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Lively1

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Everything posted by Lively1

  1. Yes it does idle rough initially, while coughing the black smoke. But not after warming up. I would say, a little rough, but not chugging like it would if a cylinder were mis-firing or timing was off. I buy my gas at Olney's, I've been told me it's ethanol-free 91 octane gas.
  2. My 1999 Bayliner has a Mercruiser 3.0 and everytime I start it, it produces black smoke out the exhaust. I let it fast idle for maybe 45-60 seconds, and then it smooths out and the smoking stops. Once its warmed up the engine runs fine. Been this way since I bought it in the spring. Is there something here to be concerned with? Any particular maintainence or adjustments to check? Thanks.
  3. Jigged Penn Yan arm Sunday at first light and again mid-day and went 0-0-0. My neighbor was out trolling in the morning and had the same result. Lot of marks scattered around, just no action. Keuka water temp is 69 at 3 FOW. When does the 'great fall fishing' turn on?
  4. Ah lakerchaser... this is the one thing I haven't asked about yet.. the actual jigs, plastics, etc. I started out with some jigs that were given to me.. 2 oz and 1.5 oz 'smiley face' heads tied with some greenish crystal flash. I put on some 6" flukes and caught some fish.. this is August 2013 on vacation. This year, now we have a place on the lake I start jigging in June and fish all summer. The big jig & plastic works, OK, not great. So I start trying other things.. casting spoons, jigging spoons, smaller plastics, trailer flies. (and copper line, wire/dipsey too). I did try some 1 oz. jigs with small tubes pulled over them, both white color and green color, and they didn't produce. The only thing that I caught fish on other than the 6" plastics is a 2.5" long trailing fly and a 3" long black/white/silver flash bucktail jig that I bought in Ithaca eons ago when 'Wildman' was still in business. This is maybe a 3/8 or 1/4 oz head and only possible to fish it when there is zero wind, or cast downwind and let it sink, using 4 lb test. I caught fish on it both ways this summer. I think I get a lot of 'trial' bites on my big jigs when they are sinking, but they are quick and tentative, never hook anything. Same with the trailing fly, lots of pecks when its sinking, but can't get a hookset with the trailer on the drop. I have one large jig with the white paint is chipped off from all the bites, but only hooked a few fish on it. And I fish it with a stinger trailer back near the end of the plastic. Seems like the fish hit the big white jighead, not the tail of the plastic. It's tempting to hypothesize that Keuka being a relatively small and shallow lake (compared to Seneca or Cayuga), with pretty steady pressure all summer, the fish are somewhat skittish and respond well to smaller flies/jigs/spoons. But in truth I've caught most of the fish this summer on the 1.5 or 2.0 oz jig and 6" fluke. All I can really say is, when it has been possible to get the smaller jigs down to the fish, the result has been hookups. And this is not the case using the larger jigs and plastics. BTW - in my summary, the parts about feathers working better than plastics, salt but no scent, and using bait to tip the jig, those all came from different Canadian outfitters or lodges.
  5. Hermit - your laker jigging guide is what enabled me to go out and catch some on my own (last year). It was extrememly helpful! This year I have a bigger boat and more chances to fish, so more variables have come into play. And I may have forgotten some of what I read or it didn't sink in right away. I summarized all the tips in this thread (and from a few other websites) and here's what I ended up with: Best/preferred times to fish: 6 – 9 AM, 5 – 8 PM Jigs: 1, 1.5, and 2 oz. jigs with flukes, paddle tails, etc. in white or pale green Feathered (Marabou) jigs work better than plastics Curly tail and Mr. Twister plastics don’t work Trout like salted plastics but not scented Tip jigs with bit of worm, salted minnow, or belly strip from fish caught previously Line: 10-12 lb braid with 10' fluorocarbon leader Tactics: Drop jig to bottom, bounce 2-3 times, then reel up steadily Let the jig settle to the bottom, then reel in rather fast, for 20-40 feet. Open the bail and let the jig settle back to the bottom. I repeat 4 – 5X then reel all the way in. Keep your jig above any rising fish, reel away (up) if they're interested Try not letting the jig go all the way down before starting your retrieve If the line goes slack on the drop, set the hook A steady up/down jigging motion seems to NOT produce most of the time. However, a painfully-slow jigging motion of only a foot or so on/off bottom sometimes works also.
  6. Lot of you said you use flourocarbon leaders.. what brand flouro?
  7. Thanks to all of you, for sharing tips, techniques, theories, and encouragement.
  8. Yes I do use a fish finder, just upgraded to a newer Garmin and can see the jig and fish clearly all the way to bottom (100-120 feet). Often see fish rise up to it on the way down, or if letting it sit at one depth, fish will come off bottom to inspect it, say from 120 ft to 100 ft) and then slink back down.
  9. On vacation last week I went laker jigging once or twice a day. I noticed sometimes after deciding to move to a new spot, I would get violent grabs while reeling up. I started reeling up like that on purpose and it seemed to produce some additional fish. (Still no more than 1-2 per day though.) I had been trying other things like a repetitive up and down motion at one depth, a long sweep of the rod up followed by reeling the slack in, and free fall followed by reversing direction just before the jig gets to a fish mark. What seems to work best is dropping to the bottom, then a steady retrieve up at medium speed. Some of the grabs were quite high up.. 45-50 feet. Given the small sample size, I'm not sure if this is really anything other than coincidence. What do other jiggers normally do regarding moving the jig, retreiving it, etc. Does one specific retrieve/motion seem to work best?
  10. thanks everyone, this forum is such an excellent place for info on things like this. I haven't even looked at the engine starting battery since buying the boat earlier this year, just been too busy. I have a deep cycle trolling battery, but the only thing running on it is the trolling motor. I will get it all sorted out sooner or later.
  11. I've noticed that my fishfinder will often turn off when i start my boat engine after sitting and jigging for a while. is that normal? can it hurt the finder somehow? not sure how it's wired, I just used the same leads that the original was connected to when i installed the upgrade.
  12. Another Dispey Misadventure this morning. Decided to try it in a stiff south wind and some decent sized chop with whitecaps.. Did get it out and trolled for a while.. Speed was a more modest 2.2 mph going against the wind and waves. Let out most of the 300' of wire and trolled a Sutton 88 with trailing fly. Still nothing to show for it. After 20-30 minutes reeled it all back in. Here's where the misadventure begins.. When there was just maybe 10-20 feet of wire out, decided to try to manually trip the dipsey just to see if I could do it, if I did happen to hook a fish. Gave the rod a couple of strong hooksets.. Met with tremendous resistance. Made me think for a minute I was hung up on something. Gave it a stronger tug, and suddenly -- no resistance. Not even a little! Turns out I had straigtened the swivel and the dispey is now buried in the mud in 130 FOW. The good news is, the leader had wrapped around the wire several times and I recovered the spoon and fly even though the dispey was deep-sixed. So, need to buy some stronger swivels, and another dispey.. Will get a #1 this time instead of a magnum.
  13. Update - Went out this morning starting at first light. Jigged the first hour, saw some lookers but no biters. Put it in cruise with the I/O drive and GPS said 3.5 mph. Decided to try the dipsey anyway. Got it paid out OK, At this speed, it was way behind the boat and not visible on the fish finder. An improvement over yesterday. Trolled past a bunch of marks on the screen, but no action. After a while decided to try it a bit slower, using the trolling motor. Got that going at a speed of 2.25-2.5 mph. Dispey still well behind the boat and not seen on the screen. Fish were at various depths, so played with varying amounts of wire out, including a run with nearly all 300' out. But the fish were not interested. After 30 mins or so called it a day. The battery charge on the troller was half gone from the 30 minutes of use. Remembered that the other day my neighbor showed me something called the Happy Troller.. Anybody use one?
  14. Guff - I've only caught and kept half a dozen fish this year, but all of those have had empty stomachs. Makes you wonder if they are eating anything.
  15. Thanks for the help.. Here's some additional info. First off, its definitely the dipsey on the fish finder because the track moves up or down on the screen when I let out or take in line. I bought a #3 magnum dipsey based on the need to get down to 100 feet, of course I'm running wire not braid or mono (whatever the chart is based on). Trolling speed and wire angle: I did take the ring off the dipsey, but the wire is still nearly vertical and the dipsey not far behind the boat. My smartphone shows my trolling speed at about 1.5 mph. I read that you needed to go slow for lake trout. But I see guys pulling copper with a little outboard going twice that fast. I'm using an electric trolling motor at the present time, my slowest speed with my I/0 is about 3.5 mph. I could go 2-2.5 with the electric though. Should I speed it up? Side angle: Since I'm only running one rod I thought it would be OK to run it straight back so the weight is set on 0. If it helps to get it away from the boat I can change that. Presentation: I've tried several spoons solo with nothing to show for it. Today I tried a Sutton 88 with a little white streamer tied on the hook and trailing about 2 ft behind. My version of flasher/fly. Still no hits. I did pick up about 50 ft of discarded mono that wrapped around the wire. Finally - a fishing report. I did some jigging today as well as playing with the dipsey. It was overcast, and I was seeing a lot of marks from 5 ft to 50 ft. in some breezy chop. Hard to jig with the wind, so on a whim I tied a 1/2 oz black/white bucktail to my UL rod and cast it down wind. Let it sink and jigged it up. You know the rest.. Wham.. Laker slammed it probably 30 ft down, 20 inch fish but it felt like a monster on my 5 ft rod and 4 lb test line. Next time out I am going to try: - weight setting on 3 to get it out to side of boat - speed of 2-3 mph - smaller spoon, closer to size of the jig that worked today If that doesn't work maybe I need a smaller dipsey.. Will post a pic of my rod/reel in separate post.
  16. I came into an older roller rod and big reel and decided to see if I could run a dispey with it. Put some 30 lb AFW on it, bought a black #3 diver, and viola, it works. I have trolled with it a couple of times now, and it gets down to 100 ft or more if I let it. Shows up really well on the fish finder. Thing is, I've trolled with it for several hours now, through places with lost of marks, and not caught a thing. I'm on Keuka Lake so I've run the depth anywhere there are marks - 45' down to 100;. So now I'm wondering if there is something wrong wtih my equipment, or what I'm doing. I have tried some basic flutter spoons - Sutton 88, FLT Angry Alewife, Michigan Stinger purple/blank, mainly. Leader is 12 lb fluoro,about 8' long. Here are some of the things kicking around in my head: How do you know when a fish hits the spoon? Do they normally just hook themselves? Do they pop the dipsey front clip when they hit? How close to the boat should the dipsey be? How fast do you troll? I've read 1.5 mph but now was to go that slow. How bendy or stiff should the dipsey rod be? The one I have is pretty flexible. I think it's 1st gen. fibreglass.I would describe the tip as "floppy"/ When you see a bunch of marks on the screen at say, 100 feet, do you try to run the dipsey at their eye level? or slightly above maybe? Any other advice would be appreciated.. I throw up a photo of the rig when I can. Thanks!
  17. On another Keuka jigging trip this AM, my buddy noticed my rod tip has quite a bit of flex. Suggested a stiffer pole might work better, got me thinking. The rods I have are Diawa 'Eliminator' medium action 8'6" 12-20 lb. I didn't buy them for jigging, they were just an impulse purchase off the rack at Dicks. Are these suitable rods for jigging ? What do you regular jiggers use? Searched for a previous thread on this topic but came up empty.
  18. Guys - as you can see from the other thread I started (Keuka skunk..) I'm still learning the ropes, but I can say of the fish I've caught jigging so far, there is no pattern to what retreive they hit. I caught them on the drop, slowly lifting and dropping, and just letting the jig sit with no motion other than wave action. The only thing that hasn't worked (yet) is getting hit on a retrieve up. I would say over half the hits are on the drop -- which I think are hard to feel and harder to hook. And probably half were fish I never saw on the fish finder either. Sometimes they just come out of nowhere. What I also see on my fish finder is that whatever I drop often gets inspected by a fish or two, but the vast majority turn and swim away once they get a look at it. Just like a brown trout will rise up and look at a dry fly and then refuse it. I haven't yet figured out what the missing 'trigger' is - color, size, action, scent, etc. It may be different every day for all I know. Or it may not matter at all, maybe the fish actively feed only at certain times of day, phase of moon, etc. I know one troller who never uses anything except a silver spoon, and he does as well as anyone. So I'm not sure one jig/bait is really better than another, but my producers this year seem to be an all white paddle tail and a pearl fluke with green flakes. Lately I have taken to setting the hook at the slightest little bump or nip and I think it has helped improve my hookups. The other thing I'm doing is moving often.. 3 drops and no hits - I go find another set of marks to drop to.
  19. Guff - to bleed a larger trout/salmon just cut one or two gill arches. And because a sharp knife and a thrashing fish don't mix well, don't use a knife, just stick your finger in the gills and tear it. The gills are quite fragile, and the fish will bleed out very quickly.
  20. Fishing report - Jigged Penn Yan arm from Olney's down to bluff this morning from about 6:30 - 9:30 AM, with a buddy. Hooked 4, landed 2! 1.5 or 2 oz jigs with flukes were getting bit; flukes were all white paddle tail, and pearl with green metal flake. Larger fish that I took home had a fat belly - turns out she had a load of good-sized eggs and an empty stomach. Normal for this time of year? Couple other crazy things happened.. got the big fish up on top and my buddy is just getting ready to slide the net under, and ptooey! goes the jig.. Oh no! I scream.. but my buddy did a miracle net job and managed to catch it before it took off. The other was I got a hit on the drop, set the hook and then the fish disappeared.. I was reeling like mad trying to get the slack up but couldn't get tight to the fish.. thought it must have got off somehow.. then "SPLASH" on the other side of the boat, and 'pting!' line breaks. Neither of us saw the fish, but never heard of a lake trout going airborne from 50 FOW. Would love to know what it was, but never will. All in all a decent outing; it felt good to have a little excitement on board.
  21. Guff & Sk8man - Yeah I think you are right about that. Don't have a proper fishing boat with built-in ice chest but no doubt can get a yard sale one.
  22. Tg8 - I have noticed there are often 'slicks' on the surface with bubbles and wondered if they result from trout feeding on sawbellies. Last summer I jigged some of them and caught fish. Never noticed a 'fishy' smell though. I will have to take another look at them next time I get out. Also FWIW - was out yesterday AM and caught one laker off Marlena Point, jigging with a trailer fly tied to the jig hook. Fish took the trailer fly which was about half the size of the jig/fluke. Been getting bumps and nips with no hookups, and wanted to present something smaller. Tried using half a fluke on the jig, but the slot in the middle makes it hard to get it to ride on the jig the right way. Another question is if I want to use a second rod that could be left unattended while I jig with the other, what should I put on the second rod? Lots of questions I know...
  23. My trolling motor is permanently attached on the bow, and has a wire harness with a connector for the foot pedal (an older model). The pins in the connector show some corrosion (blue/green coating) and its finicky.. have to fiddle with it to get the contacts and motor to work. How do I clean the darn thing?
  24. I want to install a float switch for my bilge pump in my 19' Bayliner. The pump sits under the engine and there is room for the switch there also, in the proper orientation. However there is only a few inches of headroom to work under the engine, so drilling and screwing in the mount is difficult to impossible (without lifting the engine). I think epoxy might work but there is 1/2" water with a little engine oil mixed in sitting there. Suggestions? Also, if I wire it to the existing on/off switch, then I will lose the ability to manually turn it on, right? So to keep the ability to do that I need to get a three-position switch?
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