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Heaven on ice

jagermeister

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
18,060
223
Ohio
This would be so much fun!

[video=youtube;Uqa9XW94y6k]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uqa9XW94y6k[/video]
 
Interesting...the music doesn't seem to bother the perch. :smiley_chinrub:

I'm shopping for a flasher type fish finder. I think a fish camera would lead to me just watching the fish and not fishing. Even so, it would be cool to watch them hit the bait.

Good hunting, Bowhunter57
 

Gern186

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
10,171
201
NW Ohio Tundra
Thanks for the cool video. I like how when a fish is hooked and pulled straight up the other perch don't even seem to notice their buddy getting pulled away. Man that looks like some fun!
 

jagermeister

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
18,060
223
Ohio
Interesting...the music doesn't seem to bother the perch. :smiley_chinrub:

I'm shopping for a flasher type fish finder. I think a fish camera would lead to me just watching the fish and not fishing. Even so, it would be cool to watch them hit the bait.

Good hunting, Bowhunter57

I would really like to have a flasher in my arsenal, too. A flasher would make locating the fish much easier, as well as fishing for suspended fish. However, a camera can be just as useful, if not more useful than a flasher. A camera lets you see how the fish react to a certain bait, or presentation... allowing you to make quick adjustments that you'd normally never make. It also let's you catch fish that you'd normally not even feel a bite from. When you run a camera, it's amazing how many fish can suck that jig in without even causing the slightest twitch in your line or bobber.

Thanks for the cool video. I like how when a fish is hooked and pulled straight up the other perch don't even seem to notice their buddy getting pulled away. Man that looks like some fun!

That's the exact same thing I was thinking! Until I started running a camera, I always just assumed the fish scattered when you caught one. Now, I really think they're too stupid to know what's going on. In fact, I think the commotion attracts more fish in to your spot.
 
JBrown,
I don't own any fish electronics...yet. This is my first year of ice fishing and so far, I'm loving it. :smiley_bril:

Will a fish camera tell you the depth you're fishing?
How do you "look around"? Spin the cord?

Good hunting, Bowhunter57
 

jagermeister

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
18,060
223
Ohio
JBrown,
I don't own any fish electronics...yet. This is my first year of ice fishing and so far, I'm loving it. :smiley_bril:

Will a fish camera tell you the depth you're fishing?
How do you "look around"? Spin the cord?


Good hunting, Bowhunter57

Depth is easy... I just wrapped the camera cable with a white piece of tape at one-foot intervals, and labeled each five-foot interval. Drop the camera down the hole, count the tape as you go.

"Looking around" with the camera is where things can get tricky. Certainly, you can just twist the cable with your fingers until you find your lure, then rest the camera on the bottom so it doesn't move. I know several guys that operate like that. But when the fish are suspended, these guys have no way of keeping their camera position consistent. A product that you can buy, called the Camera Compass, will resolve this issue. It sits over top of the hole, holds your cable, and allows you to spin it on the ice to pan your camera view. Here's an example... http://redrockstore.com/Catalog/index.php?crn=74&rn=1797&action=show_detail

Well I'm a cheap bastard when it comes to piddly stuff like this, so I decided I was going to redneck-engineer my own camera compass... all I needed was a frisbee and a cheap plastic clamp.
frisbeecompass.jpg

Drop camera down hole, slip cable through slot of frisbee, clamp cable to frisbee once desired depth is reached... and wahlahh, redneck camera compass in action.

So to break it all down, here's how I will set up to fish. First, I always start at the bottom to see what's going on down there, simply because it's the easiest way to set the camera. I'll fish one rod on the bottom, in front of the camera, and fish my other rod at various depths up off the bottom. Without a vexilar, this is my only way to locate suspended fish. If I get on a good bite up high, I figure out how high off the bottom I am and raise my camera up to that depth. Now finding your jig on the bottom with the camera is easy... bang it off the bottom, stir up some mud, and bingo there it is. But locating your jig anywhere up off the bottom can be virtually impossible. To remedy this, I made up a long piece of rope with a weight attached to the end... all coiled up on a piece of pvc. I drop the weight down my fishing hole and let the rope uncoil as far as necessary. Since the depth on my camera is already set, I just spin the frisbee on the ice until I see the rope. Then pull the rope out, drop the bait down the hole, and close your bail when it gets in front of the camera. I know it probably sounds complicated, but it's really not at all. I can have my camera set to whatever depth I want to fish within minutes, with very little extra gear required.
 

FredT

Junior Member
262
0
SE Ohio
I really enjoyed that video. I love my perch fishing on Lake Erie. I can fill up a basket, but I never get to see it happening.

 

swantucky

The Crew
1,594
122
Swanton, Ohio
Great video! I wonder if that is from Simcoe?? I want to get a power auger next season and hopefully a camera the following year. The Vex works for the time being.
 

jagermeister

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
18,060
223
Ohio
Great video! I wonder if that is from Simcoe?? I want to get a power auger next season and hopefully a camera the following year. The Vex works for the time being.

I wondered that, also. Simcoe seems to be one hell of a perch lake from everything I've seen online.
 

swantucky

The Crew
1,594
122
Swanton, Ohio
A salesman from work used to go there every year and did very well. I never took him up on going and have kinda lost contact with him. They had a pretty good deal going where they rented a cottage right on the water and rented huts out there. The price was pretty reasonable.