How to Fish Wild Shiners - PART ONE
2016/7/21 11:34:32
There is more to catching Bass with Wild Shiners than watching a strike indicator. Catching Bass with wild shiners is perceived by most to be sitting, watching a strike indicator. When done professionally a multitude of factors are involved with the end process of setting the hook and catching bass. Where to fish; how to hook the bait; the bait; how a bass eats a wild shiner; and the technique to fish the wild shiner are all professional considerations. There is action and thrill involved! There is more than one way, one place, more than one set of equipment, involved in catching bass with wild shiners.. Some may think it抯 like sitting on a stump- it shouldn抰 be. In this article subjects covered are: 1. Where to fish. 2. Hooking the wild shiner. 3. The techniques of trolling, anchor fishing, free line fishing, Carolina rig fishing, dead shiner fishing and how to hook the shiner in each method. 4. How bass eat a wild shiner. 5. Other fish that will bite your wild shiner. 6. The Vital Hook Set. 7. Equipment. 8. Handling the bass. 9. Photographing the bass. 10. The wild shiner itself including how to make it better than when you got it. 11. Locating shiner fishing places. The information comes from years of guiding clients to MONSTER BASS with wild shiners; lots of study; and brain picking other wild shiner fishing experts.
揅atching bass with Wild Shiners is more than watching a strike indicator!?br />
Where to Fish Wild Shiners
There are three main areas bass concentrate. Grass Mats are excellent places to fish wild shiners. Grass Mats are topped out vegetation or vegetation that has grown and is floating. Areas with scattered grass clumps are excellent areas to fish wild shiners. And trees or wood are excellent places to fish wild shiners.
Fishing a grass mat involves anchoring around the mat and placing the bait near the mat, or letting the bait swim under the mat. Scattered grass areas may be fished effectively by anchoring or trolling. Wood and trees can be fished by trolling or anchoring. Spawning grounds are excellent areas to shiner fish. These areas can be trolled, drifted, anchored or fished with wild shiners in an artificial lure fishing method.
揋rass Mats are excellent places to fish Wild Shiners.?br />
There is nothing like the thrill of the catch. To achieve more thrills of more catches it takes patience, skill, knowledge, and applying all.
Hooking the Wild Shiner
There are four ways to hook a wild shiner. Each way has advantages and disadvantages. Each way has a reason. The four locations for hooking the wild shiner are through the lips, below the dorsal fin, above the anal fin and in the tail.
The most common and most widely used hooking procedure is to hook the wild shiner through the lips. Done correctly the point of the hook goes through the lower lip and comes out one of the two air holes in the top of the head of the wild shiner. The placement of the hook through the air hole gives more substance for the hook to hold. The hook stays in place better. Bass eat shiners head first. Lip hooking increases hook set ratio. Fishing line has tension or pull. With the hook in the lips the wild shiner tends to swim back to the boat. (The line tension causes the wild shiner to face the angler. The shiner swims the way he faces.) Lip hooking reduces swimming action of the bait and the bait tends to stay in one place. Sometimes you want the shiner to stay put and sometimes you want him to move. How you hook him makes a difference.
A sub category of lip hooking the wild shiner in the lips is hooking the wild shiner in the head. Basically, the hook is placed through the meaty part of the bait just behind the two air holes. You get the advantages of lip hooking, a more solid positioning of the hook, and a little more action out of the bait.
揌ook the Wild Shiner through the lower lip and then bring the point of the hook through one of the air holes in the top of the head.?br />
To hook the wild shiner under the dorsal fin run the hook through the meat in the back of wild shiner just below the dorsal fin. The exact placement of the hook is only important in that the angler should be able to rip the hook through the shiner when he sets the hook. A shiner will face away from the angler when hooked this way. The shiner will tend to swim more. When tension is placed on the line the shiner will come to the top and make splashes. Sometimes the splashing is enough to get a curious bass to strike. The splashing also draws attention. When splashing, the wild shiner looks like a bait trying to escape a bass. An angler can cause a wild shiner to swim UNDER cover when hooked this way. Bass eat wild shiners head first. Hook set to hook up ratio is reduced. The wild shiner tends to come up to the surface when hooked this way. Sometimes the difference in getting a bass to strike or not is based on whether the shiner swims or not.
揟he hook is placed through the shiner below the dorsal fin.?br />
Hooking the wild shiner above the anal fin is used when you need the shiner to swim under a mat to produce a bite. The idea is that with the hook on the bottom of the shiner the hook is less likely to get stuck in the mat. Basically, this is the same as hooking the wild shiner under the dorsal fin. The major difference is that the hook can easily be pulled out of the shiner when it is placed above the anal fin. By pulling the rod tip down while the shiner is under the mat the shiner is pulled out of the bottom of the mat and when the rod tip is given to the shiner the shiner will swim further under the mat. Lifting the rod tip up or to the side will cause the shiner to dig deeper into the bottom of the mat. Many, many times the difference in getting a bite or getting that MONSTER bite is based on the location of the shiner. On the edge of the mat or swimming under it can be a vital difference.
Tail hooking has the distinct advantage of getting the shiner to swim. And it has the distinct disadvantage of greatly reduced hook up success.
When to use each hook placement method is based on what the bass are doing, how the angler is trying to catch them, the quality of the bait, and what other fish in the area are doing. For example, if needle fish or gar are in the area the shiners should not be near the surface as the needle fish and gar will wound and kill the bait.
SEE PART TWO: http://www.fishin.com/forums2/conten...iners-PART-TWO
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