I was out the other night (Dec. 23rd) chasing the water-borne whitetails (walleyes) and had a situation that I never thought would have happened, except maybe, other than in bar talk. I typically fish with big baits (4 - 8 inches) after dark and seldom do I finesse for winter walleyes. Yet because fishing was slow on my "regular" main-flow rock plies, I went to fish slack water eddies, which is not totally uncommon for me. Here's where the rub comes in - the water was far more slack with one particular eddy than I expected it to be, and a 1/4oz was WAY too heavy, especially considering the rocky shoreline... (I don't carry anything lighter in my winter jig box). By chance, I grabbed my bass finesse rod (spinning rod with mono) that evening as a rig to overcome potential line icing issues, should the temps get that low; as it turned out, this rod had a Do-it Freedom Fry rigged wacky style, from earlier in the year, and I'm sure everyone can guess by now... I was successfully catching
walleyes on a wacky worm... in December... after dark (about 10pm). The hardest part was (not) feeling the bite because of the slack line, but overall, this method did produce. We caught a couple 18 inchers that we kept and turned back a handful of other shorter fish... not the quality of fish I was hoping for, but hey, it was action!
Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought of this technique until it just came together the other night; heck, I never would have thought of fishing crappies with a wacky rig until BKJ mentioned it early this spring... then a couple of weeks later, I actually caught a crappie on a wacky rig fishing for smallmouths. I'm sure there are plenty of other "off-the-wall" experiences/methods out there and I'm just chumming the water for some other great fish stories... let's hear them.