Bird Lure

Bird Lure
The Soft bodied Bird Lure works! Click Bird Pic Above

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Frogs and Birds both have there place on those hot summer days

To fish either the frog lure or a high quality holllow bodied bird bass lure, I start the same way as I do using buzz frogs, starting slow after that working to swift retrieves, first working the outside edges of vegetation then working them into the thickest of the thick. When casting these baits, I rarely be concerned about producing a big splash, particularly when targeting super heavy mats. The splash of the lure draws in the fish and its big silhouette can be noticed however the mats against the bright sun. To do the job these baits, it is fairly significantly self explanatory. Try to make my lure look like real frogs messing approximately on top of vegetation mats or swimming around weed edges, slight twitches to aggressive walk-the-dog actions may be effective. The most important thing to do once angling these baits is to watch and remember what presentations the fish are reacting to. Other than viewing the fish, be systematic in your approach, otherwise you could have no thought how to get a 2nd fish or get that 2nd strike immediately after a misst. This previous calendar year I have started twitching frogs in the same spot, jiggling the rod so which there is movement, but the lure is maintaining the same position. This method is quite lethal once a fish misses the lure the first time. I could cast again to the same find and make the frog vibrate in spot, causing the fish to believe they wounded the frog, which these bass cannot resist biting. The bass should clue you in on what they want that day.  As explained just before concerning buzz frogs, I may go on for hours about demonstrations, but experimentation and observation using these baits are much better than any advice I may offer.

As with a lot of various kinds of bass lures, one of the most essential things to just know is to make many casts to a similar location using various presentations. Additionally, if a bass missed the fishing lure, do not give up. Right after I miss a bass or the bass misses my fishing bait, I should make up to 5 casts to the same dead on spot. If I do not get a hit in those casts I should let the spot rest for 15 to 45 minutes, simply because I understand which bass is outstanding there and can hit, particularly if it sensed no hooks.




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