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April 27th, 2015, 10:12 PM
#11

Originally Posted by
intothedeep
Nice fish. I enjoy fishing lake specs with spinning gear and smaller bass/walleye type baits... As you proved they eat a lot more than just spinners or worms...
Ya!! We threw some nymph patterns and it was the slowest part of the day! Switched back to minnow and bang bang!
We opened the belly of one we kept for the table, and there was a piece of grass, a twig and a piece of tree bark in there...talk about aggressive!!
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April 27th, 2015 10:12 PM
# ADS
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April 28th, 2015, 07:29 AM
#12
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April 28th, 2015, 07:39 AM
#13
Nice fish, congrats. Never seen Specks caught on those rubbers before.. How do you tell the Naturals from the Stockers? Are they all clipped down there? They aren't clipped up here anymore.
Woody
Nothing is more certain than an extremist's hatred of compromise
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April 28th, 2015, 08:08 AM
#14

Originally Posted by
Live2Fish.ca
The funny part, I landed 3 natural Brookies, and they all came on the Berkley Ripple Shad...they where the only 3 fish that hit the swimbait...
Specs are my favorite too. I wouldn't have gone to a ripple shad first, but now I might give it a shot (just thinking they might be a bit big - obviously they aren't). Right on!
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April 28th, 2015, 09:43 AM
#15

Originally Posted by
woody1948
Nice fish, congrats. Never seen Specks caught on those rubbers before.. How do you tell the Naturals from the Stockers? Are they all clipped down there? They aren't clipped up here anymore.
Not sure where up here is, but where I was they do still clip them. The pectoral fins are gone, and they do look a little different
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April 28th, 2015, 09:48 AM
#16

Originally Posted by
Live2Fish.ca
Not sure where up here is, but where I was they do still clip them. The pectoral fins are gone, and they do look a little different
Brookies are meat eaters, look at the tongue next time you land one, it looks like they have back pointing teeth on it! They definitely are opportunistic and aggressive! Thank god they get weary with age or else they would try to eat anything that hit the water!
The Ripple Shad is just a minnow imitation, we get them on jerk-baits, leaches, mice, spinners and all sorts of drop shot patterns, why not swimbaits?
Next week I'm gonna throw the kitchen sink, just to see what happens, lol
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April 28th, 2015, 11:07 AM
#17
I fish creek specks and fish right below the fast water as the specks are so aggressive they hit the bait right away, ( before the 50 chub in the hole have a chance ) fishing the slower water you have to fight the chub off. The stretch I fish has about 30 such spots and it's run and gun throw a bait in maybe 5 times, you don't have a strike by then it's onto the next spot. As for aggressive I've found them with colored pebbles in their stomachs that must have been washing downstream with the current.
Panther Martin with a bit of worm on the hook is deadly.
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April 28th, 2015, 09:10 PM
#18
Up here is where the ice is still on the lakes and the Specks are a lot bigger than those. Yep, I have seen the mouths of a few Specks.
Woody
Nothing is more certain than an extremist's hatred of compromise
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April 29th, 2015, 07:35 PM
#19
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April 29th, 2015, 08:07 PM
#20
Sweet, sweet spring speckles!
I also have moved to less "traditional" brookie baits for the lake fish, when they are aggressive they want it moving! I experimented with topwater a couple of years ago, in the fall, they would come up and look at baits that you had to pause like poppers or prop baits but as soon as they stopped the fish would turn tail and disappear. I found walking baits to be the best, lots of action but they don't travel very far.
Haven't been able to get out yet but I'm hoping to this weekend.
Heeere fishy fishy fishy fishy! :fish: