02-02-2006, 12:45 AM
[center][#ff0000]<*@}))))))X< Ice Fishing Tip number #69[/#ff0000][/center]
Haven't seen a tip for a while. Here's one from Field & Stream magazine that I'll have to give a try.
Ice Fishing Tip: The Flash Rig
Make your minnows doubly appealing with this simple setup
by Dave Scroppo
[url "http://www.fieldandstream.com/fieldstream/fishing/article/0,13199,1153309,00.html#"][/url][url "http://www.fieldandstream.com/fieldstream/fishing/article/0,13199,1153309,00.html#"][/url]
This bastardization of an open-water stalwart, the crawler harness, adds fish-catching color and flash to tip-up rigs and can be appropriated for jigging below a bobber.
To catch walleyes or magnum perch, start with a 2-foot length of 6-pound fluorocarbon or monofilament. At its end, tie a No. 10 treble hook, and above it slide on a neoprene bobber stop until it’s anywhere from 6 to 10 inches above the treble. Add six 4mm chartreuse or orange plastic beads and a clevis with a No. 2 silver spinner blade. Tie the end of the leader to a swivel. Tip the treble with a 2- to 4-inch shiner.
To arm yourself for pike, use a 6-inch sucker or shiner, beef up your treble to a No. 4 and your leader to 20-pound-test fluorocarbon, and use six No. 6 to No. 8 red beads with a No. 4 red-and-white spinner blade.
Used beneath a tip-up or with a slip bobber on a short, ice-style spinning rod, this rig outfishes a plain minnow.
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Haven't seen a tip for a while. Here's one from Field & Stream magazine that I'll have to give a try.
Ice Fishing Tip: The Flash Rig
Make your minnows doubly appealing with this simple setup
by Dave Scroppo
[url "http://www.fieldandstream.com/fieldstream/fishing/article/0,13199,1153309,00.html#"][/url][url "http://www.fieldandstream.com/fieldstream/fishing/article/0,13199,1153309,00.html#"][/url]
This bastardization of an open-water stalwart, the crawler harness, adds fish-catching color and flash to tip-up rigs and can be appropriated for jigging below a bobber.
To catch walleyes or magnum perch, start with a 2-foot length of 6-pound fluorocarbon or monofilament. At its end, tie a No. 10 treble hook, and above it slide on a neoprene bobber stop until it’s anywhere from 6 to 10 inches above the treble. Add six 4mm chartreuse or orange plastic beads and a clevis with a No. 2 silver spinner blade. Tie the end of the leader to a swivel. Tip the treble with a 2- to 4-inch shiner.
To arm yourself for pike, use a 6-inch sucker or shiner, beef up your treble to a No. 4 and your leader to 20-pound-test fluorocarbon, and use six No. 6 to No. 8 red beads with a No. 4 red-and-white spinner blade.
Used beneath a tip-up or with a slip bobber on a short, ice-style spinning rod, this rig outfishes a plain minnow.
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