Should I fish that Pautzke on my fly pole or my 4 foot long ultralight spinning rod?(40.6200822, -75.4778021) they put some real hogs in here. Throw a little Pautzke fire bait on the hook and hang on!
4ft if you got it, they really pull hard.Should I fish that Pautzke on my fly pole or my 4 foot long ultralight spinning rod?
I don't think I've ever used Pautzkes growing up. I always had Uncle Mike's.In all seriousness those Pautzke eggs are like catnip for fresh stockies. Especially Rainbows.
Fished opening day with some spincasting friends and neighbors a few years ago. I think I caught and bonked 4 fish on 4 casts (2 each for my wife and I to eat), and then was more concerned about breakfast burritos and coffee and beer.
I don't think I've ever used Pautzkes growing up. I always had Uncle Mike's.
No... That day is reserved for posting about mountain lion sightings in PA.This thread should have been posted on April fools day......
Yup, dem pink shrimp flavored ones worked real good. Used that and good old fashioned Berkeley powerbait…. Sparkles needed.I don't think I've ever used Pautzkes growing up. I always had Uncle Mike's.
Uncle Mike's salmon eggs were the go-to back in the day.I always had Uncle Mike's.
But is does have a wild BT population that expanded downstream for about a mile to the confluence with the Perkiomen and I would credit your Chapter’s tree plantings on the flat lands between Rt 100 and the mouth with the BT population downstream expansion from the higher gradient stretch decades later as those trees grew enough to shade that former low gradient meadow section.Not because of the fishing, but because our TU Chapter named it through a submission to the USGS. Pachwechenn Run.
40°25'36.0"N 75°34'20.3"W
Uncle Mike's salmon eggs were the go-to back in the day.
But is does have a wild BT population that expanded downstream for about a mile to the confluence with the Perkiomen and I would credit your Chapter’s tree plantings on the flat lands between Rt 100 and the mouth with the BT population downstream expansion from the higher gradient stretch decades later as those trees grew enough to shade that former low gradient meadow section.