep a cup of water near the vise. I constantly wet the fingers of my off hand and stroke the fibers up and back to avoid overwraps. Flies usually look great when they dry though you can primp and groom more. Where can I get a tiny hair dryer?

  8. This is a great and endless discussion. Sit In, SitONTop... How did we get so far into the discussion without mentioning SUPs like this one?

     

    full-18705-44574-kaku3.jpg

    You can see this one is well equipped. The micro power pole is frosting on the cake. With the board going for $850, I see about 2 grand in equipment on board.. You guys that are more into it can comment on the need for electronics, like sonars and trolling motors. I admire this angler's use of the traditional paddle.

  9. Great Idea to name your boat.  I have a homemade canoe named after the  African Wildebeest, the Gnu for short. 

    Two other boats came with the name already on them-Wenonah and Lowe.

    When you get a faster kayak, Terry, name it Liquor, because "Brandy is dandy, but liquor is quicker."

     

  10. We owe a lot to Lefty. He is up there with all some great outdoor writers like Ray Bergman, AJ McClane, and Tom McNally, all of whom kept my interest in fly fishing alive over the years. Lefty did so much that it is hard to put it all in a nutshell. He put it in his Bug.

    Lefty’s Bug 27299390579_7d9aaa8d51_c.jpgLeftyBugOrig by Michael Gerharz, on Flickr

     

    Here’s what it says. This is a bug you can make yourself with easily obtained materials. Lefty came up with it when he was a guide on the Potomac. He needed a bug that beginners could handle and cast all day. You do not need a Black Belt in One Handed Skagit Casting to catch bass on this one. Fly fishing is for e everyone.

    I forgot to mention that Lefty is also an internet star. A Google search will call up countless articles, blogs and videos. Recently I rediscovered the link to the classic video of Lefty tying his signature Deceiver, showing above.

    I think this song fits.

     

  11. I will be watching this since I have built a few in my time. I never gave it much consideration as a way to get rich quick. Millions of Americans, Canadians, Europeans, and Asians know how to build rods; so you are competing with the world market. For the three Gs - grass, glass, and graphite - the niches are overflowing. Unless you can come up with a miracle rod material or a miracle gadget, Ronald's is a better choice.

  12. Quote me on this, "A bottle of wine is too good a thing to be enjoyed just once."

    Once the wine is gone give the bottle a new life as a candlestick. And more importantly give the cork a chance to enrich your fishing life. I am just beginning to see the possibilities in the corks I used to toss out.  The new synthetic ones are especially intriguing. Elsewhere I have already exhibited my Prop Popper.  Here's my new 2018 creation-the Roto-Popper.

    40631800982_92da7f05c8_z.jpgRototail by Michael Gerharz, on Flickr

    If you want to get into this, here are my insights so far. Dark Day, dark wine cork; Light Day, light wine cork. Contrary to the opinion of French Chefs, red wine corks work very well on fish.

  13. On 3/8/2018 at 7:04 AM, rich mc said:

    tim had his tightline booth across from me last weekend at the hawkeye fly show   his stack of books vanished real quick.

     

    Tim Holschlag?

    John, can you compare it to Holschlag's book?

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