Check

 

Defiance Boats!

LURECHARGE!

THE PP OUTDOOR FORUMS

Kast Gear!

Power Pro Shimano Reels G Loomis Rods

  Willie boats! Puffballs!

 

Three Rivers Marine

 

 
Topic Options
Rate This Topic
#166129 - 11/20/02 12:49 AM plug water
onesteelheadnut Offline
Eyed Egg

Registered: 11/19/02
Posts: 7
Loc: puyallup
After many years of bankin' it, I have finaly got a driftboat, 16 ft. Lavro . I have taken it out a couple times and managed not to spin circles, hit anything, and have put a couple of steelies in it. All of my experience is drift or float fishing and I would like to learn how to pull plugs. I have puchased some Tadpollies for now. In all of the reading that I have done the same phrase keeps coming up, "good plug water". If any old plug pullin' hands would descibe what good plug water is I would really apreciate it. thanks.

Top
#166130 - 11/20/02 01:17 AM Re: plug water
fish4steel Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 09/12/01
Posts: 348
Loc: yelm, wa
steelnut, check your e-mail on some ideas.
_________________________
Any day spent fishing does NOT count against one's life expectancy!!
Cyberfishing from Korea sux!!

Top
#166131 - 11/20/02 01:21 AM Re: plug water
silver hilton Offline
Repeat Spawner

Registered: 10/08/01
Posts: 1147
Loc: Out there, somewhere
Not to be a smart alec, but it'll be the water that has all the plug pulling boats in it. Do a drift saturday afternoon in december or january and look for guys fishing. You want the ones with the intent look that glare a little bit when you get close to 'their' hole. That'll show you most of what you need to know.

Don't be afraid to just pull in 100 yards above somebody, and fish behind them. Watch what they do. Do the same, or do something slightly different. If he's going down in the middle, go down right next to the bank, or the reverse. Eventually one or the other of you will catch a fish, and you'll learn something about what plug water looks like. You can easily catch fish behind other boats, particularly if you've got a little something special down there. If you know they're running bait, run plugs, or vice versa.

Now, for a description, it's water that is slow enough so that you can hold the boat in it without getting a coronary, fast enough to hold fish, and long enough so that you can get the plugs set out and have water to still fish. Preferably it doesn't also have a bunch of bank fishermen that are fishing the same area of water. If a bank fisherman can hit you with a rock or his sinker, you're too close to be plugging that water.

Does that help?
_________________________
Hm-m-m-m-m

Top
#166132 - 11/20/02 05:50 AM Re: plug water
bardo Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 11/21/01
Posts: 304
Loc: union wa
another idea that might be good would be to hire a guide that pulls plugs. that would teach you the basics.

Top
#166133 - 11/20/02 11:08 AM Re: plug water
Beezer Offline
Spawner

Registered: 06/09/99
Posts: 838
Loc: Monroe WA
For me it's the cut-bank side of the river with a water depth of 4-8 feet over cobble about the size of softballs to bowling balls or larger (no ball jokes here please) with a well defined tailout at the end to push the fish towards until the water gets too fast/shallow that they can't back up anymore and decide to rip your tadpolly's head off.

Beezer

Top
#166134 - 11/20/02 12:50 PM Re: plug water
Sky-Guy Offline
The Tide changed

Registered: 08/31/00
Posts: 7083
Loc: Everett
I agree Beezer.

Theoretically, you want to "trap" the fish and make him bite your plug.

Do this by starting out a the top of the hole and rowing the boat back and forth across the width of the hole. Go slowly downstream in a zig-zag fashion working towards the tail.

Hopefully, the fish will see the plug once or twice, get pissed and head downstream a little.
Then, by the time you get to the tailout, you wil be forcing him to strike because he doesn't want to head downstream any further.
_________________________
You know something bad is going to happen when you hear..."Hey, hold my beer and watch this"

Top

Moderator:  The Moderator 
Search

Site Links
Home
Our Washington Fishing
Our Alaska Fishing
Reports
Rates
Contact Us
About Us
Recipes
Photos / Videos
Visit us on Facebook
Today's Birthdays
merkelman, MWR, WorstFishCatcher
Recent Gallery Pix
hatchery steelhead
Hatchery Releases into the Pacific and Harvest
Who's Online
2 registered (Streamer, 28 Gage), 839 Guests and 21 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Newest Members
NoyesMaker, John Boob, Lawrence, I'm Still RichG, feyt
11499 Registered Users
Top Posters
Todd 27838
Dan S. 16958
Sol Duc 15727
The Moderator 13944
Salmo g. 13530
eyeFISH 12618
STRIKE ZONE 11969
Dogfish 10878
ParaLeaks 10363
Jerry Garcia 9013
Forum Stats
11499 Members
17 Forums
72944 Topics
825316 Posts

Max Online: 3937 @ 07/19/24 03:28 AM

Join the PP forums.

It's quick, easy, and always free!

Working for the fish and our future fishing opportunities:

The Wild Steelhead Coalition

The Photo & Video Gallery. Nearly 1200 images from our fishing trips! Tips, techniques, live weight calculator & more in the Fishing Resource Center. The time is now to get prime dates for 2018 Olympic Peninsula Winter Steelhead , don't miss out!.

| HOME | ALASKA FISHING | WASHINGTON FISHING | RIVER REPORTS | FORUMS | FISHING RESOURCE CENTER | CHARTER RATES | CONTACT US | WHAT ABOUT BOB? | PHOTO & VIDEO GALLERY | LEARN ABOUT THE FISH | RECIPES | SITE HELP & FAQ |