sandfly
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- Joined
- Sep 13, 2006
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- 6,275
been thinking on this one for awhile. Found some mustad #3576 hooks in a size 2 and wasn't sure what to do with them. The middle hook in the pics are mustad 94720 # 2 10x long and bottom one is a 9672 #2 for comparison. Been planning some trips either this year or next to fish the finger lakes in the pontoon. It's set up for trolling. Thought these would make some nice smelt imitations.
The rainbow smelt, Osmerus mordax, is an anadromous species of fish inhabiting rivers and coastal areas of North America from New Jersey to Labrador on the east coast and from Vancouver Island to the Arctic Ocean on the west coast. It has been introduced to the Great Lakes and from there has made its way to various other inland bodies of water in Ontario and the midwestern United States.
The body of the rainbow smelt is slender and cylindrical. It has a silvery pale green back and is iridescent purple, blue, and pink on the sides, with a light underside. When fullgrown, the rainbow smelt is between seven and nine inches long and weighs about three ounces, and ones over 12 inches are known. They eat zooplankton, invertebrates and other fish, including small smelt, sculpins, burbot, and whitefish. They are preyed upon by larger predatory fish such as coho salmon, burbot, trout, walleye, and yellow perch.
The rainbow smelt, Osmerus mordax, is an anadromous species of fish inhabiting rivers and coastal areas of North America from New Jersey to Labrador on the east coast and from Vancouver Island to the Arctic Ocean on the west coast. It has been introduced to the Great Lakes and from there has made its way to various other inland bodies of water in Ontario and the midwestern United States.
The body of the rainbow smelt is slender and cylindrical. It has a silvery pale green back and is iridescent purple, blue, and pink on the sides, with a light underside. When fullgrown, the rainbow smelt is between seven and nine inches long and weighs about three ounces, and ones over 12 inches are known. They eat zooplankton, invertebrates and other fish, including small smelt, sculpins, burbot, and whitefish. They are preyed upon by larger predatory fish such as coho salmon, burbot, trout, walleye, and yellow perch.