04-28-12, 04:02 PM | #1 |
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Favorite lures for skipping.
Another skipping question for me. I'm curious what some of the favorite lure choices are for skipping by others here in the forums. I think my experiment with skipping with a bait caster is about over. After several tries, it leaves me with the same feeling I had when I quit golfing. So I'm going to try using a 6 1/2 MH/F spinning outfit with 20 pound braid for skipping. Just thinking off the top of my head, lures I think would work well for skipping would be tubes, senkos, weedless spoons, and frog baits. Does this sound about right to you fellas? Am I leaving anything out? I figure, the fewer appendages, the better. Less to catch water on the skip.
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04-28-12, 04:50 PM | #2 |
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Tubes are good, as is a senko. I'd add a beaver style bait as my favorite and about as easy a bait to skip as there is, because it's relativelly flat and skips like a stone. Good rod choice, mine is just a bit shorter at 6'3".
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04-28-12, 04:57 PM | #3 |
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Keith, I really think you should keep after the skipping with a baitcaster deal. I am still not great at it but I am getting better and more confident with it daily. What made the biggest difference for me was finding the right rod for the job. If I was skipping a jig I was using a jig rod, if I was skipping a creature bait I was using a Texas rig rod. What I finally found was that I could get away with using a rod for skipping baits that might be too light for casting the same bait. What I mean is since skipping usually means a pretty short cast I could still get a good hookset with a rod that had a pretty soft tip which allowed me to keep the bait low to the water when I made a cast. This rod would not have enough backbone if I was dragging a jig in 20 foot of water, but it has plenty of backbone for making a short skipping cast. Once I figured out which rod suited me best for skipping I have been making a lot more headway towards learning this technique because I can loosen the tension knob on the reel and make a really soft cast and load up the rod tip so it almost has a sling shot effect. This helps the bait pick up velocity, stay low to the water, and not require me casting so hard that I create a backlash (as often).
To answer your question though. I would say that you could get away with that rod for just about any bait you wanted to skip. A few others I would add is a Swee Beaver, swim jig, finesse jig, and a shaky head.
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04-28-12, 05:03 PM | #4 |
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No don't give up yet. It seems we just has this conversation. I was just skipping senkos yesterday though it only skips for maybe 4 skips max. Very useful for where I fish. Sure I bird nested a few times but then againi bird nest when I cast regular too so no difference IMO. I fish exclusively bait casters now and it's pretty much a practice every outing. Keep at it Keith
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04-28-12, 10:14 PM | #5 |
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I'll keep at it but I'm thinking about having a dedicated spinning outfit along for skipping when I really want to make it count. But yeah, I'll still keep trying to learn to skip a bait caster from time to time. Thanks for the tip on rod choice Kory. How would you feel about a 5 1/2' pistol grip casting rod, medium action for skipping? Another recent post about pistol grips got me to thinking a shorter pistol grip casting rod might make skipping easier to learn. I could move up in rod size as it gets easier.
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04-28-12, 10:26 PM | #6 |
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I give up on using a bait-caster for skipping also but have caught plenty of fish with spinning rig I think you should use what ever your comfortable with and have confidence I like to skip a fluke and have had good luck with it.
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04-28-12, 11:58 PM | #7 | |
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Quote:
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04-30-12, 10:14 AM | #8 |
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I like skipping a fluke, it looks like a minnow being chased and jumping out of the water to escape.
I've been looking for a good quality, yet affordable 6' baitcaster rod for a while now, for making short casts in cover with spinnerbaits and jigs. I have a few on my radar, just haven't pulled the trigger yet. It seems like a very specific technique, but I think it would get a good deal of use; also in my canoe or kayak when fishing topwater and jerkbaits(techniques in which having the rod pointed down is an advantage). Any recommendations out there for this type of rod?
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04-30-12, 10:51 AM | #9 |
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I skip with both baitcasters and spinning rods. The lures I skip include Senkos, tubes, flukes (especially the Zoom Super Fluke), some of the flatter hollow swimbaits, and the early 1990's infomercial sensation, the Flying Lure.
I fish a lot of ponds and small streams/rivers in wooded areas, so skipping is a must, and I find that depending on the bait, I can go either way for a rod. |
05-02-12, 07:14 AM | #10 |
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The zero appendage, watermelon red zoom speed worm body minus the tail skips extremely well. Fishing it weightless it is perfect for skipping. Great also for distance casting with a spinning outfit. Texposing also helps prevent air resistance.....shortly put, it's truly a winner!!!
Good Fishing, Mac
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05-02-12, 11:13 AM | #11 |
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Flukes and Fat Ika
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05-02-12, 12:12 PM | #12 |
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Theres one bet many would not think of skipping,built perfect for it and when shad are being chased hard to beat,a rattletrap.I have even just gone along the bank skipping it back in under tree branches and had my boat pard give me glares as making noise yet bass didnt seem to mind and stopped it at times inbetween skips.
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06-02-12, 02:32 PM | #13 |
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Lunker City makes a bait called a spanky and it skips really well for me. (weightless)
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