You are exactly the person I had in mind when I wrote this. Thanks man. Maybe I'll test out the drop shot lol. I was thinking I'd probably have to have a setup just for a swimbait. Would you use that setup for any other applications. I'm a cartopper guy so space is limited. When I'm alone I bring 3-4 rods and when someones with me usually 2 each.
Shawn, I have been a cartopper guy for a few years now. My big boat sits with a blown powerhead. I never leave home without my swimbait rod. I start throwing them in early April and don't put them down until sometime in November. The best days are cloudy with a decient breeze going. Ponds with no real deep water are better on average then those with lots of deep water. The deeper the pond the more I lean toward the slow sinkers and the ROF 12 Hudd. A swimbait rod is really too heavy for another application unless you are going to use the Alabama rig.
I use the slammer like a top water at 1st. Cast it out, pop it , twitch it, slowly let it crawl its way back to the boat, then Istart to jerk it like a BIG jerkbait with pauses inbetween, Finally I will crankk it down and retrieve it like a crankbait, again pausing and twitching inbetween. I throw it at docks, around downed trees, along breaklines and pad and other weed edges. You will be suprised at how "weedless a 9" piece of wood with 2-3 sets of treble hooks is. The slammer will catch 2lb fish as well as 5,,6 and 7 lb class fish.
The Hudd take a lot of patients, but those patients are rewarded with BIG fish. The hudd has no "feel" to it. It feels like you are draging a hunk of plastic along the bottom but believe me the tail is working. I cwarl it along at a painfully slow pace making contact with the bottom as I go. The hits are usually angry in nature. My biggest Hudd fish is in the 5lb class but I have had 7's and 8's follow it back to the boat and turn away
With swimbaist you want to think BIG and when you think you are using a BIG bait, go up in size AGAIN. My 1st swimbait was a 7" slammer. I threw it for a whole season with good results. Over the following winter I purchased two 9" baits. I threw them the following year and my catch size went up without a significant drop in numbers. Now when I look at the 7" bait it looks small to me. I still throw it, especially early in the year bu the 9" Slammers are my "go to" wake baits.
* If you can find ( not made anymore) either a Generation 1 or Generation 2 Muits Mouse, They are awesome wake/ cranking baits that can be thrown on a 7' heavy flipping stick