What should be in tackle box




















The pliers help you bend and twist the metal components of your gear, a knife helps you gut your fish, and a nail clipper handily snips through line. A first aid kit is essential on any backcountry trip, but especially one that includes knives, hooks, and flailing fish, some with teeth. Fishing is one of the most relaxing pastimes. To excel, you need technical prowess, experience, and excellent observational skills. You also need gear. A necessity for all anglers, your tackle box is a crucial part of your gear, besides your rod, line, and reel.

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Land Management. Small Game. How To. Wild Game Recipes. Bigger fish obviously require much heavier line. Fish with teeth may require steel liters. A knife is indispensable on a fishing trip. Take the time to sharpen your knife thoroughly before your trip. Sticking your hand down the gullet of a catfish is a baaaad idea. Their mouths are like sandpaper and can rip your hand to pieces.

Polarized sunglasses spare you the piercing brightness and significantly cut down on the glare from the water. They allow you to look into the water and see beneath the surface, which in turn allows you to fish more effectively.

Depending on your setup, you may want to bring extra sinkers. Typically, sinkers are used with live bait and plastic baits. In fact, you may not want to use any sinkers.

Generally speaking, there are two types of stringers. A single line stringer is simply a piece of nylon rope with a piece of metal on one end and a metal ring on the other. You run the metal piece through the gill of the fish then connect it to the metal ring. Keep an extra pair in the glove box of your boat, because we all know how easy it can be to forget them on pre-dawn starts.

Did the line slice your finger? Use superglue. Did you set a hook into your thumb? Did that northern pike get the best of you? Almost everything you use for fishing is pointy or extremely sharp. A jig eye punch makes plucking the paint off new jigs much easier and safer than using the tip of your knife or another hook.

Keeping one on board is a good way to avoid having to use that first aid kit. When your rubber baits get hammered and sliced to shreds, you can use a torch lighter to heat up the butter knife and weld the rubber back together on the fly. For people new to fishing this is a good list.

My Dad, God rest his soul, made sure I had everything I needed in mine. I've been fishing most of my life and enjoy it. I take two boxes. To keep hooks close to hand, I use a small sheet of foam that comes in shipping boxes. Cut to size needed and put hooks by size on it.

Slides into the soft side tackle box without problem. A small wire cutter for removing things, placed on a lanyard tied to the handle of a box. I got mine in the crafts area. Clamp on sinkers. A lot of items you can in the boxes sold at walmart's. I buy the boxes on sale and use them to hold my tackle like large swivels, bobbers, sinkers,clampers, tools so I can take it out and see at a glance what I need.

What bait is up to the fisherman. I like live, my g'son likes plastic. We try to get plastic that is like the bait around where we fish. Of course after every trip I clean everything up and replace things used, especially after having the grandkids along.. I keep a multitool in my tackle box.

It helps when I need to cut line and remove hooks from fish. I can not emphasize enough the importance of hydration when fishing. You will be near water or on the water but you need water as you will experience thirst. Small nail clippers to cut fishing line. Put clippers on a bright keychain so when you set them down you dont loose them. I always have a fingernail clipper in my tackle box.



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