Types of Fishing Bobbers - How to Use and Setup Bobbers - Slip, Spring, and Round
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- Опубліковано 5 лип 2024
- This video examines the three main types of fishing bobbers - spring bobbers, round bobbers, and slip bobbers. We review how to set up each type of bobber and how to have the most success bobber fishing for bluegills, crappies, perch, walleye, and more.
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Hey man, I love your videos so much. You are the reason why I can understand how to fish. Now fishing is my hobby thanks to you!
Thanks - I appreciate the comment. Good luck fishing!
@@FishingwithNatur the best 😎
@@JulianshOVGM Thanks
I find all kinds of lost bobbers while fishing and wondered what they were for. Great informative video!
Same. Very helpful video - thank you!
Thanks 🙂
Thanks Nat! I began my fishing journey about 4 months ago and have fallen in love with it. Your videos were extremely helpful when first starting off and are still providing me with incredibly useful information. Thanks again!
Awesome - thanks for taking the time to leave this nice comment.
same! started fishing this spring, these videos have been invaluable
you know a youtuber really cares about their viewers when they respond to every comment. I personally prefer the spring bobber.
Thanks. I appreciate you all watching the videos and commenting. If you take the time to comment, I will take the time to reply. 🙂
I fish all different methods but have to admit the sight of a float going under water is so satisfying and fun way to fish. 🎣
I agree
A million Thanks for this video!!
And for helping me to improve my fishing learning and skills thanks for introduced me to this beautiful activity
I was one of the many to ask for this video. Cause I really like Bobber fishing 🙂
Keep up the great and inspiring informative content. ❤
Thank you for the suggestion and for your compliments. I'm glad you enjoyed the video.
Thank you nat I am 14 and am learning how to fish and your videos are very useful
Great - glad to hear it!
I've been waiting for this video thank you so much you videos are the best for a newbie like me and even some long time angler too from what the comments say.
You're welcome - I'm glad you liked it!
Thanks for sharing some helpful information on bobbers! Keep up the good work! Thank you!
You're welcome - thanks for the comment.
Where I live the water gets incredibly weedy by the first week in July. I like to use a bobber just to keep my worm floating either at the edge of the weeds or just above the weeds.
Above or next to vegetation are both great places to cast a bobber, for sure.
best fishing channel fr fr
Thanks 🙂
Forgot water bobbers and foam and peg floats like from the Trout Magnet kit. Still a lovely video! 🥰
Thanks. These are the styles that the vast majority of people will come across. I didn't want to get too "deep in the weeds" with the lesser known/used styles.
@@FishingwithNat haha fishing puns!! Love it!
Or you could’ve said you didn’t want to get too “bogged down in the details...” 🤪
bobbers in america are so different then europe I always used small splitshots like .50 grams max and slide them depending on conditions. If I want my bait go fast I line up the splitshots. If I want just bites I spread the splitshots or line up a few at the top and one at the bottom to target top, middle and bottom water all in one cast. and the usually have a eye where the line goes through
Interesting - thanks for sharing
Can you do a video on trout, steelhead, salmon? Your format is really good for beginners. :)
Yes, likely this fall
@@FishingwithNat very nice. :)
Would you recommend the improved clinch knot or the trilene knot. I’m looking for the strongest knot
The Trilene is stronger
Loving the videos! Do you have a Facebook page anymore?
Nope, no Facebook page anymore
Hi are you going to pit out the small moth bass video?
Still working on that one. Going to do a bit more filming of them underwater.
Can you put my comment on the screen wen the vid starts🙏🙏🙏
W VIDEO
Thanks
Would you also recommend a bobber for perch fishing?
It's an effective way to fish for perch. They love minnows and worms. But perch are pretty easy to catch on small jigs and spinners too. My preferred way to catch them is just a small jig and plastic minnow.
@@FishingwithNat are you casting that or just vertically jigging? Come summer I usually am just casting and going for walleye and pike.
I don't catch any perch until ice fishing season. I'd like to catch a few in open water season too.
@@charleslefebvre5515 Either, but perch generally hang near the bottom so keep it close to the bottom. I catch them a lot on small jigs/swimbaits moved slowly near the bottom around vegetation.
So how would I know how much line to give out with any given depth for the slip bobber. For example, if I’m fishing I’m 15 ft of water, how much line do I need to let out to make sure my bait is at the right depth? Thanks
That really depends. If you were in 15 feet of water and there was a school of crappies suspended at 6 feet down, you'd want your bait sitting at 5-6 feet to keep it right in front of / above them. But if you were fishing a rocky reef that's 15 feet down, you might want to be at 14 or 14.5 feet down to target walleyes or perch near the bottom. If you were in 15 feet of water with vegetation growing about 3 feet up from the bottom, you might want to hold a bait right over the top of the plants about 12 feet down from the surface. Does that answer your question?
@@FishingwithNat Kind of. So let’s say I want my hair 12 feet below the surface, how would I make sure my bait goes to that depth. Do I have yo adjust the line for different depths?
@@FishingwithNat Autocorrect.. Bait* not hair
@@dd1190 You would set your bobber stop 12 feet up the line from the hair jig. The jig will sink and pull line through the slip bobber until it hits the bobber stop. If your jig is not heavy enough to pull the line through by itself, add a split shot sinker to the line a foot or two above the jig.
@@dd1190 You would set your bobber stop 12 feet up the line from the bait. Your jig will sink and pull the 12ft of line through the slip bobber until it reaches the bobber stop. If your jig is not heavy enough by itself, add a split shot sinker a foot or two above the bait for a bit more weight.
hmm ain't no way a bobber stop would make it through my outermost guide, it's *tiny*, on all my rods. Are certain fishing rod made for bobbers so they have huge guides or something?
Some rods have very small guides near the top. The idea is that more contact between the line and the top guide means better sensitivity. But as you said, it can cause problems with leader knots or bobber stops catching on the guide. If your top guides are super small, it may just prevent you from using slip bobbers with them, or you'll only be able to set them a few feet deep and keep the bobber stop outside of the rod guides.
Bobber down
Set the hook!
@@FishingwithNat great channel I subscribe a few months ago
Maladec
Thanks for watching
Tbh who also doesn’t use bobbers?
It's another tool in the fishing toolbox. You can catch fish in many ways but bobbers are very effective tools and can help you catch fish in situations where it's hard to without a bobber.
I enjoy fishing but I never used bobber I never find them useful honestly
They have so many uses. You can replicate some of the techniques by simply casting a jig or hook and letting it fall, but a bobber can keep your bait in the right spot for much longer.