Your best shot at a nice sized steelhead is a green or purple spoon on a dipsy diver in mid-july in depths of about 55-90 Feet.
What ?? Bass, Catfish, Stripe, Pike, basicly all fish. anything you put on the end of string is a lure.
Just fish wer you would like to fish then if a small fish catches your lure DO NOT press a or b but if a big fish gets it Press A or B.
Harry H. Wagner has written: 'A summary of investigations of the use of hatchery-reared steelhead in the management of a sport fishery' -- subject(s): Hatchery fishes, Steelhead (Fish)
Duane E. Phinney has written: 'The use of mesh restrictions to minimize the steelhead catch in the Grays Harbor gill net fishery' -- subject(s): Steelhead (Fish), Salmon fisheries, Gillnetting
I used a lure to catch bonito fish ( at Blue Deeps)
As the fish start to slow down and go deeper in cooler waters you can use live bait, such as minnows, to get a strike out of them. A minnow-like lure on a slip sinker works well too.
Use the frog lure. Be wary; the timing needs to be much more exact, and you need to wait a split second before you press the button to catch it. Practice using the lure on other fish to get the hang of the timing.
Use a Fish Lure at Sonar Level 3. It takes patience though.
A chatter bait is a king of lure/bait that you can use when you go fishing. You can use this along with other baits to fish. It is quite safe to use a chatter bait since you use it only to fish.
it can all depend on a number of things- how big the lure is, the lures colour how deep the lure is running where the fish are the season and the weather. first you want an overcast day and a warm south westerly breese, say your going for a pike/musky around 15-20lbs, i would use a lure about 4-6 inches preferably a jerkbait or hardlure with a diveplain on the front (the shallower angle the plain is the deeper the lure dives and vise-versa) in winter lures must run deep and very solwly and in summer the lure can be worked abit faster and at varying depth. in coloured water use a bright lure e.g. orange, green or yellow, in clear water use a lure with added detail on it and in bright conditions use a reflective lure. also try to match the lure to what the pike mostly eat it wont be as good fishing a perch lure if the pike rarly eat them and go for roach instead. if your still stuck invest in a DVD of book focusing on this subject (the fox guide to lure fishing(DVD) is an exelent choice)
Lantern fish and angler fish differ in physical characteristics and hunting strategies. Lantern fish are small and have bioluminescent organs for camouflage and communication, while angler fish are larger and have a bioluminescent lure to attract prey. Lantern fish are fast swimmers and hunt in schools, while angler fish are slow and use their lure to ambush prey.
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