Reddit mentions: The best fishing corks, floats & bobbers

We found 26 Reddit comments discussing the best fishing corks, floats & bobbers. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 22 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

2. Eagle Claw Balsa Style Oval Fixed Float with 6-Inch Stem, 2 piece (7/8-inch)

Great For Panfish
Eagle Claw Balsa Style Oval Fixed Float with 6-Inch Stem, 2 piece (7/8-inch)
Specs:
ColorMulti
Height1 Inches
Length1 Inches
Weight0.01 Pounds
Width1 Inches
Release dateMarch 2012
Size7/8
Number of items1
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12. Thill Fish'N Foam Cigar Floats - Red - 2 1/2 in - Weighted Clip

    Features:
  • Premium Foam Floats
  • Performance Comes Standard
  • Available In A Variety Of Styles
  • Features Hi-Vis Coloring
Thill Fish'N Foam Cigar Floats - Red - 2 1/2 in - Weighted Clip
Specs:
ColorCigar Weighted Clip
Height0.5 Inches
Length5.3 Inches
Weight4 Kilograms
Width4 Inches
Size2 1/2"
Number of items2
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🎓 Reddit experts on fishing corks, floats & bobbers

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where fishing corks, floats & bobbers are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
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Top Reddit comments about Fishing Corks, Floats & Bobbers:

u/master0li · 2 pointsr/FishingForBeginners

I've only been fishing for a little over a month. My young kids wanted to so finally bought some rods, hit the internet to learn, and we're obsessed. OK, rather I'm obsessed lol, but my kids love it nearly as much. It's great to spend time with them and a blast when they catch one. So what I've learned in this short time...

Step one is to get a license for where you fish! Buy online and you can fish your whole state. Next equipment.

Most of the cheap rods I bought for the kids broke already :(. So I've resorted to buying gear that I'd personally find useful and will hold up. I replaced one with an ugly stick dock runner. Only $15, dinky but it's super strong so my 5 year old won't break it. I use it for bluegill (small fish) but it also held up great when I unwittingly hooked a decent bass! It's a spinning reel which is more prone to tangles. Unfortunately I also spend a lot of time untangling my 5 year old's reel. Alternatively you can get the dock demon spincast which is less prone to tangles.

I'm mentioning these rods because I'm kinda guessing your daughter is young if you want her to fish too but it's still appropriate for an adult to use. Full size ugly stick combos (rod & reel) are around $50 if you're will to spend that much for something super durable. Otherwise you can spend $25 for any combo at a sporting goods store and be able to catch fish no prob. Most popular is medium-fast action 6ft-7ft probably.

Easiest way to start catching fish is exactly what' you'd think, hook and a worm. I'm a fan of jig heads so you don't have to deal with a weight (weight is attached to hook). The improved clinch knot is seems to be the most popular way to tie the hook (but there are other knots). Grab some night crawlers - gas stations, convenient stores, grocery stores will have them by you (I'm in Chicago area so assuming it's the same). Just look for a live bait sign. Cut a small piece of the worm (maybe in half or quarters), stick it on the hook, give it a few wraps then hook it again, cast it (or just drop it from where you're standing), wait for that bobber to move, lift up to set the hook and reel it in. Take care unhooking it and go for that next one! It should be easy to find bluegill in shallow areas or right off of docks next to pillings (he uses slim jims in that video). You don't have to get up at the butt crack of dawn either for these small fish and can basically go whenever. They'll magically steal bait of the hook but be persistent and you'll hook one. Oh you might want to bring small scissors and needle nose pliers as well. Not necessary but sure makes things easier when you have to retie a hook or unhook a fish.

This is how we got into fishing because it's just a thrill to catch a fish no matter how small. If you enjoy it you'll probably want to catch bigger or different fish. Each fish has different behaviors so generally you'd target one species, learn what it eats and lives, then fish for it. Largemouth bass is the most popular but of course there's tons of fish out there all with different challenges.

As for places obviously you have Lake Michigan. I've personally never fished it and to be clear my suggestion comes from small lake or pond experience so might be more applicable there. They are everywhere around here though! I literally load up google maps, look for bodies of water, and bam, never realized there are dozens of places to fish within 10min or less. I'm sure it's the same for you.

Youtubers I've been enjoying so far Catfish and Carp, Hey Skipper, KickinTheirBassTV, Flukemaster, TacticalBassin, & just today discovered 1Rod1Reelfishing (probably one of the biggest ?).

Good luck. Even if it doesn't turn into a new hobby, you can spend $30 and have the thrill of catching a fish. Totally worth it.

u/jphert12 · 3 pointsr/Fishing

The most basic all around set up I would recommend for fishing in a lake would be to go buy some crankbaits, jerkbaits, a couple topwater lures (I recommend jitterbugs, and poppers), and some softplastic worms and worm hooks (they have the little angled shaft by the eye of the hook). Get some 12lb monofilament fishing line (it's good for mostly everything you'll catch in a lake).
Also, get some hooks and splitshot sinkers.

In terms of color for the baits, try to mimic the types of baitfish that are in the lake you're fishing at. Shad are pretty common in lakes near me, so 2/3 of my tackle box are filled with shad colored crankbaits and jerkbaits. Bluegill colored bait is always good because most lakes are full of bluegill.

That should help you target almost anything you could want to catch in a lake until you start getting more experience. Once you get more experience you can start tweaking things and buying more specialized stuff. But with the stuff I told you to buy, you really just have to locate the fish and you should be able to catch them.

EDIT:

Here's a pretty good assortment of hardbait to get you started. I'm not sure how wonderful the quality is, but they should catch fish for you and give you a foundation to build on until you get some more experience.

these and these are pretty decent rubber lures that will work for a wide variety of fish. Buy these hooks for them and these weights to help get your rubber lures to the bottom of the lake.

A package of bait hooks like these will help you catch stuff like catfish and bluegill using live bait. [Bobbers] (http://www.amazon.com/Eagle-Claw-Floats-Assortment-1-Inch/dp/B0009V5QEA/ref=sr_1_1?s=sporting-goods&ie=UTF8&qid=1462166419&sr=1-1&keywords=Bobber) are pretty good for catching bluegill as well. Catfish suck food off of the bottom of the lake at night, so skip on the bobber if you're fishing for those and I wouldn't waste time fishing for them in the day time.

And some basic 12 pound fishing line. Stick to the clear stuff.

All that gear should help you get started. There shouldn't be a fish in a lake that you can't catch using that stuff.

u/awildwoodsmanappears · 0 pointsr/Fishing

Ah yes it will definitely help. You can still do it well the way you are, but it takes practice. Though it all does I guess.

In that case, if you want to continue on as you are, first thing to do is use less weight. keep using less until you feel you aren't hitting bottom at all, then put a little more back on.

Also use round split shot if you can find it. The kind with the little wings is easier to take off but is slightly more likely to hang up. You can still take off the round ones by pinching the sides with the small pliers you always carry with you. You can always use a regular small needlenose but the ones with the cutters too are even better.

Anyway it's very doable but using a float is definitely the most deadly way to target fish in a stream. Really, read up on floatfishing, most of what you'll find will be about steelhead but you can use it on any trout and any fish in moving water. There are different systems for adjustable floats, the old spring loaded red/white round bobber, to pegs or what I like, which are these, which have little tubes, or (something similar)[https://www.amazon.com/Eagle-Claw-Balsa-6-Inch-8-inch/dp/B008MIMTXI/]. Tall skinny floats are more sensitive to bites than round ones.

With that technique you can fish artificial lures like jigs, to any live bait, or whatever you want. You can shorten the float up and add a little lead for the fast water and take a little off and slide the float back for the deep pools. Alrighty then

u/jgnp · 2 pointsr/FlyFishingCircleJerk

I prefer these tricolor “Bobber Doggin Chubbys” for presenting a drag free drift of a variety of nymph patterns. Plus they cast well on spinning gear if you like to fly fish with mono like a true tenkaraeuronympho.

ALEXA PASTE LINK TO BOBBER DOGGIN CHUBBY FROM AMAZON OH SHIT WHAT IS ON MY TV. BARB, HELP!

Aero-float Bobber Doggin' Chubby Guide Pack (4 Floats Per Pack) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01NAL9X1X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_Z4G3DbTHRCPN4

u/wolfkeeper80 · 1 pointr/Gunpla

This warms my heart. Sweet work.

I wonder if you could do something similar with fiber optics and once of these: http://www.amazon.com/Bobber-Light-Battery-Replacement-Value/dp/B00YO8QYJU

I use these fishing in the evening. The battery is just about the size of a handle. Some of these rotate on, some pull on/off.

u/Evodius · 1 pointr/bassfishing

FYI stop buying bobber stoppers at the store, and get them on Amazon. I am still convinced they're the exact same. I have yet to see a difference in the 6th Sense ones and the generic off-brand Amazon ones... other than a bunch of money.

u/thorium007 · 1 pointr/pics

To be honest, you aren't too far off. Foam bobber

u/Inkedfatboy · 2 pointsr/Gunpla

Lol here ya goled

u/aldanathiriadras · 4 pointsr/flashlight

It sounds like you're looking for one of these, a light-up fishing float.

Or a Super Ray for somethign a bit fancier.

u/xderek182 · 3 pointsr/discgolf

These are lights that are used for fishing. I found a link on Amazon so you know what to look for. My brother used to buy his at Walmart so I'm sure that may still be an option.

u/fraghead5 · 1 pointr/starwarscollecting

I figured out that those lights are fishing bobber leds

OKBUYNOW LED Bobber Light Replacement Battery for Archery Nocks, Fishing - 12PCS (6PCS Red+6PCS Green) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01NADWTZP/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_RthPybM6SD9QW

u/Pd69bq · 5 pointsr/Gunpla

there are several articles in this subreddit about DIY light-up lightsabers with LED fishing bobber and the result is EXACTLY the same

u/nhjuyt · 2 pointsr/whatisthisthing

Nope, Europeans use quills for fishing floats

u/NeedsMoreMenthol · 3 pointsr/Wetshaving

Tungsten putty. Roll it spaghetti thin, insert into hole in handle, pack it down and you're done.

u/sking301 · 2 pointsr/Fishing

I use these all the time for fishing in a nearby river spot where there's so many rocks and sticks 8 feet down that almost anything will get caught.

http://www.amazon.com/Thill-FishN-Foam-Cigar-Floats/dp/B003OAOB7Q/ref=sr_sp-btf_image_1_9?s=hunting-fishing&ie=UTF8&qid=1397477113&sr=1-9

With a 6' rod and a worm, I can normally cast it around 30 yards+- depending on wind.

edit: You can get them at wallmart for $1.50/3

u/antifolkhero · 9 pointsr/Design

Do these double as fishing bobbers?

u/BobSevenEleven · 7 pointsr/Fishing

The yellow thing is a practice plug. Just a weight. Can be used for learning to cast and practicing.

u/skifdank · 3 pointsr/Fishing

Hook and worm you say... floating jig heads
light up bobbers
long pliers

Really, You should buy a new fishing rod and put your name on it and give it to him so you can go fishing with your dad.

u/llee89x · 1 pointr/Wetshaving

not sure but this is what i used.

u/jcarp333 · 2 pointsr/troutfishing

For your small mountain slower flowing streams.

Yellowstone Fly Goods, Palsa Strike Indicator Pinch-on-Floats (24ct, Flame/Orange) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0009P12Y4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_WlIBDbE8R0NEE

u/Btrash · 4 pointsr/bassfishing

I think it is almost worse that he spent $2 for 9 peg stoppers when you can get 600 on Amazon for $7

u/RugerRedhawk · 1 pointr/Archery

http://www.amazon.com/THILL-NITE-BRITE-BATRY-LITE/dp/B0010FDYCK/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1314804752&sr=8-1

These are going to be the cheapest you can find. They are for fishing bobbers, and what people use when making homemade lighted nocks. I think they sell them at Dicks sporting goods. These units have the battery and LED on them.

Getting them at 20 to 25 cents a piece was ridiculous. You could make nocks and sell them online for 5 bucks a piece and sell thousands of them.

u/jhulbe · 3 pointsr/fishingtackle

I'd go for a spinning combo personally, but a push button may be more your style i find they always get tangled and make it a pain to cast.


Go to walmart/bass pro/gander mountian. But something in the $30-$50 range. Depending on the age of your kid, those cartoon flavored ones in the pack may work too.


Get hooks, Size 10 arberdeen grab some bobbers Personally I like the balsa slip floats. Like this


Youll need some bobber stops too.


Get some Split shot sinkers


I'm a fan of 4lb zebco fishing line. it's like $2 at walmart for 500 yards. It'll give you line for 2 poles.


Now you'll rig up with your bobber stop, then bead, then bobber, then a couple weights and then a hook. Try to keep the weights about 12-18" above the hook. The bobber stop you can slide up and down your line and set it to whatever depth you want. If your slip bobber isn't pointing straight up that means your weights on the bottom and you need to adjust your slip bobber knot.


Pick up some worms or leaches and go to town. You'll want your bobber to barebly be able to keep up your bait, so you can see the strikes. If you have a big ass bobber a fish will never get it down.


These tube jig kits are usually a great deal too and catch anything. If they don't have hooks, you'll need jig hooks too. Something like this you could throw under a bobber too and try to keep your bait going up and down. Maybe put a worm on it too.


Here's a video where he uses some little jig heads and sutff too


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmOiylyTltk



Should be able to get everything under $75. I added it all to a gander mountian cart. They had some specials on rod combos for $24.95. My cart total was $71.92


Rods :http://www.gandermountain.com/modperl/product/details.cgi?pdesc=Gander-Mountain-Competitor-Series-Spinning-Rod-Reel-Combo-56-Ultralight&i=694266


How to rig a slip bobber: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZAQUo7H4gYs