Edward Lea.
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2005
- Messages
- 846
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Ok time for the up date on my attempt to try out Baitcasters. I tried out several that my father in law has and found the BPS Bionic worked great and would not cost me an arm and a leg to start out with. I didn't want to invest hundreds of dollars and really hate a baitcaster. So off I go to BPS and get the real and a 6 foot MH rod. Very nice rod good backbone and a fast tip.
We go over to the lake at 5:00 am and launch the boat in the dark. I back the boat in while my son holds the bow rope. Boat floats off and I pull up into the parking lot. As I head to the dock my Sons yells "the rope broke". I look and there the boat is 10 feet from the dock and headed out to sea without us in the wind. So I look around and it dark and this is a small country lake so I strip to my "tidy whites" and swim out and retrive the boat. Nice start to the day.
Now we are on the lake and get to start fishing. My son sticks a 16 inch bass on his first cast with a topwater so I am ready. I grab the new rod with the same lure that was on my father-in laws rods when I tried it out. Set the settings the same as it was on his and make my first cast.
The lure goes 18 feet and the reel makes a wierd noise( one I am sure you all have heard). The noise is one my son and I started calling the birdnest noise after the 5th occurance in 5 casts. It Also came to be followed by the noise of my son laughing.
Ok I say this will happen and get it straightned out. I make many adjustments over the next several hours with pretty much the same results. By now my son has boated and released many nice bass on topwaters and stopped laughing. I think he was now sorry for me.
I finally get the perfect cast, the lure went where I wanted it and no overrun. Who hoo. A bass even hit then. Yessssss. I set the hook and realize that in all the adjustments I had made I never checked the drag!!!! Birdsnest sounds followed by a bad sound from me, followed by fish swimming off.:angry:
25 casts later and 25 birdsnests later while I am straightening out yet another mess of line a nice 17 inch bass catches it's self on my new rod and that is how I caught my first bass. :lol:
It has been three days now and 457 birds nests. I respooled the reel on day three as I had ran out of line already. I steped up to 12 pound test at the advice of my father in-law. He is correct that it is easier to straighten out than 10 pound test. It also appears that heavier lures work better than lighter lures. I find I can toss a 1/2 oz jig or a big wally diver better than a Texas worm with a 1/16 oz weight on it.
I can see that there are situations where it has it's advantages but tossing light worm rigs while fighting a 20 MPH wind is not one of them.
We go over to the lake at 5:00 am and launch the boat in the dark. I back the boat in while my son holds the bow rope. Boat floats off and I pull up into the parking lot. As I head to the dock my Sons yells "the rope broke". I look and there the boat is 10 feet from the dock and headed out to sea without us in the wind. So I look around and it dark and this is a small country lake so I strip to my "tidy whites" and swim out and retrive the boat. Nice start to the day.
Now we are on the lake and get to start fishing. My son sticks a 16 inch bass on his first cast with a topwater so I am ready. I grab the new rod with the same lure that was on my father-in laws rods when I tried it out. Set the settings the same as it was on his and make my first cast.
The lure goes 18 feet and the reel makes a wierd noise( one I am sure you all have heard). The noise is one my son and I started calling the birdnest noise after the 5th occurance in 5 casts. It Also came to be followed by the noise of my son laughing.
Ok I say this will happen and get it straightned out. I make many adjustments over the next several hours with pretty much the same results. By now my son has boated and released many nice bass on topwaters and stopped laughing. I think he was now sorry for me.
I finally get the perfect cast, the lure went where I wanted it and no overrun. Who hoo. A bass even hit then. Yessssss. I set the hook and realize that in all the adjustments I had made I never checked the drag!!!! Birdsnest sounds followed by a bad sound from me, followed by fish swimming off.:angry:
25 casts later and 25 birdsnests later while I am straightening out yet another mess of line a nice 17 inch bass catches it's self on my new rod and that is how I caught my first bass. :lol:
It has been three days now and 457 birds nests. I respooled the reel on day three as I had ran out of line already. I steped up to 12 pound test at the advice of my father in-law. He is correct that it is easier to straighten out than 10 pound test. It also appears that heavier lures work better than lighter lures. I find I can toss a 1/2 oz jig or a big wally diver better than a Texas worm with a 1/16 oz weight on it.
I can see that there are situations where it has it's advantages but tossing light worm rigs while fighting a 20 MPH wind is not one of them.