I admit it guys, I'm pretty terrible at salt water fishing in the OBX. I have a vacation home down there and I struggle to catch any salty fish down there. I'll figure it out eventually.
I recently spent a 2 week vacation down there. The weather was fantastic. I wanted to share a new and successful technique to me that worked well in the shallow, mucky, weedy ponds that are in the OBX.
Since there is quite a bit of grass, weeds, and muck in the shallow ponds, I decided to try a Carolina Rig to go after largemouth bass. Since the bottom of the ponds mostly have grass, muck, with areas of hard sand, I decided that a floating worm might work best. That way, the bullet sinker would drag along the bottom, but the floating worm would float up above the muck.
It worked well. I used about a 3 foot leader of some 30 pound mono I had on hand. The floating worm was I believe a Strike King, elaztec plastic. It floated great and was weedless except when the hook point became exposed.
The bass would either eat the worm on the initial cast as the worm dropped, or the bass would strike on the drag and pause. I look forward to applying this presentation to the ponds I fish here in Maryland to see how it does.
I recently spent a 2 week vacation down there. The weather was fantastic. I wanted to share a new and successful technique to me that worked well in the shallow, mucky, weedy ponds that are in the OBX.
Since there is quite a bit of grass, weeds, and muck in the shallow ponds, I decided to try a Carolina Rig to go after largemouth bass. Since the bottom of the ponds mostly have grass, muck, with areas of hard sand, I decided that a floating worm might work best. That way, the bullet sinker would drag along the bottom, but the floating worm would float up above the muck.
It worked well. I used about a 3 foot leader of some 30 pound mono I had on hand. The floating worm was I believe a Strike King, elaztec plastic. It floated great and was weedless except when the hook point became exposed.
The bass would either eat the worm on the initial cast as the worm dropped, or the bass would strike on the drag and pause. I look forward to applying this presentation to the ponds I fish here in Maryland to see how it does.
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