Hey,
Just looking for some info. What time of year is best for bass and is it likely to catch any this late in the year?
Also are there any good marks in the greater dublin area?
Any info welcome
Thanks
Ken :D
Bass this time of year
Moderator: donal domeney
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lampoon
- SAI Bait Ball
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- Location: Dublin - North
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KenM
Lampoon, thirty,
Thanks for the info. Had a read through a heep of mags and stuff. All showed rigs etc. but none mentioned their season. Only fishing a short while. So I'm looking at late spring early summer next year realistically then! Agh well.
Eoghan superquinn were all out of bass mate! you must of got there before me! :lol:
Thanks for the info. Had a read through a heep of mags and stuff. All showed rigs etc. but none mentioned their season. Only fishing a short while. So I'm looking at late spring early summer next year realistically then! Agh well.
Eoghan superquinn were all out of bass mate! you must of got there before me! :lol:
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kieran
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rigs and baits for winter bass
Hi KenM
You can not beat a mackerel head in winter for a big bass. You will catch relatively small fish on it as well, they have a massive gape! Use a zip slider rig or a pulley if you need to use a lead but you can work it with no lead - the frozen head is enough - and a single 4/0 hook. A treble with two hooks embedded in the head is an option as it avoids the use of shirring elastic to keep the head on. VMC make good onces in the 4/0 size, you can bulk buy them online cheap. Keeping it frozen means that the fluids leak out slowly only after the head has been cast into the sea. Keep the hook near the mackerel's eye as this is the visual key that the bass will attack. Crush the barbs to aid CPR and a quick honing will ensure they can cope with a bass' hard mouth... I've crushed barbs and blunted the damn hooks with cold hands before so best to do this before you head for a mark in the middle of winter!
Fluorocarbon snood is useful (I use 14 lb) and keep the tackle especially swivels as small and as innocuous as possible. Avoid shiny stuff.
Squid with the membrane removed is good for tipping smaller baits, but a whole squid is a good alternative bass bait, especially when twinned with a scented bait. Crab is excellent on its own, but lugworm and razorfish are good as scent markets, especially if they are freshly dug.
If you are not familiar with the rigs, some some in the shop and then buy the bits and copy them yourself. Pay particular attention to the knots and use good knots like a uni in preference to poor strength knots... or else you will find yourself fishing for a bass with 7 or 5 lb line instead of 14 lb!
Hope this helps
You can not beat a mackerel head in winter for a big bass. You will catch relatively small fish on it as well, they have a massive gape! Use a zip slider rig or a pulley if you need to use a lead but you can work it with no lead - the frozen head is enough - and a single 4/0 hook. A treble with two hooks embedded in the head is an option as it avoids the use of shirring elastic to keep the head on. VMC make good onces in the 4/0 size, you can bulk buy them online cheap. Keeping it frozen means that the fluids leak out slowly only after the head has been cast into the sea. Keep the hook near the mackerel's eye as this is the visual key that the bass will attack. Crush the barbs to aid CPR and a quick honing will ensure they can cope with a bass' hard mouth... I've crushed barbs and blunted the damn hooks with cold hands before so best to do this before you head for a mark in the middle of winter!
Fluorocarbon snood is useful (I use 14 lb) and keep the tackle especially swivels as small and as innocuous as possible. Avoid shiny stuff.
Squid with the membrane removed is good for tipping smaller baits, but a whole squid is a good alternative bass bait, especially when twinned with a scented bait. Crab is excellent on its own, but lugworm and razorfish are good as scent markets, especially if they are freshly dug.
If you are not familiar with the rigs, some some in the shop and then buy the bits and copy them yourself. Pay particular attention to the knots and use good knots like a uni in preference to poor strength knots... or else you will find yourself fishing for a bass with 7 or 5 lb line instead of 14 lb!
Hope this helps
Kieran Hanrahan
Time spent fishing is never time wasted...
2015 targets - a triggerfish, a specimen bass, a three bearded rockling to complete the set and something big and toothy from certain north Mayo deep water marks
Time spent fishing is never time wasted...
2015 targets - a triggerfish, a specimen bass, a three bearded rockling to complete the set and something big and toothy from certain north Mayo deep water marks
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KenM