Bass Lures
Posted: Fri May 12, 2023 10:08 pm
When I say taught, I mean letting the fish tell me what is true and false when it comes to manmade lures.
I used to follow the match-the-forage concept I read in fishing magazines and watched celebrity anglers illustrate with great catches. Of course, lure companies were behind most media exposure of their lures and irrefutable until forums came along for anglers to compare notes.
I began making my own lures starting with in-line spinners with and without hair-wrapped trebles. I did as well as I did using Mepps spinners. Various blade sizes and colors piqued my interest and once they caught fish, I figured lure companies weren't the only supplier of good lures. Blade baits such as the spinnerbait became an obsession. What various blade size and blade combinations along with skirt colors would get bass to strike? What trailers should I try and did they help? Even arm length (i.e. short-arm spinnerbaits) were made and fished with different presentations. I caught hundreds of bass on those creations that dispelled color choice as anything but personal - not a fish's - choice.
Weedless bass jigs came next tieing living rubber skirts in many colors onto Arkie jigs along with trying various trailers.
More bass by the hundreds. I found skirted jigs could be swam horizontal to the bottom or jigged off it. A few dark colors
were all I needed.
Soft plastic lures followed jigs and spinner lures, using molds and soft plastic stored in jugs bought online. Color choice exploded after so many used caught so many fish! In fact, I even did well on clear plastic in various lure shapes.
Let me emphasize one thing: targeting a fish species is not possible for many lures and many lures may catch 6 fish species in one outing! The lure shown caught bass, various panfish, pickerel, catfish and trout.
clear.jpg
In the last 12 years, modifying soft plastic lures had been a challenge. A part of one lure was added to another lure part using a flame to slightly melt the ends to be joined. In this example, I hand-poured spike tails and added them to a grub body which was then wacky-rigged using a small jig. Man did fish go nuts watching those quivering tips on the way down and no different than bass on wacky-rigged Senkos (where I got the idea from.)
spike.jpgaITzxnQ.jpg There are many more but you get the picture.
What have I learned from catching fish on soft plastics in general and modifying lures specifically?
1. Shapes and action matter like for hard baits.
2. Many lure shapes and actions in different sizes can be used with different presentations.
3. Some lure combinations of shape and action excel far more than others when it comes to provoking fish to strike.
4. Color hue and brightness may enhance a lure's shape and action, the rest being personal choices based on successes and confidence.
Granted, most of the above is well known by most of those who read it. But for me and others, lure choice can be made easier minus the bull we've been fed for decades.
I used to follow the match-the-forage concept I read in fishing magazines and watched celebrity anglers illustrate with great catches. Of course, lure companies were behind most media exposure of their lures and irrefutable until forums came along for anglers to compare notes.
I began making my own lures starting with in-line spinners with and without hair-wrapped trebles. I did as well as I did using Mepps spinners. Various blade sizes and colors piqued my interest and once they caught fish, I figured lure companies weren't the only supplier of good lures. Blade baits such as the spinnerbait became an obsession. What various blade size and blade combinations along with skirt colors would get bass to strike? What trailers should I try and did they help? Even arm length (i.e. short-arm spinnerbaits) were made and fished with different presentations. I caught hundreds of bass on those creations that dispelled color choice as anything but personal - not a fish's - choice.
Weedless bass jigs came next tieing living rubber skirts in many colors onto Arkie jigs along with trying various trailers.
More bass by the hundreds. I found skirted jigs could be swam horizontal to the bottom or jigged off it. A few dark colors
were all I needed.
Soft plastic lures followed jigs and spinner lures, using molds and soft plastic stored in jugs bought online. Color choice exploded after so many used caught so many fish! In fact, I even did well on clear plastic in various lure shapes.
Let me emphasize one thing: targeting a fish species is not possible for many lures and many lures may catch 6 fish species in one outing! The lure shown caught bass, various panfish, pickerel, catfish and trout.
clear.jpg
In the last 12 years, modifying soft plastic lures had been a challenge. A part of one lure was added to another lure part using a flame to slightly melt the ends to be joined. In this example, I hand-poured spike tails and added them to a grub body which was then wacky-rigged using a small jig. Man did fish go nuts watching those quivering tips on the way down and no different than bass on wacky-rigged Senkos (where I got the idea from.)
spike.jpgaITzxnQ.jpg There are many more but you get the picture.
What have I learned from catching fish on soft plastics in general and modifying lures specifically?
1. Shapes and action matter like for hard baits.
2. Many lure shapes and actions in different sizes can be used with different presentations.
3. Some lure combinations of shape and action excel far more than others when it comes to provoking fish to strike.
4. Color hue and brightness may enhance a lure's shape and action, the rest being personal choices based on successes and confidence.
Granted, most of the above is well known by most of those who read it. But for me and others, lure choice can be made easier minus the bull we've been fed for decades.