Alright, just had a chance to read over all posts again. A lot of great info appreciate it all
I like the idea brought up by Steely and Knnn of getting out early season and exploring, possibly finding some "new" water, getting ideas for "circuts" etc. I think I'll do a some of this soon so by the time the fishing starts to pick I'm not still out there exploring, but rather have a good selection of runs I like and circuts to fish depending on how much time I have on a given outing. Also like the idea of taking notes of where I see a fish caught, if I catch a s/h what I was using and what the conditions were like, etc.
I said before that as far as I can tell my tackle set up is pretty solid. If anyoen has any critiques of what I use please tell me:
Rod: I have a few I rotate through. My fav for s/h is a 10"6 12-20LB line rating Convergence. Nice and light and balances well with my lighter reels. I also have the same rod in 12-25LB line rating and an 11"6 Technium in 12-25. For casting/carring all day I prefer the 1st rod.
Reel: I have 3 baitcasters. My fav overall is the Currado 301E which I'll fish on the two 10"6 rods. Too light for the 11"6 though. Then I'll switch to the Cardiff 401.
Mainline: 15 or 17LB on the smaller reels. 20 on the Cardiff. I use Maxima UG or Pline CXX-Xtra Strong.
Leader: Usually 10, 12, or 15LB mono depending on water conditions.
Float: DNE 20-35g depending on how much weight is needed for the water conditions. Normally use the 25g. I don't really buy into clear floats and I've had a few crack while fishing then I gotta re-rig
Weight: Pencil lead 2-3 inches (1/4 gauge) threaded on mainline. I carry diff sizes of split shot for fine tuning if necessary, but generally just a piece of p/l. I used to use a plastic bead above the swivel knot but found sometimes it would break. Now I just put a dab of UV knot glue on the knot and IMO it protects the knot fine and will not crack and fall of like the bead.
Swivel: Roller swivel normally #10 (I think)
Leader length: Depends on conditions, but typically shorter than I would fish for salmon. With jigs usually quite short 12-18 inches. Same with roe/roe sacks. For rubber worms and blades I'll go a bit longer in the 24inch range as IMO such lures work better with a longer leader so they can flutter/wiggle more.
Hooks: Octupus style in #2 - 1/0 depending on water. I like the good ol' gammies in gunmetal.
Other: Most of the time I'm short floating trying to get the fish to look up and see what I'm throwing down. If feel my lead dragging on bottom I normally reel in right away and shorten up a bit. I don't snag up too often but sometimes it happens.
The only real variation I'll make to this set up is with pre-tied rigs like rubber worms where I want the leader length to stay the same, but if I cut and retie, then want to tie the worm back on, each time I lose a few inches of the worm leader, and soon it is too short!
I've tried re-threading them with a new leader but find most of the time the worm gets wrecked. A sollution to this I learned from one of the guys at Sea Run : Tie a duo-lock to the end of your worm leader and clip it to the end of your barrel swivel. If you want to change rigs, just unclip and put on a leader board. Next time you want to use it just clip back on!
With worms I like this method. However with pretty much everything else I just tie the leader right to the swivel, and if I re-tie that jig or whatever later I just cut a new piece of leader line. I prefer this as IMO the duo-lock is just one more thing for the fish to see and possibly spook from, and one more thing to possibly fail/break. Also I like having a fresh leader on with a fresh lure. However, with the threaded worm the leader getting shorter and shorter sucks, and this seems to solve the problem. I'll attach a pic in case my explaination doesn't make sense.