bought this a couple years ago and have never had luck with it. its called candy corn.
Posted by goobertongoobson
6 Comments
FluidDragonfruit7894 on
Prob good for smallies
BackItUpWithLinks on
I have 8 or 10 colors, that included.
They work better in cloudy water or at dawn/dusk.
DrZoo4040 on
I never had luck with that either. Granted, I bought them and used them as a kid. I never tried them as an adult. I stick to simplicity these days
AudienceSad2304 on
From my understanding with oranges and reds- if they are working they can work really well. Bass can see reds/oranges really well, as well as green. Orange and red are contrasting colors to most environments, I imagine bass see them vividly. My experience with fishing is that CAN be a good thing at times, but usually isnât. They seem to prefer a more subtle color that matches their environment a little better. Iâm playing around with oranges and reds this season though.
Familiar-Molasses-56 on
Throw it on a weighted wacky hook and I guarantee youâll catch bass.
shackmaestro on
Bright colors like this work well in murky/muddy/dark stained water. The bright color creates enough contrast to become visible to the fish.
Neutral/more natural colors work well in more clear water.
So it might not be the color you chose, but the water you chose to throw it in.
However, profile is profile, and colors can work in either or types of water, but for more consistent bites/hookups these are good rules of thumb.
6 Comments
Prob good for smallies
I have 8 or 10 colors, that included.
They work better in cloudy water or at dawn/dusk.
I never had luck with that either. Granted, I bought them and used them as a kid. I never tried them as an adult. I stick to simplicity these days
From my understanding with oranges and reds- if they are working they can work really well. Bass can see reds/oranges really well, as well as green. Orange and red are contrasting colors to most environments, I imagine bass see them vividly. My experience with fishing is that CAN be a good thing at times, but usually isnât. They seem to prefer a more subtle color that matches their environment a little better. Iâm playing around with oranges and reds this season though.
Throw it on a weighted wacky hook and I guarantee youâll catch bass.
Bright colors like this work well in murky/muddy/dark stained water. The bright color creates enough contrast to become visible to the fish.
Neutral/more natural colors work well in more clear water.
So it might not be the color you chose, but the water you chose to throw it in.
However, profile is profile, and colors can work in either or types of water, but for more consistent bites/hookups these are good rules of thumb.