bassinzink | Mon May-19-08 09:46 AM |
Member since Jan 11th 2003
968 posts
| |
|
#3418, "RE: What frog do you throw and why?"
In response to Reply # 0
Mon May-19-08 09:46 AM by bassinzink
|
Snag Proof has made a few changes to the bobby perfect frog and it is my favorite frog above all of them. They are very pretty soft and I get a good hook up ratio. I do a few mods with the frogs, from painting them,to chnaging the legs to the fine round rubber and stick a couple of noise makers inside, but all of that above is cause I'm usually hanging at the house wanting to play with fishing stuff. I do try and always tie a little braid around my hooks so they dont bend.
The perfect frog out of the package catches me a bunch of fish.
The river2sea frogs are my second favorite. I think my hook up ratio between the river2sea and the perfect frog are probably the same. In open water I catch most of the fish that actually take it down, of course their are misses but often those are because of the fish not actually eating the bait. cz
|
|
|
Matt Peters | Wed May-21-08 06:51 AM |
Charter member
2036 posts
| |
|
#3420, "RE: What frog do you throw and why?"
In response to Reply # 0
|
I haven't thrown frogs consistently in a few years, but I can tell you, I have a lot of confidence in the Sumo Frog. The Sumo is a consistent bait, fishes good in the slop and open water, comes with Owner hooks, and has a great profile and color options. I do think there a lots of good frog options out there. The Spro and River2Sea have been given good ratings from a few guys I know.
I would trim the legs down an inch or so, just so the frog "walks" in open water a bit better. I bend the hooks out slightly to make them a bit more open to hookset, and slightly less weedless.
Add a rattle or two inside the bait for added noise and weight. Black or white frogs is all you need.
I think braided line and a fast action 7 foot rod, and fast reel is key. I never had big issues hooking and landing frog bites, once I got the right gear. Ocassionally you miss of course, but braided line on fast action rods and quick reels is lethal.
You can get trickey and add stinger hooks in the legs of your frog by using braid and hiding single open hooks facing up in the legs of your frogs. Obviously, this is for more open water, or not so sloppy frog fishing.
Frogs skip cast extremely well, and your ability to put frogs in places your can't put other baits is often overlooked, IMO.
MP
|
|
|
Matt Peters | Tue May-27-08 12:21 PM |
Charter member
2036 posts
| |
|
#3430, "RE: What frog do you throw and why?"
In response to Reply # 6
|
Rob:
Here is a tip, tie on a Sumo frog, and fish it.......all day. Open water, in the slop, etc. I'm trying to be cute here and just suggest you fish the dam thing and commit to it. You'll get bites. Reminds me of someone I know recommending how one gets bites with a swimbait. "tie it on, fish it all day"
Here are some things I think are "advanced" frog fishing techniques and tips:
1) learn how to fish your frog in open water, walk the dog style.
2) in the slop, learn how to fish your bait with the rod tip down to make the bait mimic something alive and scurrying on the surface of the scum. Don't be braindead while working a mat. Make short pulls, then make pauses in the holes in the grass, even twitch the bait in the holes. Just don't go blah when mat fishing.
3) Fish between the bank and the grass mat. That littel 6" gap between the shore and the mat is deadly. Throw in some rocks or laydowns between shore and grass mat, oh boy. Basically, assume the fish are under the mat, and looking at the shore. Things that go from the shore and into the water, get eaten.
4) See number 3. Throw your frog on the shore and work it into the water, especially, in your "good areas"...like working uphill with a swimbait.
5) Fish a frog where fish never see a bait. Skip cast under docks, under laydown limbs, flipped into impossible pockets of stuff, etc. Wherever you are sure no one can fish a jig or other bait, throw your frog. Pure novelty of getting a bait where no one else can. Frogs cast really well, and skip really well. And the braided line and weedlessness of the frog give you confidence to literally throw it anywhere.
MP
|
|
|
dockboy | Sun Jun-01-08 12:44 AM |
Member since Jun 09th 2005
205 posts
| |
|
#3432, "RE: What frog do you throw and why?"
In response to Reply # 8
|
Snagproof Bobby's Signature Series. Good bait right out of the package. Walks well in open water and the only bait for me in slop and tulles. I throw them in White, Cicada, and Tweety most of the time. For me, color hasn't made a huge difference. Its all about being able to see the bait. Low light or dark days, I throw white. Bright days, lots of visibility, I throw Cicada because I can see it. Matt is right on too. You have to really just throw a frog and nothing but a frog if you want to learn it. same with jigs or swimbaits. Throwing with precision is crucial. Hitting that 6" of water between the bank and cover can be critical to getting bit. Like swimbaits, you can't slack off while you're throwing the frog, especially on mats; you need to be ready when the hit comes because it could be a blowup or just the fish barely sucking the bait down. And like Matt said, throw where nobody else will. Docks are great, as are lanes in tulle patches. Fish where everyone else throws the usual jig and worm setups. Try it in laydowns and standing timber. One of my most productive patterns is frogs in standing cottonwoods. Above all... throw it and keep throwin' it. Proficiency will come with time. :-) Bass + Fisherman= BAASS ADDICTT!!!
|
|
|
|
#3433, "RE: What frog do you throw and why?"
In response to Reply # 0
|
I started out throwing the Sumo and have since fished every frog that I know of. My only two choices these days are the Sumo and Bobby’s Perfect. I’ve never had a hook up problem with either of those. The absolute worst hook up ratio I’ve had is with the Swamp Donkeys. Yeah they have some cool colors and they get bit but I’ve lost just too many good fish on those. I will never fish one of those again in a tournament situation.
As far as color goes I fish all of them. I have caught fish in open clear water on white to solid black so I don’t think it is as much as a color thing as it is “walking it rightâ€
As far as modifications go I don’t get too crazy. I’ll shorten the legs and add some glass beads or bb shot but that’s about it.
My biggest frog fish to date is 11 lbs.
P.S. The Frogzilla doesn't work at all so don't throw it.....:)
-Shane
|
|
|
|
|
© Copyright Robert Belloni 1997-2012. All Rights Reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without express written consent.
|