Muskie Discussion Forums
| ||
Moderators: Slamr | View previous thread :: View next thread |
Jump to page : 1 2 Now viewing page 1 [30 messages per page] Muskie Fishing -> General Discussion -> Larry Dahlberg |
Message Subject: Larry Dahlberg | |||
musky45 |
| ||
Posts: 49 | Did anyone catch the seminar that Larry gave at the MN muskie expo? He had some interesting ideas as to why the double cowgirls work so well. | ||
guest |
| ||
musky 45, Please share those interesting ideas with us that did not attend the seminar. Thanks. | |||
WI Skis |
| ||
Posts: 547 Location: Oshkosh | I would be very interested to hear some of those too. Peter | ||
allegheny river kid |
| ||
Posts: 463 Location: Sw Pennsylvania | I'm thinking within the next few years hes gonna slow down on chasing the weird fish all around the world like he has done for the past years and stay in the usa chasing more musky like what he grew up on. I love his show, but there isn't a chance of me chasing peacocks in the amazon and tarpon in south america. I'd much rather see him chase big fish across canada and the usa. His show has been interesting lately with all his bait building and modifications... | ||
Cowboyhannah |
| ||
Posts: 1455 Location: Kronenwetter, WI | That there's a Thinkin' fisherman if'n I's ever'd seen 'n. | ||
shaley |
| ||
Posts: 1184 Location: Iowa Great Lakes | it was a fun and interesting seminar for sure. I love that boat, 24' figure 8" LOL | ||
esoxfly |
| ||
Posts: 1663 Location: Kodiak, AK | He had the Skeeter there with him? With that big 300 Yammie on it? That's alot of boat! I like my 20', but sometimes I think 22' would be nice, and 24' would just be too much in the wind and on the TM. | ||
Hawkeye |
| ||
Actually, A.R.K., on Larry's last show (or at least a recent one) he talked a lot about the Double Cowgirl lure and several others, and mentioned that he was indeed going to start focusing on Musky fishing again. Good to see him getting back to his roots. (Sorry...off the topic a little, I know.) | |||
bassinbob84 |
| ||
Posts: 646 Location: In a shack in the woods | i think it was the show with the griz on the missippi river he said something along those lines. his flight to somewhere exotic fell through because the price has gone up. ill blame the economy. lol i like that aspect of the show but i would not complain about more musky either. it seems like versus normally plays a musky or lure making episode and a far off place on friday nights. i havent seen a show of his i havent liked. they are all very interesting in different ways. from that dream vacation for tarpon to walleyes and musky on metro waters. seems to me most shows are filmed in mn or far away. | ||
h2os2t |
| ||
Posts: 941 Location: Freedom, WI | Larry is a very interesting and knowledgeable man. I was at my booth at the show but got a chance to talk with him for a while before the show and learned some great info, mostly bait making. | ||
musky45 |
| ||
Posts: 49 | Larry thinks that the reason is that the double blade lures are the quietest lures rather than all of the other lures that make so much noise. He used a hydrophone to listen to it. It was interesting. Any for those who attended the seminar, I am going to try that kite fishing, any one want to help? | ||
musky45 |
| ||
Posts: 49 | He had some great thoughts but the main thing he said about the double blade phenoms is that they are so much more quiet compared to other lures. It made me think a little bit sound and lures. Also, if anyone is looking for some nice baits check out Rogers spot below, I bought two nitro s from him, super nice guy and great looking baits I will let you know when I catch my first fish on them | ||
Troyz. |
| ||
Posts: 734 Location: Watertown, MN | Excellent speaker, talked with several we respect musky guys that alot of people thing highly off, and they just state the he is at a whole nother level. I am sure economy and sponsor will cut back some of the big trips, that is a good thing for us, will see what else he learns and observes if whe spends more time chasing skies. One speaker I would never miss. Troyz | ||
esox50 |
| ||
Posts: 2024 | If they are indeed so quiet then their fish catching abilities similar to big plastics is probably no coincidence. Makes you wonder what stimuli picked up by the lateral line muskies respond to most aggressively. | ||
JRedig |
| ||
Location: Twin Cities | It might be quiet on a hydrophone, but it's still displacing a ton of water which will create pressure waves. I would think that comes across as sound as well, but maybe not detected by a hydrophone? IDK, just guessing. I don't know enough about the technology behind the device to say much more. I've heard a story about a diver shooting video of DCG's who said he could hear them coming a long ways away, long before the boat engine pulling them. | ||
Troyz. |
| ||
Posts: 734 Location: Watertown, MN | Bingo, displacing water, look at the size of the blades, displacing the same volume of say a big sucker swimming???? I was thinking it was a big vibe, but the complete opposite, but the rest of the seminar talk about fish instinct and the he stated they are samplers, and through good and bad experience choose dinner. His big statement is find the "Mother Milk" of the fish for that area. Troyz | ||
sling blade |
| ||
i think that's kind of funny actually as some of the best night double 10s I throw are the "loud" ones that make a very discernable "clicking" noise. maybe they like them loud at night?!!!? they do in my experience | |||
sworrall |
| ||
Posts: 32886 Location: Rhinelander, Wisconsin | A hydrophone actually picks up pressure waves. That's what 'sound' underwater is. From WIKI: A hydrophone (Greek "hydro" = "water" and "phone" = "sound") is a microphone designed to be used underwater for recording or listening to underwater sound. Most hydrophones are based on a piezoelectric transducer that generates electricity when subjected to a pressure change. Such piezoelectric materials, or transducers can convert a sound signal into an electrical signal since sound is a pressure wave in fluids. Some transducers can also serve as a projector (emitter), but not all have this capability, and may be destroyed if used in such a manner. A hydrophone can "listen" to sound in air, but will be less sensitive due to its design as having a good acoustic impedance match to water, the denser fluid. Likewise, a microphone can be buried in the ground, or immersed in water if it is put in a waterproof container, but will give similarly poor performance due to the similarly bad acoustic impedance match.' In a few days you will be listening to double 10 signatures recorded on a piezoelectric transducer while watching the lure move through the water. I've already listened to them quite a bit. | ||
Murph! |
| ||
Posts: 147 Location: Leech Lake, Walker, MN. | If you missed the seminar and live in the Twin Cities area Larry is speaking on Saturday April 18th at Thorne Bros Spring sale. He will also be making some of his baits. Every thing is on sale. | ||
VMS |
| ||
Posts: 3480 Location: Elk River, Minnesota | speaking of hydrophones, will there be another edition of lures that have been put under the phone? Thanks Steve | ||
gtp888 |
| ||
Location: Sun Prairie, WI | sworrall - 4/6/2009 4:07 PM A hydrophone actually picks up pressure waves. That's what 'sound' underwater is. From WIKI: A hydrophone (Greek "hydro" = "water" and "phone" = "sound") is a microphone designed to be used underwater for recording or listening to underwater sound. Most hydrophones are based on a piezoelectric transducer that generates electricity when subjected to a pressure change. Such piezoelectric materials, or transducers can convert a sound signal into an electrical signal since sound is a pressure wave in fluids. Some transducers can also serve as a projector (emitter), but not all have this capability, and may be destroyed if used in such a manner. A hydrophone can "listen" to sound in air, but will be less sensitive due to its design as having a good acoustic impedance match to water, the denser fluid. Likewise, a microphone can be buried in the ground, or immersed in water if it is put in a waterproof container, but will give similarly poor performance due to the similarly bad acoustic impedance match.' In a few days you will be listening to double 10 signatures recorded on a piezoelectric transducer while watching the lure move through the water. I've already listened to them quite a bit. So Steve, just to clarify in my mind...a DCG creates a big pressure wave picked up by the musky's lateral line as "sound", but sounds quiet to the human ear, is that correct? Just want to make sure I'm understanding correctly. | ||
sworrall |
| ||
Posts: 32886 Location: Rhinelander, Wisconsin | Not quiet at all. Hydrophone one, a test using Musky Innovations Lures, wear a headset or earbuds for maximum effect. I've come a long way with equipment since this one, expect way better results from this week's tests: | ||
Jim Stella |
| ||
Posts: 157 Location: Arlington Heights, IL | I'm not sure about the DC being all that quiet. I know that while Gregg Thomas was filming his latest DVD he had a scuba diver under water filming different baits as he trolled them by him. The diver told Gregg that only bait he heard before he could see it was the DC. | ||
fishpoop |
| ||
Posts: 656 Location: Forest Lake, Mn. | We, being human, tend to think of sound in human terms. We think of sound as it sounds to our human ears. generally we hear waveforms that move through the air from 20Hz to 20KHz. Does anyone know the hearing range of a muskie? And, at what frequency range does the lateral line pick up, and what is the range for the fishes ears? My point is, Muskies and humans may well hear and interpert "sound" in entirely different ways. Doing a hydrophone test of how loud a lure is, is only of value if we understand and interpert the test results in terms of how the lure sounds to a muskie. They may hear or sense sound at higher or lower frequencys than a human can. Much like we can't hear a dog whistle. Yes, the double cowgirl may sound quiter to us on a hydrophone but to a muskie? Who knows? Light is also "sound" in a sense that it is a high frequency waveform that moves through the air and water. We do not have senses that percive light as sound. We view those waveforms as light with our eyes. The lower frequency waveforms we call sound. If our bodies had the proper senses we'd be able to see or hear radio frequencys too. Fish see light and color in different ways than we do. Many studies have been done on the structure of fishes eyes. I'm not aware of much study of a fishes hearing. But there could be research done that I'm not aware of. What I'm trying to say is, any test of sound must be viewed in terms of the senses of the species in question. Does anyone really know what a cowgirl, or any other lure, sounds like to a muskie? Edited by fishpoop 4/7/2009 12:32 AM | ||
Targa01 |
| ||
Posts: 742 Location: Grand Rapids MN | fishpoop - 4/7/2009 12:29 AM Light is also "sound" in a sense that it is a high frequency waveform that moves through the air and water. Light doesn't need a medium to transmit through like sound, that's why it can travel through space which has no medium. You're stepping into the old debate of particle versus wave with light. I'll agree about the possibility of fish being able to feel at different frequencies. Even in our human body there are parts more sensitive to a particular frequency such as in our hands, feet, torso, head, etc.. This stuff was covered in a Acoustics & Noise Control course I took back in school and I'm sure could be found online somewhere. So I couldn't see why a fish wouldn't be receptive to different frequency ranges versus what we hear or feel. Steve, interesting stuff you are trying out. I had a hard time trying to differentiate what might have been surface noise from the line when you pulled the dawg or if it was from the lure itself. It just seemed that when the line made a lot of bubbles and waves the sound was the loudest. If I could just throw out a suggestion/idea, maybe use a reel with high line pick up, put the rod tip in the water, and just crank fast to inpart the jerkbait action. This could take out the surface splash of the line. Only a thought. Please keep this kind of stuff coming Steve. It's always interested me. Thanks.... | ||
firstsixfeet |
| ||
Posts: 2361 | I couldn't differentiate much in the sound department either. Hard to say what the musky reacts to on the double cowgirl. I am not even sure what the turbulence pattern is for sure. They appear to create a vacumn, no, actually they do create a vacumn behind the blades, but what kind of pressure waves they send out is difficult to discern. Many bucktails are more streamlined in terms of design and water displacement, but this vacumn effect behind the blades must be present on all spinners I would guess. It would be interesting to see what the wave signature of a bucktail actually is. There must be a rythmic pulse coming off the front of the blade, going out from the face, and in smaller bucktails where there is a tail close to the blade or a bulkier tail, there should not be a whole lot of other turbulence, but when you look at the D10's you actually have a stream of water caving in to fill the displacement behind the blade, and that has to be a very UN-streamlined design. A fish swimming through the drink is very streamlined, and I guess is an attempt to smoothly repair the water flow behind it, thus decreasing overall friction in the environment? I am convinced that the streamlining in many glides work against strikes. However, I have no inkling as to how the LACK of streamlining works for Cowgirls, but I believe it works effectively for pull baits. All in all, I am suspicious the cowgirls swim in an "UN-healthy" manner or maybe they just swim in a bigger, better calorie return type of way? I am awaiting some muddy water to look at some things. I wonder what you would see in a wind tunnel? Sworrall needs to build the first "current tunnel" to test this stuff for us. He's gettin pretty old. He needs a big research break thru before he croaks... Edited by firstsixfeet 4/7/2009 11:28 AM | ||
fishpoop |
| ||
Posts: 656 Location: Forest Lake, Mn. | Targa01 you raise a good point. I will admit right now that I'm about at my limit of scientific knowledge and for me to argue much farther on the subject would only make me foolish. I was merely trying to make the point that there are many frequencies of waveforms and that depending on the senses of an animal a given frequency would be interperted differently than the same frequency would be by another animal. I don't have enough physics background to debate partical vs wave transmission through a medium. I was trying more to look at this from a biology viewpoint and how the same waveform might be interperted differently by different animals. My comment about light being "sound" was meant to suggest that if we had different sensory abilites we might be able to "hear" light rather than see it, or perhaps see sound rather than hear it. Thus to say that a DCG is quieter than other lures on a hydrophone test is true for us humans but the muskie might think it's louder or whatever, and do we have any real reserch on the hearing of a muskie and what sound it would find attractive or replusive? Any hydrophone test results should be viewed in the light of what the muskie perceives not what we humans perceive. In addition to a difference between the senses of humans and muskies there is also the matter of brain size and function. A sound wave that is heard by a human brain may induce a completely different reaction than the same sound wave that is heard by a muskie brain. There could well be individual differences too as well as the species differences between humans and muskies. This is also why some people enjoy Heavy Metal music and others enjoy Classical music and another might enjoy both, yet the human brain size and fucntion is similar. But now I'm probably straying far off the subject. I met Larry Dahlberg a few years ago. A nice and personable man. He is a thinking mans fisherman and has proven his ability to fish and think "outside the box." Edited by fishpoop 4/7/2009 5:45 PM | ||
dougj |
| ||
Posts: 906 Location: Warroad, Mn | Fished a little with Larry many years ago when he was with In-Fish. Very good fisherman, and an interesting guy. I'm not sure what makes the DCG type lure so effective, and I guess I really don't care. I suspect that the fish somehow think what they see and hear is food. For us to guess why using all sorts of different testing devises is surely speculation. From what I've seen in the past three years the big double bladded bucktails do something to the fish that most other lures don't do. I guess we would have to ask the muskies to find out for sure. Doug Johnson Edited by dougj 4/7/2009 5:47 PM | ||
fishpoop |
| ||
Posts: 656 Location: Forest Lake, Mn. | Doug Thank you for making my point for me in a simple manner. I was trying, in a long winded way, to point out that any test results of a lures sound is subjective at best, because muskies and humans are different critters. | ||
MuskyGary |
| ||
Posts: 78 | I wish Larry would make some DVD's on his equipment and lure making. I sure would be in line to purchase some! | ||
Jump to page : 1 2 Now viewing page 1 [30 messages per page] |
Search this forum Printer friendly version E-mail a link to this thread |