Those shots were taken close to the dam in an area I thought would be free of large rocks...guessed wrong.
This was a team event. One guy running the Marcum, one running the boat and the other running the video camera and saying "ooooww, aaaahhhh!"
I'm still amazed at the two little LED's on 825c. Talk about lighting up the area and no particle reflection to speak of! Someone told me these cameras work well for ice fishing too.
Quote: I'm still amazed at the two little LED's on 825c. Talk about lighting up the area and no particle reflection to speak of! Someone told me these cameras work well for ice fishing too.
That was one of the first things I noticed about the video. This takes underwater cameras to a whole new level!!
some pretty inactive lookin fish layin there on the bottom....can learn a lot with them cameras I think finding the fish just laying on the bottom vs. a foot or 2 off and activly searching around for food....thanks for the video guys
I was thinking the same thing. 1-2' off the bottom with fins flared vs bottom hugging and fins laid down, we can learn a lot about these fish with this new technology!
Quote: can learn a lot with them cameras I think finding the fish just laying on the bottom vs. a foot or 2 off and actively searching around for food...
Most people vertical jig right on bottom, only pulling their jigs up 6 inches to a foot. Walleyes, like most fish rarely go down in the water column to hit a bait. Which fish are these people targeting, the active fish at 1-2 feet up or the inactive ones right on bottom??
Exactly keep your jigs close to the bottom. I couldn't count all the times I hooked a walleye after I touched the bottom to make sure I was still down there.