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Old 01-18-2011, 09:15 AM   #32
-scallywag-
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: on the road...
Posts: 598
Thanks guys!

Yani, yes!! its a new PB!! it seems like it was right around this time last year when I was taking pics of you with a similar beast....so I'm sure we'll see a few more on that side of the pond this month.

Moyer, your right....more like a few thousand drops (and a worn out anti-reverse roller bearing) since the last real fish.

Bob, that link Adi posted is a good one....not sure why but if you keep the head underwater, and belly gaff'um they are pretty chill....having the game clip (or two) behind the seat and ready is a must. Once you start handling them out of the water is when godzilla attacks!!!

pingpang, yep, b/w mac pattern 6x.


And to answer a few PM’s, no I was not targeting halibut, 110-120' and yes I was occasionally metering a solid mark or two just off the bottom which is why I stayed in the area for HOURS. It's belly was full of squid/beaks. Here are some tips and techniques I use when fishing the iron on the squidbeds.


Always fish #40 mono and bring a few different irons....here are some of my favorites


6x sr. - sumo or salas.... the big daddy, b/w, b/w mac pattern, scrambled egg. I like fishing these bigger jigs when the squid is around for a couple reasons. They're size helps keep the macks/bottom critters from biting, you can retrieve them much faster without spinning, and the hooks are much better suited for big fish and #40mono (6xjr's hooks are a little weak). If you’re still having a problem snagging macks/bottom feeder/squid eggs try an iron with a Jhook. Also a sharp jerk or ten will usually release those pesky macs/eggs so you don’t have to reel it all the way back to the yak.


Sumo jr + C2 - For the smaller jigs I like the tady/sumo jigs...much stronger hooks, and the glow back seems to mimmic a flashing squid pretty well....the down fall is that if the macs are around they seem to hit these a lot more, also expensive.


I'm sure y’all are familiar with the drop and grind technique and how to make the iron "swim" instead of spin. This is pretty important when mimicking finbait and why the 6xjr shape is so popular (they swim well). When the squid are around I'm not overly concerned with swimming the iron....I want to get in to wherever the squirts are and mimic them, which is generally on the bottom.
Much like live bait, the longer your jig is in the zone, the better you're chances. On the squidbeds this means dropping down to the bottom and " swim it like a squid". I like to use much slower movements and pulse it up from the bottom, usually only a couple feet (half to one crank) then slowly move the rod tip up/down occasionally tapping or resting on the bottom. If you are occasionally snagging squid by the tentacals then your doing the right thing in the right place....even the squid think you jig's a squid!!! I will generally keep my jig down as long as possible until the current or wind get me to far from the jig. Once you get feel for when a squid hits your jig, you’re in business....hold the freshly snagged squid a couple feet off the bottom and let it flip out....imagine the squid hooked by a tentical, inking and squirt’in to get free...if there is a fish in the area, you will get hit!!. After a couple minutes I usually remove the squid and put it in the tank...I find the bare iron or a freshly snagged squid to be the most effective when targeting YT.
IMO nothing is more exciting then getting slammed by a YT while fishing the iron, and in my experience the iron is at least twice as effective as live bait, especially if you consider the amount of time the iron is in the water compared you’re bait. In fact the iron is so productive for some guys, that they consider having a bait out to be a liability, it just gets in the way WHEN you do hook up on the iron.

See ya on the water!


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