Do you put the hook in the strip and add a bend to your bait when you use a slab strip?Wise buys had it and i think Trotac had it. Didn't see it last year so i don't think it was a good seller ? I,ve learned to cut my own and it does take some practice for sure. I like to keep the tail on myself.
The two most important parts to cutting good strips are a really sharp knife, and the herring needs to still be semi frozen. Not hard to do, just a messy and a bit of a pain. Throw all the trimmings back in the freezer for baiting your traps or a hali chum bag. At least you get some extra milage from it afterwards that way.Hard to find cheap good quality herring to cut as bait... would be a lot of money for the bait in retail land... most guys using strip today cut there own.. not really hard to do if you really want to us strip... get a bunch of the herring u buy at the bucket sales and practice on that them move to the good stuff to get the strip us desire..practice makes prefect...![]()
Yes tiny strip works well too. I mostly used that in the winter. The Rhys Davis tiny strip teasers never put much roll on the tiny strips though. I would sometimes use a mini size Scotty Roller Baiter for those. They are the cloths pin style bait holders that impart a spin with a plastic vane. Sometimes the fish preferred the type of roll the Scotty heads gave when using strip.
Thanks for the info Bones.
I haven't tried the durabait or MC Rocket Strips. I remember a couple guys saying the used the rocket Strips and they work well. I think you have to order at least $50 worth to get them shipped. I don't think I'd take a flyer on them at that price. If they were available in local stores I'd probably give the rocket Strips a try. They seem to have a big following back east. Strangely the only artificial strip that I used to use regularly and worked well was the Glitter Strips developed by David Korsch of predator charters many years ago. They were heavy and no where near as lifelike as the new stuff out today, but when I ran out of strip I used them for backup and they worked pretty well. They didn't work to well in the Rhys Davis heads, but there was another brand from the states that spun them really well with a little modification. They didn't work that well for mature springs, but the feeders and coho really liked them at faster trolling speeds.Does anybody use durabait strip and have success with it? Looks like theyve got some deadly color combos available on their website.
I haven't tried the durabait or MC Rocket Strips. I remember a couple guys saying the used the rocket Strips and they work well. I think you have to order at least $50 worth to get them shipped. I don't think I'd take a flyer on them at that price. If they were available in local stores I'd probably give the rocket Strips a try. They seem to have a big following back east. Strangely the only artificial strip that I used to use regularly and worked well was the Glitter Strips developed by David Korsch of predator charters many years ago. They were heavy and no where near as lifelike as the new stuff out today, but when I ran out of strip I used them for backup and they worked pretty well. They didn't work to well in the Rhys Davis heads, but there was another brand from the states that spun them really well with a little modification. They didn't work that well for mature springs, but the feeders and coho really liked them at faster trolling speeds.
Too bad Dave never kept developing that line of strip he invented. I loved the fact that they worked and the money was going to one of the good local guys in town.
I will see what I can find for you FM. I can't make any promises because I don't know where the tiny teaser heads I have are at. I rarely if ever use the tiny teaser heads. I use the Scotty heads more for tiny strip. If I can find where they're at, which do you prefer the old style or the more recent version with the little fin sticking out on the trailing edge. I don't have a lot of tiny teasers, the full size I've got probably 50 or 60 heads. I don't think I'll be running out of those anytime soon.