Bluegill - Big Bluegill

Do you love big bluegill?

sometimes when the fishing gets tough and a float or a roadrunner isnt working i go to the bottom.. just a small splitshot or two and a waxworm or a small piece of nightcrawler.. caught alot of big gills using this method...

Views: 3209

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Bottom fishing is my choice 90% of the time but I'm also not targeting bluegill, I'm targeting shellcrackers. Shellcrackers are on bottom and you won't catch very many from a suspended cork. However, we routinely catch large bluegills while fishing the bottom. Like I said, I throw out four poles and let them all sit on bottom and I've got a freezer full of fish.

Cal- Aside from fishing tiny jigs tipped with waxworms or crickets, this is how I catch a lot of large panfish on or next to the bottom.  I use basically a drop shot rig, but instead of having the hook tied directly to my 2 lb test line, I will use a long 8 inch dropper loop above the sinker- about 18 inches or so.  After tying a big 9-10 inch loop, I will cut off one of the lines of the loop so I just have the one piece of line coming off my main line, and I tie on a Gamakatsu fly tying hook C12U #10.  I use a large split shot of about a 1/8 oz as a weight on the bottom of your line.  Split shots are great because if you hang up on the bottom, usually you can just do a steady pull and the hung up sinker will slide off the end of your line, and you'll get your expensive hooks back, and all you need to do is pinch on another sinker.  I use crickets, earthworms, waxworms, mealworms, and if it was legal here where I fish, I would use live minnows.  I fish this rig on a slow moving troll or drift, primarily from a float tube, or sometimes a boat, and I use this rig in 10 to 50 FOW.  I do not just cast it out and wait.  I keep it moving along the bottom to cover more area.  Try this method-  It really works great!

thanks for the info.. i will also try the split shot on the bottom .. sounds like it will save me some hooks

Could I bother you for a drawing or photo of what that looks like, Jeff?

Here is a quick drawing of basically how it is put together.  If you fish in an area with weeds ans snags, you can go up to 4 lb test, but much higher than that and you will not catch as many large panfish.

Attachments:

Thats nice Jeff! I like the loop cut to make a dropper.

I've also used regular egg sinkers in place of the split shot.

You just use a length of light wire, like copper wire or an unfolded paper clip. Bend this in half like a cotter pin and poke it through the sinkers center hole. Then you spread the wire "legs" a bit, as they stick of the sinker. Tie your line to the wires top loop and it's ready to use.

If the sinker snags up, a steady, heavy pull on the line will pull the wire legs out of the sinker and you are free!

Thanks, Jeff, that's great! I'm looking forward to trying that out from my tube in the spring.

Thanks also to David, I have some egg sinkers sitting around somewhere that I'll try this with.

Jonathan

Good advice Jeff. I have been using the drop shot for bluegill for years and it works great. Most bluegill species, other than redear, move up to eat so you almost have to have it up in the water column to get their attention. And the feel you have on the offering is incredible. I just cannot fish with bobbers anymore because of the lack of tactile input.

i love it, its all i do. i cant catch nothing on a float no more, but no float and its in there throat. lol! my method is the same as everybody on here and my few pics on my profile will show you evidence on this behalf, i cast out in open water as im tied to shore and let it fall over some bottom vegetation, and let the rod rest over my boat by the time it reaches bottom theve already picked it up. :)

going to do that in a lil while. fishing hasnt been too great. weather changes have killed consistency.

i personally use a telescopic cane pole..Master Crappie Grabber, and use a split shot, as you said and drop it down.

I personally dont like using live bait but sometimes thats all that works.

i bottom fish 90% or better of my time. i believe i do it a little different though...i use a slip cork. a standard 1 1/2" foam cork with a metal collar in each end. i let it slide free above 1 or 2 splitshot and a #5 abordeen with pink worms, crickets or red worms. its my go to never fail rig.

RSS

Latest Activity

John Sheehan posted photos
yesterday
John Sheehan commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

cupsaw bass

"The Yellow Perch Pattern is more so a Northern catcher I believe, Jeff. The Silver /Black Back and…"
Saturday
John Sheehan commented on John Sheehan's album
Thumbnail

Shore Fishing Trout and Panfish

"The benefit of catch and release perhaps, Dick!"
Saturday
John Sheehan posted photos
Saturday
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Sep 26
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Sep 26
Jeffrey D. Abney posted a status
"Scattered thunderstorms predawn moved out to sea and I gave it a shot..North Carolina creeks/river were very dirty from runoff, moved north"
Sep 26
Jeffrey D. Abney posted a status
"Hoping the beat the frontal boundary tomorrow morning for a crappie stalk on the coastal marsh….we have a lot of uncertainty in our weather"
Sep 25
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

cupsawlow waterwalleye

"Nice adjustment to the conditions John……good fishing…..cool that you tied the…"
Sep 25
John Sheehan commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

cupsawlow waterwalleye

"Hey Jeff-Every 4 years or so the lake committee lowers the lake for folks to do dock repairs. Thats…"
Sep 25
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

cupsawlow waterwalleye

"In a drought or drawdown for damn work? Nice fish…..I’ve never caught one but always…"
Sep 24
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

cupsaw bass

"I loved this bait color as a child…..but after lots of torture from being out fished by my…"
Sep 24
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

cupsawlow waterbass

"Nice colors on this largemouth….old school moving bait…."
Sep 24
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Sep 20
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Sep 20
Jeffrey D. Abney posted a status
"Finally got a calm morning on the 19 day of September, a coastal low dumped rain and high winds promising to turn the marsh over and it did."
Sep 20
John Sheehan posted photos
Sep 16
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Sep 10
Jeffrey D. Abney posted a status
"Very rough weather pattern, ready to get out if the wind will break…all the creeks are blown out and holding low….had a good dinner tonight…"
Sep 9
John Sheehan posted photos
Sep 6

© 2025   Created by Bluegill.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service