AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
rebelp74 wrote:Yeah I have a yacht, suck it bitches!
Bad17 wrote:400lbs mono fishing line Texas rig
AKPirate wrote:Jason is usually right but sometimes wrong
Pintail wrote:Does the mono kink?
assateague wrote:Pintail wrote:Does the mono kink?
No, not 300 or 400 pound.
assateague wrote:Sometimes the quickest way to put out a fire is with an explosion.
R. Chapman wrote:Texas Rigging. Here's who I bought mine from:
http://www.decoyweight.com/
Jim Porter is a great person to deal with and makes a quality rig. I bought my first dozen from him last year and Was really impressed. Just ordered 3 more dozen for the rest of my dekes, this year. Should be getting them sometime next week.
AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
assateague wrote:Put that in your huff-n-puffer and smoke it, shootin' boy.
the loop sticking above the water line would drive me nutsRonE wrote:R. Chapman wrote:Texas Rigging. Here's who I bought mine from:
http://www.decoyweight.com/
Jim Porter is a great person to deal with and makes a quality rig. I bought my first dozen from him last year and Was really impressed. Just ordered 3 more dozen for the rest of my dekes, this year. Should be getting them sometime next week.
I disagree with you, swivels and clips are a pain in the butt and get caught on things and snagged on the lines. 4 oz egg weights aren't big enough in the wind and won't hold well on a hard sand bottom.
Use 400 lb mono with a loop on one end that you can put four fingers through. Drill a small hole just over the size of the mono in the keel of the decoy and stick the mono through. On the non loop end of the mono use a 6-8 oz mushroom weight. Use aluminum sleeves and crimp the loop and anchor. If you prefer a larger hole in the keel (line runs through better) you will have to place a small washer on the line on either side of the hole in the keel.
RonE wrote:R. Chapman wrote:Texas Rigging. Here's who I bought mine from:
http://www.decoyweight.com/
Jim Porter is a great person to deal with and makes a quality rig. I bought my first dozen from him last year and Was really impressed. Just ordered 3 more dozen for the rest of my dekes, this year. Should be getting them sometime next week.
I disagree with you, swivels and clips are a pain in the butt and get caught on things and snagged on the lines. 4 oz egg weights aren't big enough in the wind and won't hold well on a hard sand bottom.
Use 400 lb mono with a loop on one end that you can put four fingers through. Drill a small hole just over the size of the mono in the keel of the decoy and stick the mono through. On the non loop end of the mono use a 6-8 oz mushroom weight. Use aluminum sleeves and crimp the loop and anchor. If you prefer a larger hole in the keel (line runs through better) you will have to place a small washer on the line on either side of the hole in the keel.
assateague wrote:Sometimes the quickest way to put out a fire is with an explosion.
R. Chapman wrote:RonE wrote:R. Chapman wrote:Texas Rigging. Here's who I bought mine from:
http://www.decoyweight.com/
Jim Porter is a great person to deal with and makes a quality rig. I bought my first dozen from him last year and Was really impressed. Just ordered 3 more dozen for the rest of my dekes, this year. Should be getting them sometime next week.
I disagree with you, swivels and clips are a pain in the butt and get caught on things and snagged on the lines. 4 oz egg weights aren't big enough in the wind and won't hold well on a hard sand bottom.
Use 400 lb mono with a loop on one end that you can put four fingers through. Drill a small hole just over the size of the mono in the keel of the decoy and stick the mono through. On the non loop end of the mono use a 6-8 oz mushroom weight. Use aluminum sleeves and crimp the loop and anchor. If you prefer a larger hole in the keel (line runs through better) you will have to place a small washer on the line on either side of the hole in the keel.
Ron,
I'm not using egg weights. He's making me 3.5 feet line with 6 oz mushroom weights. The clip itself is clipped onto the decoy. Works for me.
Rick wrote:Have I missed the post where Pintail's told us how much line she needs on her decoys?
Texas rigging can be a fine thing for shallow water, but I'd draw the line at 5' and prefer them shorter, because even that's a pain to toss and complicates transport and storage.
I've also found Tanglefree problematic. Though it doesn't seem to break in the cold like GHG pvc line, rodents think it's spaghetti. Once told Rod Haydel they'd cut it on decoys stored in my blind and shed, and he reckoned that explained the decoy weights they'd been finding on nutria mounds.
Best thing I've found for deep water is heavy gauge braided nylon or tarred twisted nylon of approximately the same diameter as Tanglefree or slightly larger. Thinner line is a tangle waiting to happen - and be cut out when it won't untangle.
AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
Pintail wrote:I don't know where the decoy forum is, if there is one but this gets more traffic anyways. So,what is your favorite type of line to rig your decoys with? I'm looking for something better. I used to use cabelas mono but it got too many kinks when wrapped around the keel. What do y'all like to use?
Goldfish wrote:the loop sticking above the water line would drive me nutsRonE wrote:R. Chapman wrote:Texas Rigging. Here's who I bought mine from:
http://www.decoyweight.com/
Jim Porter is a great person to deal with and makes a quality rig. I bought my first dozen from him last year and Was really impressed. Just ordered 3 more dozen for the rest of my dekes, this year. Should be getting them sometime next week.
I disagree with you, swivels and clips are a pain in the butt and get caught on things and snagged on the lines. 4 oz egg weights aren't big enough in the wind and won't hold well on a hard sand bottom.
Use 400 lb mono with a loop on one end that you can put four fingers through. Drill a small hole just over the size of the mono in the keel of the decoy and stick the mono through. On the non loop end of the mono use a 6-8 oz mushroom weight. Use aluminum sleeves and crimp the loop and anchor. If you prefer a larger hole in the keel (line runs through better) you will have to place a small washer on the line on either side of the hole in the keel.
Rick wrote:Have I missed the post where Pintail's told us how much line she needs on her decoys?
Texas rigging can be a fine thing for shallow water, but I'd draw the line at 5' and prefer them shorter, because even that's a pain to toss and complicates transport and storage.
I've also found Tanglefree problematic. Though it doesn't seem to break in the cold like GHG pvc line, rodents think it's spaghetti. Once told Rod Haydel they'd cut it on decoys stored in my blind and shed, and he reckoned that explained the decoy weights they'd been finding on nutria mounds.
Best thing I've found for deep water is heavy gauge braided nylon or tarred twisted nylon of approximately the same diameter as Tanglefree or slightly larger. Thinner line is a tangle waiting to happen - and be cut out when it won't untangle.
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