North American spoon chuckers

An outside the box approach to big bluegill fishing.
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  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    Bob, start with chrome or any of the taped color variations....hammered and brass models work well in cloudy conditions
  • Douglas Buck

    Ya'll keep the line wet and the hook sharp........
  • John Sheehan

    Bill my trebles on the12th oz. Kastmasters are getting beat up.Do you know where I can get single hooks the right size for them?
    The Swedish Pimple,Hildebrandts,Blue Fox and Kastmasters did great last night on my home lake .Blue Gill,P.Seeds,Yellow and White Perch,Bass,Crappie all took the worm piece tipped spoons.They worked real good casting to a fallen treetop as well as to shady areas under overhanging trees. Slow trolling with the oars 8-10 ' worked great too!...glass calm.. nothin' feeding on surface...the spoons took it to them!
    Thanks for you fishin' help!I fully expect to read a detailed article written by you in In Fisherman someday soon!

    A little off topic but I ghad a great day in April catchin'Pickerel on spoons.The spoons took the most Picks but trolling Crankbaits took the two biggest:20" and 22"
  • Jim Gronaw

    I have 2 new places to try tommorrow for rumored giant gills. Ain't life grand?!? If I can step out of my comfort zone I'll give the spoons a try. Thanks!
  • Bruce Condello

    I used spoons for a while yesterday. I caught both bluegill and redear sunfish on them.
  • John Sikkila

    I have caught gills on swedish pimples in the past....and small cast masters......been awhile though........fun for sure!....I did catch a gillzilla many years ago on a 4" red and whitespoon( daredevil) while casting for northerns.......lol!
  • BradH

    I just picked up a bunch of small Swedish Pimples last week on closeout at the Kearney Cabela's and now I see this spoon chucker thing in my email. Coincidence or fate?
  • Bruce Condello

    Wow! This group is taking off like wildfire!
  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    Well first off, I'd like to thank everyone for joining this group....because if you've haven't experienced the madness a spoon can bring to bluegill fishing, your in for a real treat!

    My fishing partner and I explored Lake Delavan today in Southeastern Wisconsin.....surface temps were in the mid 70's and most of the bluegill had finished spawning and were positioned down the hill in 15-25 ft.

    Todays productive spoons were the 1/12 oz Acme Kastmaster, and the 1/16 oz Blue Fox rattlin' flash spoon in the rainbow trout pattern....normally when we find fish in this depth of water, they typically suspend somewhere within the water column.....today, the fish were pinned to within a foot of the bottom yet eagerly accepted our offerings when the spoons were dragged along the lake floor. We tipped live today using 2 waxworms....on more than one occasion, large Northerns stole our hooked gills today.....I've added a pic of the simple rigging,....be sure and use black barrel swivels and snaps when building this rig....brass tackle will draw ghost hits from juvenile gills.

  • Josh Holley

    please tell me where to get some good spoons because i can't find them on the internet
  • Bob Davis

    Josh, I Googled Swedish Pimple and got their website immediately. I ordered them right from that website. Very Very Easy! Mod, you said you dragged the baits along the bottom. Do you use a lifting "hopping" motion with the spoons or simply drag them on the bottom or a combination of both actions? Also, can they be productive when the fish are suspended in very deep water like 50 feet and holding at 18-25 feet? If so, do you just let it float along as you wind drift or back troll or do you add lifting motion to it as you slide along? Sincerely, Bob
  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    Anytime I'm fishing suspended fish, I'm casting and counting the lure down to the productive layer, and concentrate the retrieve at that depth.....Todays fish were holding unusually deep and we varied the retrieve until we found out what worked (bottom dragging)
  • blackhawks

    Mod, thanks for inviting me to this group.

    So, when is the first Bigbluegill.com North American Spoon Chuckers tournament? Two man teams, 15 fish (total weight), and only spoons allowed. A minimal entry fee and payouts to the top 10 teams, or no fee and just the ability to brag about your team's finish. Could be a great time and provide the opportunity to meet Bigbluegill users face to face vs. the "virtual world".
  • Bob Davis

    Thanks Mike. Everything you said makes sense. One of my biggest problems is trying different things and changing up colors and weights of baits. I have a tackle box full of stuff but when it comes time to try something different, I just keep trying what worked last time out. Only problem now is finding time to get back out there. I'm stuck to weekend fishing now that I'm back to work full time again. Damned if you do, damned if you don't. This website helps with the time in-between. Thanks so much. Bob
  • John Sheehan

    Bill That sounds like clear water your fishin' at Lake Delavan...Am I wrong?
  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    http://www.bigbluegill.com/video/spoons-1
  • Brian Saeger

    Thanks for the invite! Always willing try expand my repertoire to improve my bluegill catching skills.
  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    blackhawks, that sounds like a great idea!.....problem is the groups demagraphic diversity. If we could find enough members to participate in something like this I would like for it to happen on strange water, Rock lake in Jefferson co. WI might be a good location....I hear big gills swim there, and locals regularly finesse the deep water.....it's just itchin' to get spooned, but I'm up for any suggestions, and willing to travel.....meeting some BBG members on this type of stage would be a blast.......If anybodys got any ideas, shout them out!
  • blackhawks

    Bill, I totally agree....these things are always easier to say than do. However, it might start small and then increase in numbers. We would need to consider the proximity of lodging, restaurants, bait shops, etc. That being said, we should give it a shot. If held in Wisconsin, I believe the Dept. of Natural Resources has recently increased rules related to tournaments. I haven't researched the laws to see if they include panfish, etc. I need to do that if we target Wisconsin water.

    I am on vacation this week. Currently, I am in Prairie du Chien, WI and my hotel is right next door to Cabela's. I went in there last night hoping to buy the hooks and snaps you recommend for spoon fishing. They were sold out of smaller snaps and they didn't have the Mustad hooks you recommended. I ran out of time so I'll head back there later today to look for other brands in that size/style. Beautiful country up here. We took the bridge over into Iowa and saw some guys fishing some backwaters. My wife told me to keep my eyes on the road!!
  • Bob Davis

    Bill, Do you switch out the hooks that come with the Swedish Pimples with the #6 O'Shaughnessy on your rig example? If so, why? Do the gills take the single hook better then the treble? I checked the Duolock snaps on the Cabelas website in black. Many folks who bought them were very unpleased with the results. Others thought they were great. Think I'll look around on these things. Bob
  • John Sheehan

    After all this rain here in NE New Jersey I decided to add this little spinner to my spoon presentation...works good casting and retrieving slow.


  • Rob Garner

    Hit one of the better deep waters this morning for some gills.Not in the cards for me today.I know where they are and it's just a matter of time before I get it right. Used a 1/10 and 1/5 oz swede with a little wax silver or copper color.I have some random success with the spoons so far but am confident it will come.I have been using small hops in the deep but will add the drag.I think I will have to make a trip to bass pro to try and find a few more color options.
    My best success with this method so far has been shallow water weed top ticking, pretty much ever thing hammered it, in this type of location. I think the deep bite may be a more subtle hit. Time to try for some Lake perch. May all your lines be taut,and your pans filled with grease and sounds of the sweet fry.
  • John Sheehan

    I guess Joe, but I added it more for the vibration thinking in muddy water gills could locate it easier.I usually throw small spinners for gills in high muddy conditions but like the spoon for its ability to take it down to the fish ...gonna start using this more and see if the combo has its day
  • John Sheehan

    Alright!John McKeans here!!
  • Finatic

    Bull gils is the game finatic is the name. Great site looking forward to the tactics and knowledge.
  • John Sheehan

    First time using the spinner/spoon/ worm rig.... a rainy muddy water concept...this fish and others were caught casting to a 3-4ft. flat adjacent to a dropoff of perhaps 6-10 ft or more shortly before a storm and little cold front...need to test this drifting and trolling
  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    John, I re-posted your pic for a better view....this page will stretch pics that are wider than 600 pixels.

  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    Bob, as to your question about hooks, the single hook that comes with the Swedish pimple is by far the best single hook...it has a larger eye to better accomodate the split ring....the Mustad Oshaugnessy hook is only to be used with spoons like the Acme Kastmaster, as they do not include a single hook with their product......Snaps are snaps, just make sure it's a cross lock snap and not a safety pin snap.
  • John Sheehan

    The spinner/spoon combo is easy to assemble but read through my discussions on "Spoon Chuckers "for its drawbacks as well as pluses...I had some old Eagle claw snelled spinner rigs designed for small trout/Panfish and the hooks rusted..so I cutoff the spinners/clevis's and beads and utilized them this way.
  • John Sheehan

    My spinner /spoon worked well today ,caught alot of BG/Bass and White Perch...but a drawback is the spinner seperates from the spoon while casting (maybe if it was mounted on a shafted spoon it would be better.I'm thinking the added spinner/Spoon combo is better for trolling and drifting spoons . I'll continue to use it under muddy or badly off colored rainy water though as I think it is still a trigger to some degree. Fish feel a spinner I think better than a spoon and I'm using it more for vibration than flash...Its a tiny spinner and the spoon has the flash and perhaps a little more flash and bigger profile from the added spinner works better under the conditions of cloudy visibility for the fish.
  • Bob Davis

    John, As far as your spinner blade seperating from your spoon, you can try putting 2 or 3 colored beads ahead of the clevis and blade. Then take a round toothpick and a micro amount of superglue, place the dab on the bead furthers away from your blade and let it set up. It will hold your bead in place and not affect anything else. Just be very sparing with that stuff. You'll get the hang of it in very short order. It should work fine for you. Bob
  • John Sheehan

    Thanks Bob that tip sounds like it'll work.Thanks for your in put!
  • John Sheehan

    Bass inhales spoon/spinner

  • Bob Davis

    Very cool. Looks like that bass had no problem with your spinner/spoon set-up. Did you try the super glue idea? Bob
  • John Sheehan

    No Bob I got your message after this outing! I'll have to try it and get back to you...thanks!
  • Lance A. Cashler

    Alright chuckers, I scored with the spoon. Nothing big yet.
  • Lance A. Cashler

    Alright. I used Gulp worms tonight spooning, and they certainly did not compare with nightcrawler pieces. Are other Gulp products better than the earthworms?
  • John Sheehan

    Comment by John Sheehan 39 seconds ago Delete Comment I also can not compare Gulp with real worms from my yard.
    I have not found fish that were really interested in the Gulp and I think its messier than live worms and more expensive.I am still not impressed with GulpI'll stick with worms for now.
  • Lance A. Cashler

    I haven't seen the maggots in this area yet. I have seen the red colored e-worms. Anyone tried the nightcrawler Gulp?
  • John Sheehan

    Guys ,what do you think is this a BG/SF Hybrid?


  • Rob Garner

    Hey fellow spoonchuckers was out this morn and used a couple different baits with some success on fryer gills. Used a diamond jig with little atoms tails and a hammered purple swede tipped with waxies.The gills hammered both but the swede by far received many more hits then the fish became uninterested around 8. This particular lake I dont cast for the gills I always do better just deadsticking with the occasional jig motion.
  • Rob Garner

    Soonchuckers happened to have the chance to fish a beautiful 1 acre or so private pond this late afternoon.We used some crawlers ,jigs and waxies and a 1/4 oz swede tipped with the wax.Bill I think I am getting the hang of this a lil better and pretty much have the correct lift and drop method as I could see the swede roll on the drop.

    Was a mixed bag today of most small for their 7inch size gills,crappies , a few white bass and what I beleive was a carp just couldn't get teh hook in good enough to get her up to shore.
  • Rick

    Sunday evening I had my first chance of using a rfs. I was cleared to fish a 2 acre pond so took advantage. We landed about 8 or so 9" to 10" gills quickly and landed a 17" crappie!! We were using a 1/8 oz blue rfs tipped with 2 Gulp maggots. I too cannot wait to perfect this spoonchuckers lifestyle.
  • Bill "Musky" Modica

    Rick, sounds like you had a great start. I have shared this methodology with literally thousands of fisherman, most of which have failed to properly present the bait in the presence of fish, and simply lose interest, and fail to build up any confidence in the lure, and quickly return to the tip toe/finesse approach.
  • John Sheehan

    I'm keeping my eye out for the 16th oz Mepps Bantam Syclops spoon. when finding myself in tackle shops.It comes with a single hook.

    http://www.mepps.com/current_catalog/2009/09mp_26_bantam_syclops_lite.pdf
  • blackhawks

    Bill, I hit Lake Geneva yesterday for the first time this year (on open water). Fished Geneva Bay and the flats area. Geneva Bay produced best but you had to be on or near weeds. Caught mostly Pumpkinseeds vs. Gills. Used a 1/8 ounce Little Atom Knacker spoon tipped with a crawler chunk. My partner was using a Swedish Pimple tipped with waxies. I tried dropshotting but that wasn't effective yesterday. We also tried the west end of Cisco Bay but that only produced micro perch.
  • Jim Gronaw

    Thanks, guys. I just ordered a half doz to get into some serious spoonin!
  • John Sheehan

    Blue Fox Rattlin Flash Spoons: http://www.overstockbait.com/SearchResults.asp?Search=Rattlin+Flash+spoons&Search.x=9&Search.y=10
  • Trevor

    what kind of places and times of year are spoons good to fish in rivers?
  • John McKean

    Hi Guys, I see where a lot of people are doing well down deeper with heavier spoons, and I agree with that presentation. However, I still get the majority of bluegill bites on those terrific rocking,fluttering little Microspoons,tipped with either a waxworm or a part of a red worm. These are easy get down to depth with a little trick that an oldtimer specialist once showed me - about 8"up line tie in 2 or 3 interlinked snap swivels, size 12 or 14. These don't pinch line like split shots,give line twist protection,cast great, and have the "just right" sinking to keep the Microspoon very active with its unique downward wobble.