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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
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    dayton
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    Quote Originally Posted by bowguy84 View Post
    Agreed my suggestions would be skipper 9
    ditto!!! lot's of great captains out there. many on this site, but Jim will fish harder, go farther, and stay out longer than anyone i've ever fished with!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
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    i have to agree with what the others are telling you. you really need to go out a couple of times with someone who knows whats going on.

    when i started fishing the central basin i was totaly lost. i had never even seen a dipsy diver except hanging in the stores. and over there its pretty much trolling, i have never seen anyone drifting. but i got some friends together and just chartered a trip. i went to school for a day and learned alot. then the first trip i took my boat up i chartered with this guy again the first day of our trip. i do still have alot to learn, but i can fish now.

    the charter we went on used dipsy divers. he ran 3 on each side. so i started with dipsy divers. then i switched to the walker divers, they had no rings to mess with. then i seen a film on the lite bite slide diver. i really liked the way you can set the tension from your lure to trip the diver. i dont even use the slide part of the diver. i just use them like the other divers but run my line through the lite bite arm.

    but my point is i spent 2 days fishing with someone that knew alittle about what he,s doing and i was able to fish 3 divers off each side. then i just run 2 outriggers and 2 downriggers. so i can fish 5 guys with 2 rods each. i could have spent years trying to learn how to run 3 divers on one side without keeping them tangled. so watch for open seats where guys offer to let you fish with them for your share of the costs and take a couple of the walk on charters. it will save you thousands trying to learn it on your own

    just make sure what you want to learn, then make sure the boat your going out on is planning to fish that way. another great way to fish erie is with boards. you can use inline weights or different types of divers to get you down to the fish. i havent used my boards on the central basin. but i just bought a set of electric reels for my planer mast. so i am thinking about using my boards with some other divers to spread out my lures and add a couple of extra lines when i have 6 people on board. good luck to you. now go to school and learn in a couple of trips what it takes years to learn on your own.
    sherman

  3. #3
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    Jun 2011
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    Thanks for all the encouraging advice. I will definitely get out with someone who can show me the ropes. I have been following advice on this site and have picked up a lot, especially on trolling.

    I was picking up a lot of fish on the finder at various depths. Most of the fish were around 28 to 30 feet down, so that is where we targeted, but who knows if any where walleye. I did pick up several sheephead and whitebass at that depth. We were at the south eastern edge of the boats, near the gull buoy. I think we should have been farther north and west.

    Definitely good to hear what others did in the area to help figure out what did work.
    Thanks everyone
    John

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
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    Darby Creek
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    If you are fishing 28 to 30 feet down, you are fishing too deep right now. We have been catching our fish in the top 3rd of the water column. This time of year if weather is good the fish like to feed up high. Try raising your baits and see what happens. If you are trolling you also need to make sure you are at the proper speed. use bags to slow you down if you are moving too fast. 1.8 to 2.0 for harnesses and up to 2.0 to 2.5 for spoons would be a good start.

    Keep it at, you'll get there!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
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    NW Ohio
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    Default line out

    Over the weekend, the trolling out performed casting with a few exceptions.
    Trolling 30 jets performed at 80-90-100 back and 40 jets performed 80-90-100. 2 and 3 on at a time when on the hot spot. Bright color spoons, flashy wild patterns and coppers. Dipseys went 45-70 ft.Several tried casting , including myself with slow catch rates in the deep water in the Tri-angle. Went to trolling when it calmed down and couldnt keep all the lines in the water. Junk fish are just all over, cant get away from them. Sort through the unwanted fish to find the wanted ones. Casting had no pattern, some high, some low, some mid way, lot of luck but a few hit the worm just as start to reel. This was the deeper water of the Triangle area. Saturday was good on the shallow reefs in the wind as my neighbor (retired capt. ) did very well being 3 short of a limit for 5 friends on big ones doing the casting. Limits taken today on boat #2in short order and #3 was well on his way. Boat #1 (me) I was ready to go, waited, waited, ended up with a no show. I guess they missed out on a nice warm day of fishing.Water clearity is good most areas.
    Last edited by gregnwtf; 06-10-2012 at 04:47 PM.
    Capt. Greg Hoyt
    419-890-2555 cell #
    Anchors Away Marina
    [email protected]

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