Thread: Do the fish stand a chance?
-
03-09-2025, 09:03 AM #11
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Posts
- 182
- Thanks
- 17
- Thanked 245 Times in 78 Posts
Pier#r's sonar advancements is a great one. Did y'all know most blue marlin caught in these tournaments are "seen" with sonar before they put the live tuna in front of it?
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Green_Steel For This Useful Post:
-
03-09-2025, 09:19 AM #12
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Posts
- 182
- Thanks
- 17
- Thanked 245 Times in 78 Posts
-
03-09-2025, 06:51 PM #13
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Location
- Born, bred and someday dead in Midtown Mobile, AL
- Posts
- 10,173
- Thanks
- 7,927
- Thanked 13,512 Times in 3,994 Posts
- Blog Entries
- 6
(RETIRED) mostly.
Now part-time outdoor writer,
former Pier & Shore Fishing Guide
http://www.pierpounder.com
-
03-09-2025, 08:37 PM #14
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Posts
- 182
- Thanks
- 17
- Thanked 245 Times in 78 Posts
Fluorocarbon
-
03-09-2025, 10:29 PM #15
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Posts
- 268
- Thanks
- 398
- Thanked 266 Times in 87 Posts
pier carts and Fishbites.
-
03-10-2025, 01:18 AM #16
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Location
- Born, bred and someday dead in Midtown Mobile, AL
- Posts
- 10,173
- Thanks
- 7,927
- Thanked 13,512 Times in 3,994 Posts
- Blog Entries
- 6
Pier carts have been around pier fishing since before I was.
But aluminum pier carts revolutionized pier & especially shore fishing with the addition of wide low pressure tires.
Now the big thing is 4-wheel beach carts that people haul everything out on the beach but the kitchen sink.
Fishbites (and Fishgum) are relatively much newer. but even Fishbites has been around the GSPPier for 25 years!
I knew it was something special the first time I used in the year 2000.
Adding the innovation of colored dyes and flavors (think orange shrimp and sandflea) was a leap in the technology.
Whiting candy and pinfish could not pull it off the hook.
I remember turning Sunshine on to some of it one day and she came back later "You got any more of that free cheese?" LOL!
-
03-10-2025, 01:57 AM #17
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Location
- Born, bred and someday dead in Midtown Mobile, AL
- Posts
- 10,173
- Thanks
- 7,927
- Thanked 13,512 Times in 3,994 Posts
- Blog Entries
- 6
cellphones!
-
03-10-2025, 02:52 PM #18
- Join Date
- Jul 2013
- Posts
- 320
- Thanks
- 122
- Thanked 275 Times in 107 Posts
I still got one of Mr. Herndons old carts out in the shed! The Tommy Nelson dolly cart is the way to go but don’t forget Igloo over the shoulder Cool thread Tom!
-
03-10-2025, 07:23 PM #19
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Posts
- 182
- Thanks
- 17
- Thanked 245 Times in 78 Posts
It is getting harder to think of some more, but high drag resistance reels. Between braid and higher drags, tarpon catches have exploded. It used to be a really big deal to catch a tarpon off of a pier!
-
Today, 08:56 AM #20
- Join Date
- Oct 2011
- Posts
- 182
- Thanks
- 17
- Thanked 245 Times in 78 Posts
Sabikis. When did they first show up on the pier. I remember using gold hook rigs for many years before ever seeing sabikis. Also, I remember pier#r making a rig with a slip sinker, swivel, short leader a tiny hook with strip of plastic from another lure. He jigged it and caught a huge threadfin herring. It was the first one that I ever saw. Seems like it got eaten right away. I must have been 13 lol!
Its had got to be the live scope type stuff, it has turned fishing into a video game, at least BASS has outlawed them for this year.
Do the fish stand a chance?