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  #1  
Old 02-16-2013, 05:26 AM
ratherbefishing ratherbefishing is offline
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Default Cold weather fishing question

I know I'm eager to fish an also fairly new to it. What's everyones thought on fishing cold weather like today? All week its been AC by day and heat at night. Is there any good fishing to be had and if so what should i be chasing. I know a day out not catching is better than being inside but i'm curious on everyones thoughts and looking to head in the right direction. I'm limited to where i can go being boatless at the moment but there's gotta be something out there.
Thanks for your input.
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  #2  
Old 02-20-2013, 12:44 AM
ratherbefishing ratherbefishing is offline
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Thanks for the input everyone I appreciate it.
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  #3  
Old 02-20-2013, 01:32 AM
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Shallow Runner Shallow Runner is offline
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Well buddy I'm no expert by any means but I can give you my opinion just the same. When the weather is unstable,I don't fish. I never fish after a front until 3 days of stable weather after the front. It doesn't matter hot, cold, or comfortable. Warm fronts stall the bite same as cool fronts in my experience. I also use a barometer, I find any pressure movement is good but I have done best on rising pressure, once it peaks out or gets above 31 I'm done. Fish bite in cold weather, hot weather and when it's comfortable for you. Finding them is a challenge for every fisherman and where you find them can vary from day to day. To answer you're cold weather question I start deep, in the channel from the bottom to 1 foot. Then move to the first incline, the side of the channel. Then work my way across the flat targeting any structure I find. Than I will work my way to the second incline at about 7-10 feet of water still targeting structure. After that I work the bank back to 7 feet of water targeting cover. If I don't get a bite I'm done. This time of year I would start on the banks and work my way to 7 feet of water targeting both cover and structure. Good luck and I hope this helps.
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  #4  
Old 02-20-2013, 02:38 AM
ratherbefishing ratherbefishing is offline
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Thanks for the input it definitly helps.
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  #5  
Old 02-20-2013, 09:28 AM
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meaux fishing meaux fishing is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Shallow Runner View Post
Well buddy I'm no expert by any means but I can give you my opinion just the same. When the weather is unstable,I don't fish. I never fish after a front until 3 days of stable weather after the front. It doesn't matter hot, cold, or comfortable. Warm fronts stall the bite same as cool fronts in my experience. I also use a barometer, I find any pressure movement is good but I have done best on rising pressure, once it peaks out or gets above 31 I'm done. Fish bite in cold weather, hot weather and when it's comfortable for you. Finding them is a challenge for every fisherman and where you find them can vary from day to day. To answer you're cold weather question I start deep, in the channel from the bottom to 1 foot. Then move to the first incline, the side of the channel. Then work my way across the flat targeting any structure I find. Than I will work my way to the second incline at about 7-10 feet of water still targeting structure. After that I work the bank back to 7 feet of water targeting cover. If I don't get a bite I'm done. This time of year I would start on the banks and work my way to 7 feet of water targeting both cover and structure. Good luck and I hope this helps.
good advice...Wish I could help but I dont bank fish much at all and I almost never fish freshwater
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  #6  
Old 02-20-2013, 09:53 AM
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mako1 mako1 is offline
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i caught my biggest bass ever when it was 25 degrees at take off. but yes generally the first 2 days after a big high pressure system comes in is very tough. just have to slow your presentation down alot. fish slow. dont expect too many bites.
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  #7  
Old 02-20-2013, 10:21 AM
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Keywest18 Keywest18 is offline
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If bass fishing. Slow you're presentation down alot. The fish arent going to want to chase it. Also make.repeated casts to the same area you wanna get the bait as close.to the fish as possible. Since the water is cold the fish dont swim/move as much so they dont burn off their food so they eat less. Most bites will probably be a reaction strike. They also look at energy spent vs the reward. A fish isnt gonna swim very far for a small minnow. Its not worth it to them...
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  #8  
Old 02-20-2013, 10:27 AM
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specktator specktator is offline
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The best big trout trips I have had on Big Lake were days most people would have stayed in.
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