On Lake Erie we used big juicy night crawlers and jigged them along the bottom. Caught our limit
2007-11-04 00:40:38
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answer #1
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answered by Clueless 5
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I like Red Wingnut16's answer.
Drifting/trolling is an excellent way to "scout" for active fish.
Lindy rigs with a spinner/nightcrawler harness is great.
I have also found that casting/drifting 1/4 OZ black jigheads with Berkely "Gulp" Minnow grubs/leeches/ or Fathead minnows work excellent.
Try jigs in various colors to determine what works "best".
Also trolling/casting "wide-wobble" Rapala-type hard plastic's, (Yozuri), in low-light conditions has worked well for me. Just make sure to "juice-up" any hard plastic lures with some type of sprayable Walleye fish attractant, (Dr. Juice, Berkley, Etc).
Hope this helps ya? Good luck!
2007-11-04 21:02:55
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answer #2
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answered by Swamp Zombie 7
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I've always had the best luck with a Doll-fly and worm worked off a point in the lake in 15-25 feet of water, or trolling (on lazy days) with a lure called a "Hot-Shot" with a worm on the back treble hook.
2007-11-04 07:43:33
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answer #3
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answered by steve.c_50 6
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Twister Tail Jigs with a minnow or night crawler. Spray with a little bit of WD40.
2007-11-07 14:09:14
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answer #4
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answered by Lungbuster01 1
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Drifting with Lindy rigs tipped with worms,leeches,minnows always pays off and a great way to locate the school also .
2007-11-04 09:52:35
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answer #5
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answered by redwingnut16 3
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