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Fishing Tip (Ice
Fishing Tips) Ice Fishing Depth Sounder
If you ever need a quick depth sounder
when ice-fishing, you can make one with a small bobber and bell
sinker. Just attach the sinker to the bottom line retainer of
the bobber and the hook or lure to the top retainer. This makes
it easy to find the waters depth. (http://www.eveningsecretfishing.com/specialsecret/Saltwater_Fishing_Tips.php)
Fishing Tip (Ice Fishing Tips)
Falling through the ice
If you are out with a buddy ice fishing
and there is a possibility of breaking ice, make sure
to stay at least 10 feet apart to spread out your weight. You
should also each carry long poles; they can be used to straddle
the hole to help you climb out. Make sure to have a poncho, waterproof
matches, safety pins, bandages, knife, candles, bouillon cubes,
and cocoa or soup. Put all of them in a watertight metal can
which can be used to heat water over a candle in an emergency.
Fishing Tip (Ice Fishing Tips)
Freezing
If you are an ice fisherman and consistently
have problems with your hole freezing up instead of pouring
anti-freeze into the hole (which shuts down fishing action),
use denatured alcohol. It is less expensive, has no odor or taste,
and is available at any pharmacy.
Fishing Tip (Ice Fishing Tips)
Bait
If you are an ice fisherman (which 2
million people are in the U.S.), the following bait will bring
you even more success.
For Bluegills use tiny ice spoons (1/32
to 1/80 of an ounce), ice flies or No. 10 or 12 gold hooks. Tip
them with gall worms, crane fly larvae, mousies, mealworms, wax
worms, or maggots. Fish the offering with a light tremble or
quivering movement. Try levels from one to three feet off bottom,
over depths o f10 to 20 feet. A murky or weedy bottom is best
for them.
For crappies, use a Swedish Pimple jiggling
spoon, Rapala ice fishing plug or live minnows fished on No.
2 to 6 hooks. Crappies can suspend at just about any depth, from
a few feet below the ice to just off bottom, in water from five
to 20 feet deep. Move often.
Yellow perch use the same baits
as for crappies and bluegills. Also try jigging spoons sweetened
with the eye from a freshly caught perch or a tiny strip of meat
sliced from a perch or bluegill.
Trout shoal areas, the mouths
of inlets, and points have produced the most rainbows, browns
and brookies through the ice. You can catch them on about every
kind of bait or lure you can think of. Wet flies and nymphs with
a sp lit-shot crimped a foot above for weight are good, as are
minnows, spinners, jigging spoons and ice rapalas.
Pickerel, Pike, Muskies live minnows
or dead ones rigged to hang horizontally in the water are the
best producers. Tip-ups allow you to spread your baits over a
wide area in weedy coves and on points where these predators
rove under the frozen lakes surface searching for prey.
Walleyes reefs, points, inlets
and outlets are good spots for ice walleyes. Live minnows, jigging
Rapalas, Swedish Pimples, Hopkins and Gay Blades are consistent
producers.
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