Though originally designed for use while fly fishing, small, foam slip style indicators have quickly beco*e a staple in my conventional light-tackle arsenal. These versatile floats can be pegged in place or rigged like a slip bobber, which is how I usually fish them. Because they are so light, you won’t be able to send one across the lake, but they are perfect for pond fishing and trout fishing, especially when stealth is critical. They barely make a sound or a splash when they hit the water. When a fish pulls against one, it feels very little resistance, so it hangs on longer. I love them for fishing a pocket water trout stream with a single mealworm and one BB-sized split shot. Slip style indicators also shine when presenting a single fathead minnow around shallow bank brush and laydowns for crappies.
Better known as a popping cork across the South, these floats are available in a wide variety of sizes and feature a scooped out top similar in appearance to a popper lure. You use them by hanging a live bait (usually shrimp) under them, then snapping the rod, and creating a pop and splash with the float. That popping attracts fish, which then hit your dangling live bait. Popping cork bobbers are highly effective for inshore species like seatrout and redfish, but don’t rule them out for freshwater species. I’ve had a lot of success fishing live shiners under small popping floats for bass and pickerel. The float still functions like a regular bobber, but the occasional pop can get fish to co*mit to the bait faster, especially in transitional times like fall and early spring when gamefish are a bit more sluggish.
Pole floats co*e in a variety of sizes, all the way up to 10 inches long, but the one I use most often is the 5-inch model. After experimenting with several float styles, these have beco*e my go-to for targeting bigger fish in shallow water, particularly channel cats and bowfins where I live in the Northeast. While these floats may look awkward, they have major advantages in the shallows. First, they lie flat on the surface, so the second a fish touches the bait they’ll quiver or begin to lift. Because of their length, even if that surface is covered with muck or duck weed, I can see the float from a mile away. When a fish eats and begins running, an unweighted pole float glides effortlessly across the water, so the fish barely feels it. Pole floats also co*e weighted, and while they’ll cast farther, they’ll also sit straight up and down at rest, which doesn’t offer the same advantages as the unweighted models.
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