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Old 10-04-2013, 11:16 AM   #9
Liv2Fish
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Chasing fat girls in the dark
Posts: 961
Alright, so last night was the perfect tide and moon for this spot. Me and my brother were stocked up with fat eels and a half dozen riggies of various sizes. We got there and there was not another vehicle to be seen. This was going to be a good night!

As I stepped into the water, I new it wasn't meant to be. There was more fire in the water than I had ever seen - 10 times the amount!. I dipped a riggie in front of me and the entire eel immediately started to glow. I gave it a cast and it looked like a bomb went off. I could see my line all the way out to the riggie and every twitch looked like another bomb. We thought maybe it was just pushed up against the shore so we decided to hitch a ride with the tide out to an outer bar and see what that looked like. No change except for the fact that we were now completely glowing from head to toe. Must have looked like some kind of freaks to anyone in the ocean front houses who may have glanced out the window.

I understand all the tactics to combat it: light leader, smaller presentation, slow to no movement, etc. My question is, do the fish actually stick around when it's like this and just become fussy? There was plenty of bait around but we didn't even get a bump nor did we hear or see any signs of life. I would think it would make the ambush part of their feeding tactics pretty ineffective.
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