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Author Topic: Decoy weights  (Read 11062 times)

Offline L-ofalab

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Re: Decoy weights
« Reply #15 on: November 27, 2012, 06:52:12 AM »
I use these Ace anchors with greenhead gear rigging line. The rigging line is a synthetic material with little/no memory and is slightly stretchy. The anchor never come loose in my decoy bag. Cabela's sells them.



We have some of these on about 6 dozen decoys.  They are good for a few season until you have to replace the surgical tubing.  I have just about every weight imaginable on a variety of decoys.  Lead straps, tear drops, triangle, pyramides, mushrooms, etc.  For pond hunting I have just resorted to 1/4" pencil lead about 4" long.  Works great for packing in.  If you have current, you have to lead up.  For deep water I make it quick with long lines.

When the surgical tubing breaks use bungy cord, mine have been working good for 4 years.
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Offline BiggLuke

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Re: Decoy weights
« Reply #16 on: November 27, 2012, 08:57:57 AM »
You can try something similar to these Texas rigged lines. Work great for quick setup and fast pick up. The weight sets itself to the right depth.

 :yeah:

these texas rigs are awesome... if you only hunt the same area over and over. They dont work well in deep water or areas that have changing depths, like tide flats lol.

but if you consistently hunt 3-6' these are really east to pick up and put out.

We use a weight that my dad invented a long time ago that is perfect for deep water or changing depths, but they are a bitch to pick up.
Just remember though, its better to be able to place decoys quickly in the morning and take longer to pick up, than it is to have decoys that take forever to place when it's 20 degrees out and the ducks are ready to land.

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Offline BiggLuke

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Re: Decoy weights
« Reply #17 on: November 27, 2012, 09:01:01 AM »
I use these Ace anchors with greenhead gear rigging line. The rigging line is a synthetic material with little/no memory and is slightly stretchy. The anchor never come loose in my decoy bag. Cabela's sells them.



I also love these Ace decoy weights....
but  i lose a lot of them.
They are nice because they stay put on the decoys in the bag, no tangles... but the elastic wears out over time.
Seem like they break just when I need them the most. lol.... like last weekend when I threw one in the air then plop, plop.... decoy hit water, weight hit water 10 yards further out. Never found it. lol.....
Stan Marsh: "My Uncle Jimbo says we gotta get up there early. Right Uncle Jimbo?"

Jimbo: "That's right, Stanley. Animals are much easier to shoot in the morning."

Offline scout/sniper

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Re: Decoy weights
« Reply #18 on: November 27, 2012, 09:16:13 AM »
I use these Ace anchors with greenhead gear rigging line. The rigging line is a synthetic material with little/no memory and is slightly stretchy. The anchor never come loose in my decoy bag. Cabela's sells them.


:yeah:    These are all I use now. They actually have a small piece of string attached where his hand is to easily pull the weight from the decoy because they hold tightly to the decoy.
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Offline brocka

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Re: Decoy weights
« Reply #19 on: November 27, 2012, 12:10:15 PM »
I use these Ace anchors with greenhead gear rigging line. The rigging line is a synthetic material with little/no memory and is slightly stretchy. The anchor never come loose in my decoy bag. Cabela's sells them.



+1 on the "J" weights

Offline cue772

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Re: Decoy weights
« Reply #20 on: November 27, 2012, 04:08:34 PM »
I use these Ace anchors with greenhead gear rigging line. The rigging line is a synthetic material with little/no memory and is slightly stretchy. The anchor never come loose in my decoy bag. Cabela's sells them.



We have some of these on about 6 dozen decoys.  They are good for a few season until you have to replace the surgical tubing.  I have just about every weight imaginable on a variety of decoys.  Lead straps, tear drops, triangle, pyramides, mushrooms, etc.  For pond hunting I have just resorted to 1/4" pencil lead about 4" long.  Works great for packing in.  If you have current, you have to lead up.  For deep water I make it quick with long lines.

When the surgical tubing breaks use bungy cord, mine have been working good for 4 years.

Bungee cords... great idea! I also read a post somewhere by a guy who buys a bicycle tire tube and cuts that to length... inexpensive and fairly durable. I would be fine with either method.. I usually change out my line every season anyway, but I am not rigging 100 dozen decoys either.

Offline WSU

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Re: Decoy weights
« Reply #21 on: November 27, 2012, 04:16:05 PM »
I use these Ace anchors with greenhead gear rigging line. The rigging line is a synthetic material with little/no memory and is slightly stretchy. The anchor never come loose in my decoy bag. Cabela's sells them.



We have some of these on about 6 dozen decoys.  They are good for a few season until you have to replace the surgical tubing.  I have just about every weight imaginable on a variety of decoys.  Lead straps, tear drops, triangle, pyramides, mushrooms, etc.  For pond hunting I have just resorted to 1/4" pencil lead about 4" long.  Works great for packing in.  If you have current, you have to lead up.  For deep water I make it quick with long lines.

I also use pencil lead.  Tanglefree line and pencil lead will cover you most anywhere you can wade.  You can also bend the lead to hook around the keel.

Offline jplmyers

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Decoy weights
« Reply #22 on: November 29, 2012, 06:17:13 PM »
I just changed mine to Texas rigged, but I flipped it upside down so the running end with the loop was by the deke.  Added a depth adjuster thing to the line so I could hunt different depths.  The main issue with my old setup (strap weights) was that it was too tedious for a pack-in area and a solo hunter with dog.  Took all the fun out before hunt began.  We'll see on Saturday if the change paid off.

Offline Kola16

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Re: Decoy weights
« Reply #23 on: November 29, 2012, 06:20:18 PM »
I use these Ace anchors with greenhead gear rigging line. The rigging line is a synthetic material with little/no memory and is slightly stretchy. The anchor never come loose in my decoy bag. Cabela's sells them.



+1 on the "J" weights

+ another 1  :tup:
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