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Muskie Fishing -> General Discussion -> From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing
 
Message Subject: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing
codfish
Posted 5/8/2012 4:54 PM (#558583)
Subject: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing
I have a chance to do some Muskie fishing. This is totally new territory for me. As you can see I live on Cape Cod Massachusetts where we fish for stripers and tuna fish. The issue I have is my tackle, is it ok for Muskie?? we fish 7-10 inch soft plastics on jig heads that are 3xxx strong or 4xxxx strong for tuna. The pic below is jig heads I use on Stripe Bass they are 3xxx, strong, the question is will they work or are they over kill. The hooks range in size from 3/0,5/0,7/0



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codfish
Posted 5/8/2012 5:03 PM (#558584 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


sorry about the double picture here is the 9 inch plastic
edalz
Posted 5/8/2012 8:21 PM (#558617 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: Re: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing





Posts: 458


I fished stripers off Marthas Vineyard and you probably have stuff that works. List what you have.
Shep
Posted 5/9/2012 8:51 AM (#558701 - in reply to #558617)
Subject: Re: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing





Posts: 5874


You need to have a discussion with Steve Worral. He's a master at jigging muskies.
codfish
Posted 5/9/2012 12:53 PM (#558759 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


thanks I will post a few more pics tonight when I get home thanks for any pointers
dtaijo174
Posted 5/9/2012 12:58 PM (#558762 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: Re: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing





Posts: 1169


Location: New Hope MN
I think you should hire a guide or at least buy a DVD showing the basics.
codfish
Posted 5/10/2012 5:20 PM (#559015 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


Went and checked into Muskie tackle the lure below 10inch soft plastic striper magnets they swim like a zara spook but about 10 inches under the water with the 6/0 weighted hook. Do you guys use a lure called a zara spook?? sorry but this is totally new territory

Edited by codfish 5/10/2012 5:37 PM



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codfish
Posted 5/11/2012 6:05 AM (#559120 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


Papy thanks for the reply, here is another lure we use for blue fish, forgot to mention the soft plastics above look just like a trout or sucker, tough to see from the picture

Edited by codfish 5/11/2012 6:11 AM



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(Zara XW9258HBS.jpg)



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FAT-SKI
Posted 5/11/2012 8:37 AM (#559160 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 1358


Location: Lake "y" cause lake"x" got over fished
First of all codfish... "if it moves it's food"!! There are so many guys that put way to much emphasis on bait size. My wife caught a 45" musky last year on a 3inch long rattle rap in the middle of fall... Now "fall fishing" for us musky guys is a "go big or go home" type of bait (at least most of the time). Because in the fall like Pappy said they like to eat a meal that is worth while. Let me ask you... Is a 3" rattle trap worth while in fall conditions...? Probably not.. So that being said if someone tells you not to use a bait... The first thing I would do is USE the bait. Us musky guys are always looking for the next best thing, or something different the fish has not seen before. If I were you I would use the crap out of that bait! Granted, you are going to need to spend some money and get some "Musky lures". You want to have a variety of lures in the boat to give you the best chance at catching a fish.. But don't ever let someone tell you to not use a bait... They say wimpy.... I say different... You just never know, it may catch fish or it may not, but how will you ever know if you don't try...

But if you don't wanna try you can sure send em to me and I will give it a whirl...
codfish
Posted 5/11/2012 7:15 PM (#559317 - in reply to #559160)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


First of all codfish... "if it moves it's food"!! There are so many guys that put way to much emphasis on bait size. My wife caught a 45" musky last year on a 3inch long rattle rap in the middle of fall... Now "fall fishing" for us musky guys is a "go big or go home" type of bait (at least most of the time). Because in the fall like Pappy said they like to eat a meal that is worth while. Let me ask you... Is a 3" rattle trap worth while in fall conditions...? Probably not.. So that being said if someone tells you not to use a bait... The first thing I would do is USE the bait. Us musky guys are always looking for the next best thing, or something different the fish has not seen before. If I were you I would use the crap out of that bait! Granted, you are going to need to spend some money and get some "Musky lures". You want to have a variety of lures in the boat to give you the best chance at catching a fish.. But don't ever let someone tell you to not use a bait... They say wimpy.... I say different... You just never know, it may catch fish or it may not, but how will you ever know if you don't try...

But if you don't wanna try you can sure send em to me and I will give it a whirl... ;)

great advise so which one of the 3 do ya think I should spend most of my time fishing??
codfish
Posted 5/11/2012 7:20 PM (#559319 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


Anonymous - 5/11/2012 8:41 AM

Can you say "Banjo Minnow?"


I have seen those now thats a slim profile lure
Pappy
Posted 5/11/2012 7:33 PM (#559323 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing


Anonymous, I have witnessed someone using a banjo minnow... even a banjo minnow on a Johnson spoon... and they caught....nothing. But I will encourage this person to keep trying, because it would be really cool if he actually caught a musky on it!

Fat Ski, I spent years trying to catch musky using northern pike lures, with little success. My advice to codfish was with good intent, though I might have had a couple beers in me at the time.

Codfish, I like the super Zara Spook on calm water or low light. And if the doll-eyed trout/suckers actually work, I'll be the first to buy them but they might be better as a throwback lure (once you've seen a musky but it didn't bite) or maybe in weed pockets, because they look like they'd be worked slowly. You need something you can work fast so you can cover ground and find an aggressive musky, I want you to catch one man!
codfish
Posted 5/12/2012 7:53 AM (#559368 - in reply to #559323)
Subject: RE: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


no worries, does the lure need to be worked fast?? if so I have my answer
sworrall
Posted 5/12/2012 8:41 AM (#559370 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: Re: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing





Posts: 32958


Location: Rhinelander, Wisconsin
Let the fish tell you how fast to move your lures. A jig and plastic will catch muskies, that's for sure, and so will a big Zara Spook.
codfish
Posted 5/13/2012 3:22 PM (#559530 - in reply to #559370)
Subject: Re: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 9


Thanks Steve these are the bodies I plan on using on the jig head at the top of the page,they are 9 inches long do you think they will work??


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sworrall
Posted 5/13/2012 4:05 PM (#559534 - in reply to #558583)
Subject: Re: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing





Posts: 32958


Location: Rhinelander, Wisconsin
Absolutely. Take a look for some more information:
http://muskie.outdoorsfirst.com/articles/11.11.2005/982/Of.Jigs.and...
FAT-SKI
Posted 5/13/2012 6:55 PM (#559554 - in reply to #559370)
Subject: Re: From Cape Cod to the land of Muskie fishing




Posts: 1358


Location: Lake "y" cause lake"x" got over fished
sworrall - 5/12/2012 8:41 AM

Let the fish tell you how fast to move your lures. A jig and plastic will catch muskies, that's for sure, and so will a big Zara Spook.


----

Exactly!

As far as which you should use most of the time while fishing... that's a question, that only current conditions of the day would be able to anwser for you... It all depends completely on the time of day, current weather, water temp...ect... All about trial and error, just try till your arms fall off... - that soft plastic minnow does look like it would be a cool twitch bait though. Let us know if they work for you this year.

Edited by FAT-SKI 5/13/2012 7:04 PM
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