drifter
01-10-2002, 10:02 AM
IFishers: I know that when you find the honey hole, you should keep it Quiet. Maybe, this should apply to a new technique. But, since this board has given me so much good information in the past, I need to give some back.
I have been trying "glow in the dark" for the past four weeks with great success. Corkies and spin-in-glow, hit with a flash unit or flashlight, fished one hour before sunrise or after sunset WORKS. FISH ON!
The best thing is that it increases my fishing time. I fish before work in the morning. Now I am casting and expecting a hookup one hour before sunrise. This has given me an extra 30-40 minutes of fishing tiime.
Fishing in semi-dark does require that you are:
(1) a good caster; (2) Know your hole well; and (3)that you can FEEL the take. BUT IT WORKS.
TIP - be sure to check the offical sunrise/sunset times. You can legally fish one hour before sunrise and one hour after sunset. However, the official times are "lighter" than you might think.
IT is a real blast having a fish on without actually seeing it. The chromers really SHINE when they roll.
Email my or post with questions. Good Fishing. Wes "Drifter"
I have been trying "glow in the dark" for the past four weeks with great success. Corkies and spin-in-glow, hit with a flash unit or flashlight, fished one hour before sunrise or after sunset WORKS. FISH ON!
The best thing is that it increases my fishing time. I fish before work in the morning. Now I am casting and expecting a hookup one hour before sunrise. This has given me an extra 30-40 minutes of fishing tiime.
Fishing in semi-dark does require that you are:
(1) a good caster; (2) Know your hole well; and (3)that you can FEEL the take. BUT IT WORKS.
TIP - be sure to check the offical sunrise/sunset times. You can legally fish one hour before sunrise and one hour after sunset. However, the official times are "lighter" than you might think.
IT is a real blast having a fish on without actually seeing it. The chromers really SHINE when they roll.
Email my or post with questions. Good Fishing. Wes "Drifter"