It's pretty heavy and sinks straight down.

Posted by reneandrey

13 Comments

  1. hunt_fish_love_420 on

    I find it works best if you cast it out into structure, let is sink for a second so it snags on the structure then snap your line and tie something else.

    I joke but these are snag magnets, have fun.

  2. wudidothistime on

    Throw it in the water and turn your reel…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

    .

  3. Making_Kenough on

    This is likely intended for river use. Reeling it back up the current. Most lures want to pull to the surface with rivers. This should stay nice and deep and considering the large spoon, it’ll help remain visible in river depths. The rivers I fish are also full of massive rocks at the bottom without much plant life. Something like this wouldn’t snag much for me

  4. Reasonable_Chef1996 on

    These are the shit when you’re night fishing at the end of a dock underneath a light.

  5. AdorableWafer3665 on

    I prefer rooster tails over these. Anytime I use these it’s for creeking or anytime I’m in a body of water I can wade in. Other than that I literally just use rooster tail or soft plastic on a Texas rig.

  6. They are awesome white bass lures and small wipers destroy them as well. If your in an area with white bass highly recommend throwing these

    Fish them like you would an inline spinner, but in deeper rivers or a lake (you want at least 3-4ft of water to prevent snags). You can also jig them in deep water as well

  7. Love these things in rocky creek beds on 20lb braid

    Jig them through current, straight retrieve over weed beds, yoyo retrieve, etc

    I get big bites in the summertime with these things

  8. If a guy has LiveScope and just likes to catch fish that lure is good for catching white bass and hybrids. Spot the fish, cast past them and pump the bait towards the fish. When they eat it you know it.

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