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Thread: What is it?

  1. #11
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    Mar 2011
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    I caught one in Mississippi this year on Sardis and thinking it was some kind of shad, I stuck my thumb in its mouth to get my hook out. BIG mistake. Found out real quick about those teeth. It is a gold eye.

  2. #12
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    Apr 2016
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    Speaking of Skipjacks, I was fishing the tailwaters below KY Dam catching crappie. I took the fish to the cleaning site at the campground and while I was there a guy bought in a bucket full of skipjacks, stepped up and started filleting them. Somebody said to him, "Buddy I hate to tell you those things are skipjacks and you can't eat them."

    The fellow never missed a stroke and just went right ahead cleaning them and said, "By golly, my mother in law is staying at our house and been there 2 weeks. She told me she wanted a mess of fish and by golly here they are." 100% true story except those are not the exact words he used.
    Likes jigfisherx, 1MObowhunter, south point LIKED above post

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
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    Yep. I see the difference. Don't lip one. Lol. We catch the skippers on the Osage too using small lures.

  4. #14
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    May 2014
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    I would like to catch some skipjack. Where can I find some to catch? Are golden eye as acrobatic as skipjack?

  5. #15
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    Apr 2010
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    Best places to get skips are below dams on the Cumberland, Tennessee, or Arkansas rivers, in the springtime. Sometimes they gather below Alton (Melvin Price) lock and dam on the Mississippi, they are probably still there now but it has been pretty slow there. In September they can be caught below bagnal, but it is hit or miss. When they are there it is a good time. Mooneye don't put up the fight skips do, but are still fun when they are stacked up.

  6. #16
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    Watched a couple of guys catch a bunch around the lock and dam on lowers Osage. They had 3 small white jigs on each pole and was jigging up and down. Sometimes 2-3 on a pole at a time.

  7. #17
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    Apr 2010
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    I forgot about that dam. I need to fish there again soon. That place can be fun.

  8. #18
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    Sep 2015
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    On the Ohio and Mississippi we always did a little better with the mooneye than with the herring or gizzard shad. But they all caught fish. In the Tennessee or Cumberland I always liked the yellow tail shad or threadfin shad. Sometimes the fish would key on something specific. Drift fishing a live yellow tail near the speed of the current is sheer poison sometimes. I got took to school on that one day and I never forgot it.

    Lot of guys are just using the asian carp now. Snag one take just a few seconds and cut bait all day. But a live yellow tail wiggling just a little on the end of that line....man

    Live herring will catch stripers
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