Out of these six lures which one, if any, have you guys had the most luck with when it comes to catching bass?

Posted by Super-Ad-616

17 Comments

  1. JustFax_NoPrinter on

    Out of all of those, I’ve only tried the rooster tail and I got it stuck in some rocks this weekend. So no success on my end.

  2. I think I’ve caught more bass on a dropshot with a nightcrawler than with any of the more popular lures.

  3. They have different uses, and success depends on when and how you use them. Wacky rig the senko on the right, and you have an unstoppable weapon. I’ve had incredible luck with it, but it works best in places you would normally suspect fish to be (near cover, fallen trees, under docks, by weed beds and edges of grass). I’ve gotten a ton of strikes on frogs before but the hookup ratio is something I struggle with, I can just never seem to get a decent hook set on them.

  4. The fish around me go nuts for those pearl white flukes. Everything from slow twitches off the bottom, to erratic jerking in the middle of the water column, to dancing it off the top to imitate a fleeing baitfish. It’s nice to get all that action without having to switch lures. Good luck!

  5. Fluke for me IDK they just work

    Dad white rooster tail guy

    Pro’s the green worm

    The most fun Frog all day

  6. PlumbingBoston1195 on

    The rooster tail should be good for smaller bass, the spinner bait too.. I’ve been trying soft plastics all summer and got way more bites on hard plastics.. now I just run my weedless soft plastics around to feel out the terrain and depths, then I switch them out to crank baits and ChatterBait. More success

  7. Senko is king. But you need the watermelon with red flakes. For years I was doing a Texas rig to much successful but I recently started using a weighted ewg hook with a blade and it’s been very successful. There’s a screw near the eye of the hook so the soft plastic stays in place much better than before.

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