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Watch your line 2024


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 

So you more experienced guys probably already know this, but to anybody relatively new to the sport: when fishing any slow moving presentation, WATCH YOUR LINE. I never used to do this but I've fished a lot of senkos recently and I've noticed that a lot of times I don't feel a thing and my line just starts moving off or ticks sometimes. This happened to me again today and I probably would have hooked him deep if I hadn't been watching my line but I knew right away when he bit. (got off near the bank unfortunately, but...) Hope this helps somebody.


fishing user avatarjbsoonerfan reply : 

I have always watched my line, but when I switched to Sufix hi vis yellow braid my catch rate went up significantly. I am red/green color blind so I think it made a Huge difference. 


fishing user avatarGlaucus reply : 

 


fishing user avatarDogface reply : 

I'm not color blind....just getting old but I have to say that hi-vis line is showing up on a lot of my rods. For me it makes a difference especially when fishing soft plastics. 

 

 


fishing user avatarMassYak85 reply : 

Seeing line swimming off on the surface of the water while fishing weightless worms is probably my favorite thing in bass fishing other than topwater blowups. 


fishing user avatarA-Jay reply : 

No doubt line watching can be very helpful with visually detecting strikes.

However the more I fished at night, the less I felt like I needed to watch my line during the day. 

Dark nights make line watching all but impossible, but knowing how a bait 'feels' at any given moment is king.

That pays off with & without daylight.

Haven't been out at night as much past few seasons but still do very little line watching during the day.

Can't say for sure if I'm missing strikes, because I can't miss what I don't feel.

Hope the ice melts soon, my left eye is starting to twitch.

58cdd5587016f_nspectordreyfuss.jpg.c7dd22bd6849b1b344d92b3fb20f1650.jpg

:smiley:

A-Jay

 


fishing user avatarBluebasser86 reply : 

I'm a big line watcher, and I like to watch my rod tip as well for those slight visual cues my hands might not detect. 

Line watching is a big reason why I was excited about Flash Green Seaguar Smackdown that just came out. I've never been able to see yellow very well in small amounts like thin fishing line, but I could see that bright green easily. It's already helped me catch quite a few fish. 

 


fishing user avatarGlaucus reply : 

As usual, I'm backwards. On top of starting on a baitcaster, I started line watching whereas a lot of people start with feel. Thank you, social media age, for once. I think you should wear polarized sunglasses anyways for both eye protection and because it helps on the water, but my eyes are so light sensitive that I can't see the line unless the shades are on. Over stimulation issue but that's another topic. I haven't had the courage to use high visibility braid yet - definitely a (lack of) confidence thing. I think I rely much more on seeing than feeling because when it's really windy I tend to do a lot worse because of the bow in the line.


fishing user avatarCatt reply : 

I totally agree with @A-Jay night fishing will dramatically change your sense of feel.

 

Now I aint gonna say I don't watch my during daylight but I don't stare at it either.

 

This is why I've preached for years ????

 

Feeling a worm/jig bite requires keeping a certain amount of tension on your line while at the same time keeping a certain amount of slackness in your line. To the average angler this makes no sense at all but the worm/jig angler it makes total sense.

 

You should be able not only to see the line movement but feel you're line tightening up!


fishing user avatarTodd2 reply : 

I don't keep logs, but when pitching into cover, I'd guess half of my strikes are detected on line movement alone. Either a twitch, walk off, or just going slack earlier than expected. When casting and working along the bottom, I go more by feel probably.


fishing user avatarnascar2428 reply : 

I agree with the op as far as fishing Senko type baits. Line watching is an essential part of that technique. If you don't line watch, gut hooking fish will increase.  Hi vis braid with a flouro leader will help in this endeavor.


fishing user avatarCatt reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 6:42 PM, nascar2428 said:

. If you don't line watch, gut hooking fish will increase. 

 

Uhhh nooo!

 

So far this year I've caught somewhere around 200 bass with only one gut hooked. And that one was on a weighted Texas Rig which the bass simply inhaled.


fishing user avatarNYWayfarer reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 6:00 PM, Catt said:

Feeling a worm/jig bite requires keeping a certain amount of tension on your line while at the same time keeping a certain amount of slackness in your line. To the average angler this makes no sense at all but the worm/jig angler it makes total sense.

 

You should be able not only to see the line movement but feel you're line tightening up!

Makes sense to me.

 

The Goldilock's zone. Not to tight, not to slack. Takes a bit to get there but it's worth it. With a decent rod you will feel that "tick" of a pick up, then see the line move, time to set the hook.


fishing user avatarnascar2428 reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 7:53 PM, Catt said:

 

Uhhh nooo! 

 

So far this year I've caught somewhere around 200 bass with only one gut hooked. And that one was on a weighted Texas Rig which the bass simply inhaled.

Had a feeling you might make a comment. Are you talking about weightless senkos or weighted worms? All of my gut hooked bass have been weightless senkos or weighted tubes( largemouth specifically)


fishing user avatarJigfishn10 reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 8:11 PM, NYWayfarer said:

Makes sense to me.

 

The Goldilock's zone. Not to tight, not to slack. Takes a bit to get there but it's worth it. With a decent rod you will feel that "tick" of a pick up, then see the line move, time to set the hook.

There's the "Goldilock Zone" of line tightness upon splash down. For me I want to keep a tight line, yet slack enough so it drops straight down and not pendulum back towards you.

 

@NYWayfarer, great analogy for it.


fishing user avatarNYWayfarer reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 9:40 PM, Jigfishn10 said:

There's the "Goldilock Zone" of line tightness upon splash down. For me I want to keep a tight line, yet slack enough so it drops straight down and not pendulum back towards you.

 

@NYWayfarer, great analogy for it.

Wish I could say I coined the phrase but I just adapted it to fishing.

 

Goldilock's Zone referrers to the habitable area around a star. Not to hot, not to cold, so life has a chance.


fishing user avatarJigfishn10 reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 9:51 PM, NYWayfarer said:

Wish I could say I coined the phrase but I just adapted it to fishing.

 

Goldilock's Zone referrers to the habitable area around a star. Not to hot, not to cold, so life has a chance.

You can't win'em all. I liked it though...:)


fishing user avatarBassNJake reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 7:53 PM, Catt said:

 

Uhhh nooo!

 

So far this year I've caught somewhere around 200 bass with only one gut hooked. And that one was on a weighted Texas Rig which the bass simply inhaled.

His experience would match mine, I gut hook more fish when fishing a worm than anything else.

I have never gut hooked a fish on a jig.

Rarely have I ever gut hooked a fish with a craw type of soft plastic.

A few times I have gut hooked a fish on a lizard.

 

I used to fish a carolina rig a lot with a long leader and a weightless senko and that rig was the gut hooked champion and my belief is it would happen because the fish would move off with the senko before I could see/feel it


fishing user avatarA-Jay reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 9:51 PM, NYWayfarer said:

 

 

Goldilock's Zone referrers to the habitable area around a star. Not to hot, not to cold, so life has a chance.

I've been living there for the past 6 months anyway ~

:smiley:

A-Jay


fishing user avatarJigfishn10 reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 9:58 PM, BassNJake said:

I used to fish a carolina rig a lot with a long leader and a weightless senko and that rig was the gut hooked champion and my belief is it would happen because the fish would move off with the senko before I could see/feel it

Man I hate C-Rigs for that reason alone. I know it's a great technique, but I'd rather watch paint dry in a rain storm.


fishing user avatarEGbassing reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 6:00 PM, Catt said:

I totally agree with @A-Jay night fishing will dramatically change your sense of feel.

 

Now I aint gonna say I don't watch my during daylight but I don't stare at it either.

 

This is why I've preached for years ????

 

Feeling a worm/jig bite requires keeping a certain amount of tension on your line while at the same time keeping a certain amount of slackness in your line. To the average angler this makes no sense at all but the worm/jig angler it makes total sense.

 

You should be able not only to see the line movement but feel you're line tightening up!

I was talking more about fishing senkos where you can't keep your line tight like you can with a jig though.

  On 4/11/2019 at 9:58 PM, A-Jay said:

I've been living there for the past 6 months anyway ~

:smiley:

A-Jay

Meanwhile, it's 85 degrees here.


fishing user avatarthe reel ess reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 8:42 AM, jbsoonerfan said:

I have always watched my line, but when I switched to Sufix hi vis yellow braid my catch rate went up significantly. I am red/green color blind so I think it made a Huge difference. 

How long is your leader? Or do you even use one. I've been considering the same thing.


fishing user avatarscaleface reply : 

When I'm worm fishing I watch my line intently and go by feel   . My worm rod is spooled with clear blue fluorescent .


fishing user avatarCatt reply : 

When I say feeling a worm/jig bite I need to rephrase that to read, plastics!

 

To many a Senko is considered a soft plastic jerkbait, to me it's another worm. Many anglers fish Senkos Wacky Rigged, I fish em Texas Rigged weightless.

 

Many anglers try to separate a Texas Rig bite from a Jig-n-Craw bite thinking they are not the same. 

 

For me I'm feeling for the same tics, taps, thumps, line movements, feelings of heaviness, regardless of which one I'm throwing. 

 

When most anglers think  "watch" your line for movement they're thinking the bass is swimming off with your Senko. When I throw my Senko into 10' of water & I watch my line sink 6' & stop I'm setting hook. When I throw my Senko into 10' of water & it takes 12' of line & still aint hit bottom I'm setting hook.

 

What about when that bass inhaled your Senko with no visual line movement up, down, left or right & just sits there?

Edited by Catt
Operator Error

fishing user avatarWRB reply : 

Sometimes you hear a pro say that was a solid strike  "it knocked slack in my line".

Watching line means a lot of things besides the obviuos line moving. Feeling and watching line develops a sense of what the underwater lures are doing without a bass striking and changes to the line tension or movement that you detect from time on the water using those lures can indicate a strike, meaning the lure is in the basses mouth....set the hook!

I know you younger anglers think it's old school to run the line over your finger and rods don't need fore grips to hold the rod and reel relying on the rods "Sensitivety" for strike detection. It's the line that is tied to the lure and that line movements are dampened by dense water, you only feel line movements via the rod giudes or your most sensitive feel your finger tips. Not feeling line means you are not detecting a lot of the feel only strikes.

Tom

 


fishing user avatarjbsoonerfan reply : 
  On 4/11/2019 at 11:16 PM, the reel ess said:

How long is your leader? Or do you even use one. I've been considering the same thing.

I don't use one, haven't notice any difference it the amount of bites I get.

 

Edit* That kind of doesn't make sense since I said I can see the line better. I guess I'm trying to say that I don't think it has had a negative impact on the amount of bites I get. I hope that makes sense LOL. If not, I apologize.


fishing user avatargeo g reply : 

I use floro for all my plastics, except when flipping heavy cover.  Floro is clear in clean water, super sensitive, abrasive resistant, with very little stretch for rock hard hook sets.  I don't like tying leaders.  I am a devote line watch and often dead stick with slack for a natural fall, so being a line watcher is very important.  You will see the line jump or move way before feeling it through the rod.  It has worked for me for decades.


fishing user avatarDrew03cmc reply : 
  On 4/20/2019 at 1:04 AM, geo g said:

I use floro for all my plastics, except when flipping heavy cover.  Floro is clear in clean water, super sensitive, abrasive resistant, with very little stretch for rock hard hook sets.  I don't like tying leaders.  I am a devote line watch and often dead stick with slack for a natural fall, so being a line watcher is very important.  You will see the line jump or move way before feeling it through the rod.  It has worked for me for decades.

Most fluoro lines do stretch, but they do not go back when pressure is released. It's why I don't use fluoro at all.


fishing user avatargeo g reply : 
  On 4/21/2019 at 3:34 AM, Drew03cmc said:

Most fluoro lines do stretch, but they do not go back when pressure is released. It's why I don't use fluoro at all.

I disagree, I have used floro for at least 20 years and it has little stretch, and very sensitive.  Use it for all plastics unless flipping heavy cover where I use 60 pound braid.  But everyone is entitled to their opinion! 


fishing user avatarwaymont reply : 

100%, that's why I use yellow Power Pro. IT's really easy to see when it ticks/moves.




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