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		| How To's, F.A.Q.s, Tips, & Tricks How-To's, Tips & Tricks plus Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) **** Please Do Not Start Discussions or Ask New Questions in Here **** This is for popular Threads To be moved here for easy access & discussion. Post all new questions in main Stripertalk Forum |  
	
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		|  09-28-2004, 09:00 AM | #1 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2001 Location: Uh, in a spot.... 
					Posts: 5,451
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				 Ebbing Wave Retrieve 
 This is a trick I learned many moons ago on the backside beaches ( Atlantic side  ) of Monomoy when you could land a small boat anywhere on the island and fish. I found that with the large swell coming onshore this past weekend I pulled it out of the 'ol memory bank and lo and behold it still works! I was on a Provincelands beach and the swells were abnormaly high. A lot of the beach structure had been washed away leaving a long sloping expanse that the swells would ride way up on. This condition was very similar to the Monomoy surf. The P-Town surf never usually gets like this ( as a matter of fact, big surf is somewhat of a rarity up there as opposed to the more easterly facing beaches of say Truro south to Nauset.) Back then at Monomoy we learned to fish our plugs back very slowly and by trial and error, we knew when our plug was close to the shingle by the amount of drag on the plug and the increase in plug action. We found that by stopping the retrieve in that instance and walking backward ever so slowly the plug could be made to swim but stay stationary in the bulge of the wave which was just behind the breaking edge. The plug although technically still moving was staionary in the mass of water. This bulge is caused by the waves "fetching" up at the point where the slope of the beach meets that zone where there is a small ridge of usually one to two feet that marks the dividing line between bottom and beach slope. As the surge ( bulge) rides up and your bait is suspended in in it, any bass in the area using that dividing edge has a perfect view of the plug and is in the perfect position for an ambush attack. Also, as the the bulge recedes back into the next oncoming wave you, still not reeling, reverse your direction and walk slowly back towards the water all the while keeping tension on the plug in a delicate balance of your motion back into the surf but just slightly slower than the waves actual recession. 
If you have a good amount of current up or down (parallel) and the swell is heavy but not breaking in tons of white water you can and we have been able to keep our plugs in the strike zone for hundreds of feet up or down a beach without moving the handle of the reel, all the while that plug, unless fouled by weeds, wiggles excitedly in that bulge of water. This is a rarity of course but it has happened when all the factors needed were in line.
 
99% of the bass I took Friday night were taken with this method. Try it. It takes a little mastering to get the feel down just right but once you have it nailed it can put a lot of fish on the beach. Good Luck, Flap.  |  
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Why even try.........   |  
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		|  09-29-2004, 11:24 AM | #2 |  
	| Super Moderator 
				 
				Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: Middleboro MA 
					Posts: 17,126
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		|  09-29-2004, 12:44 PM | #3 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2002 
					Posts: 5,945
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 Worded very well, Flap. I've tried to explain that, to guys I've fished with at Nauset, and gotten the    look... 
I only opened my yap, because I see a lot of guys give it up too early, they will almost skip the plug in over the last surging wave, and heave it back out. I am constantly amazed at how many bass there are, or just happen to hit, in that first roller. 
That, and a lot of plugs you could just hold and keep repeating the walk up and back, under those conditions, without any retrieve......   |  
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		|  09-29-2004, 01:39 PM | #4 |  
	| Registered Grandpa 
				 
				Join Date: Nov 2003 Location: east coast 
					Posts: 8,592
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 Thanks Professor Flaptail,you keep me learnin.  |  
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		|  09-29-2004, 01:41 PM | #5 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Nov 2003 Location: RI 
					Posts: 21,501
				 | Interesting, I've found my self doing a similar thing at my favorite beach. Perhaps I'll actually think about it    
-spence |  
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		|  09-30-2004, 06:23 AM | #6 |  
	| Got Necco's? 
				 
				Join Date: Aug 2001 Location: Franklin 
					Posts: 1,339
				 | Great post Flap, very informative. I will have to try this out. |  
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HAMMER TIME!    |  
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		|  09-30-2004, 09:59 AM | #7 |  
	| Still A Plugger 
				 
				Join Date: Jan 2002 Location: Woonsocket, R.I. 
					Posts: 731
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 Great Post Flap, this is definitely one of the timeless how to,s. 
Especially when i read it 4 or 5 times. I,m speechless.   |  
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DennisRetired
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		|  10-03-2004, 07:17 PM | #8 |  
	| Dave's Guide Service 
				 
				Join Date: Jul 2001 Location: Cape Cod 
					Posts: 7,557
				 | Karl Mid 90's around #2 use to hold on the inside of the barit was the bar that parelelled the beach about 60 feet out.
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Pro Tool Club....
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		|  11-23-2009, 03:28 PM | #9 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2002 
					Posts: 5,945
				 | bump....this one should be sticky too, as good as the shadow line words of wisdom. |  
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		|  11-23-2009, 05:41 PM | #10 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Feb 2003 Location: Here and There Seasonally 
					Posts: 5,985
				 | Indeed. Perfect situation for  710/704. Just wind backward. Just finished reading The Shadowline. He taught something about a beach that I fished from childhood and didn't know. An artist .. |  
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		|  11-24-2009, 04:32 PM | #11 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: Sturbridge MA 
					Posts: 3,127
				 | That same technique killed the fish for me out at block in october.  I got a couple hits close in on needles, and when i switched to a metal lip i would let it hang out in the kill zone and was getting crushed. |  
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Everything is better on the rocks.
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		|  05-27-2010, 07:27 PM | #12 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Northport,NY 
					Posts: 172
				 | I never thought about taking it to that extreme but I always do something similar. Not the walking back and forth or down the beach but letting the plug just sit in one spot when I feel the pull. It certainly has produced as fish do hang at the lip waiting for bait to get tossed around. 
 Thanks!
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		|  01-07-2013, 11:32 PM | #13 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2011 Location: Mansfield, MA 
					Posts: 151
				 | I want to bump this up - I read this earlier in the year, and had a situation in soco this fall where I used it, and it worked extremely well. |  
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