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Yea I haven't either and that's why I asked. I was reading about all these guys using such long leader lengths but I was use any where from a foot and half to two feet. I have to say eggs all the way for me. I haven't tried out yarn balls but I should. I hear it help set the hook because the yarn gets stuck in their teeth. Has that been the truth for you?
Sorry to disagree with you about the leaders Fords07 but I use thousands of leaders a year and they are all between 4.5 to 5.5ft long I have seen flossing leaders and they tend to be on the 7 to 10 foot side! The leaders are that are 4.5 to 5.5 tend to create a more natural drift with the baits be it roe yarn or something else. Shorter leaders have their place ie murky water or small shallow streams. With murky water the fish tend to be in closer to the shore and if you have to long of a leader your bait will never make it down to where the fish are holding or traveling. The same also holds true for small shallow creeks and streams if your leaders are to long your presentation will never make it down to where the fish are, instead it will just pass over the top of the fish.How ever if you use too short of leader in low clear water the fish will be spooked away from your offering because it will be presented in an unnatural drift.B_C
People use 4' leaders or longer for one reason, to floss fish.
Quote from: fckfords07 on January 09, 2012, 11:13:45 AMPeople use 4' leaders or longer for one reason, to floss fish. nope! I use 36-42" leaders almost all the time and I do not floss fish EVER!
Quote from: huntnnw on January 09, 2012, 10:24:44 PMQuote from: fckfords07 on January 09, 2012, 11:13:45 AMPeople use 4' leaders or longer for one reason, to floss fish. nope! I use 36-42" leaders almost all the time and I do not floss fish EVER!4'=48"
not a chance I would ever use 24" leader in a clear river bouncing for metalheads...8lb maxima and sometimes 6lb