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Blue Gill help

3.5K views 11 replies 10 participants last post by  chaunc  
#1 ·
I have 2 Grandson's 7 and 9 with a pond behind there house that is full
of fish, and the last couple years have become addicted to fishing.
I haven't fished for Blue Gill in decades, and am not up on the
latest and the greatest of B-G baits. I want to get them a bunch
of stuff to improve their experience. They are now using worms
and a hook (that is too big) and bobber, (That is too big).
My daughter has lived here since the pond was dug, about 15 years.
No one ever put any fish in it, and now it is full of bass and blue gill.
Amazing how that happens!
 
#4 ·
1/64 or 1/32 jig with longer sickle hook (you can get better hook up IMO and almost always through the roof of mouth catches. If you use live bait, i always add a glitter crappie nibble (avoid the green color, least effective for me) or cut off micro piece of artificial as a backer. Trout or crappie magnet in the orange/chartruse or black/chartruse color reallys works for me. The magnets have split tails where the hook comes out. I place a crappie nibble up the hook to split the tail out and makes it look like a bee/bug. The gulp 1 inch chartuse minnows really works for me too. I use the foam bobbers that use a toothpick. Weighted version if i really need to cast out. good luck
 
#9 ·
I have 2 Grandson's 7 and 9 with a pond behind there house that is full ..My daughter has lived here since the pond was dug, about 15 years.
No one ever put any fish in it, and now it is full of bass and blue gill.
Amazing how that happens!
possible that birds brought them in, most likely ducks or geese ... they land in one pond, get eggs stuck on their little webbed feet and lose them in another one ... lol either that or somebody threw in a couple "minnows" at some point :p many many moons ago I caught a northern pike in a little 2 acre farm pond in Medina that was spring fed, the only way for it to get there was one of those methods ...