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View Full Version : Tank Smallie


Chrisper4694
10-08-2017, 12:55 PM
Ducked out a little early Friday and NJ Squatch and I jumped in the Tin Can and tried to catch some smallmouth bass. We didn't have much time and the fish wouldn't cooperate, but I managed one tank on a silver surfer jigging fly :) you know what they say...if you're only going to catch one...

FASTEDDIE29
10-08-2017, 01:52 PM
Yep that's a big beautiful BRONZEBACK! Great colors on her too!:D

thmyorke1
10-08-2017, 05:54 PM
Tank indeed. Hell of a fight it out up?

Riz
10-08-2017, 07:40 PM
excellent smallie

Chrisper4694
10-08-2017, 08:18 PM
Tank indeed. Hell of a fight it out up?

it bull dogged but didn't jump once. I hooked a bigger one the other week that jumped over and over again as soon as it was hooked and it spit the hook.

antgogz
10-08-2017, 08:52 PM
thats a nice smallie...would love to see what is in his gullet! nice work

thmyorke1
10-09-2017, 07:34 AM
it bull dogged but didn't jump once. I hooked a bigger one the other week that jumped over and over again as soon as it was hooked and it spit the hook.

I've had biggies not jump at all before. I never understand what goes on when they jump, like the science behind throwing the hook. I have noticed the less drag I have the less they jump. Ive had one jump then throw the hook 5 sec later under water. I think they jump when they are forced to the surface hence why a low drag will keep them swimming on the bottom. All speculation.

NJSquatch
10-09-2017, 08:18 AM
nice camera work:p

Jigman13
10-09-2017, 08:34 AM
Yep, that's a piggie. Tape her?

JDTuna
10-09-2017, 10:17 AM
Beast!

Chrisper4694
10-09-2017, 01:33 PM
Yep, that's a piggie. Tape her?

yeah almost 20",

Yhmyorke, when they jump it's harder to keep tension on the line and it's easier for them to shake slack into the line and loosen the hook. you're def right about the pressure making them come to the surface a lot of the time. it's tough. you can usually prevent big jumps if they're close enough to you by directing the rod tip down and to the side pulling them sideways as they approach the surface. When you hook them way out on a long cast and they start jumping immediately, it's mostly in the fishing gods hands haha. these jigging flies are around 150-200ft out the back to maintain depth so it's up to chance.

thmyorke1
10-09-2017, 02:16 PM
yeah almost 20",

Yhmyorke, when they jump it's harder to keep tension on the line and it's easier for them to shake slack into the line and loosen the hook. you're def right about the pressure making them come to the surface a lot of the time. it's tough. you can usually prevent big jumps if they're close enough to you by directing the rod tip down and to the side pulling them sideways as they approach the surface. When you hook them way out on a long cast and they start jumping immediately, it's mostly in the fishing gods hands haha. these jigging flies are around 150-200ft out the back to maintain depth so it's up to chance.

Thanks man. I do that low and to the side trick when they're close. I've always lost smallies when they're too far to control that way.