There was a short period several years ago when it was illegal to sell herring strips in many areas (including around here) . I think it had to do with VHS disease. Anyway, there were meat-rig lovers experimenting with methods to use other, locally sourced fish in their meat heads. (Fresh or frozen smelt, ocean perch, alewives either caught on sabiki rigs or harvested from freshly caught fish, even belly meat from salmon or trout.
I'll be the first to say I'm not a meat rig afficianado. I do use them but they are more of a last resort tactic rather than a go to tactic.
I had a fellow on the boat who brought some frozen smelt (ready for the skillet) along. I rigged one on a City Chicken rig and it caught two trout, one of them the largest of the day. Blind luck? I used them the next couple trips with zero results.
Few questions:
1) Anyone have consistent success with herring substitutes? If so, what species.
2) Anyone have a fish barf up an alewife and put it on a meatrig and have it work? Is it a "hot" tactic" or just something that was a one off?
3) Anyone have brining, flavoring or staining techniques they use to treat "store-bought" (or freshly caught) strips which either makes them work better or store better? I've heard of guys soaking them spawn curing stuff, in anise, in garlic juice, in sea salt, in laundry bluing and fish oil.
4) Strips better than whole herring?
5) Many people use those heavily "bent" plastic flashers, evidently made specifically for pulling meat rigs because I've never heard them used with just trolling flies, rubber squids, spin-n-glows. I have heard of guy pulling meat rig teaser/head rigs behind Spin Doctors and large Paddles, often used with flies, etc. Thoughts?
6) I don't have a special cooler or refrigerator on my boat. So when I bring herring strips along, I just toss them in the fish cooler with the ice. By the end of the trip, they are thawed, sometimes a bit waterlogged, then I refreeze them and bring them the next day. I've tried several ways to give them a bit more protection but it's all been either a royal pain or unworkable. I'm sure after a couple three cycles the strips are "less" than pristine. Which brings up a couple more questions. A) Does it matter?
How can you tell when it's so bad they need to be tossed? c) Anyone have a good way to handle their strips on board?