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Forum Home > SPINNERBAITS > Spinnerbaits by Aaron Martens

Delawarebass
Site Owner
Posts: 15248

Spinnerbaits are some of the most widely used fishing lures, and for good reason. They'll catch bass day in and day out under a wide variety of conditions. In this lesson, we'll talk about how to carry a wide selection of them without sinking your boat.


 

Most of my heads and wire frames are carried in Plano spinnerbait utility boxes. They have several styles. Pick the one that works best for you. I build one or two boxes with what I think I'll be using on my next fishing trip or in my next tournament. It goes in my boat.


 

I have at least 50 others, however, that I use for storage. My baits are sorted by weight, wire length, head design, blade configuration, color and anything else that seems appropriate at the time.

 

That's more lures than you probably have, but you get the idea just the same. Keep your lures organized so that you know what you have and where to find what you need when you need it.


 

Those boxes stay in my room or my truck. There are two reasons for that. First, I don't want to carry more lures in my boat than I'll need. Extra weight slows my boat and makes my fishing complicated.

 

Second, I don't want them to get wet. Water is a killer on fishing tackle. It causes rust, stains and dulls hooks. It's absolutely essential to keep everything dry if you want it to last.


 

I sort my blades the same way. I use a Plano 3700 box for that. Again, I make one for my boat and several others for storage. In my boat box, I put individual designs, sizes and colors in separate compartments.


 

In my storage boxes I'll use one box for each design, size or color. When I go to restock my boat box, I can do it efficiently without wasting valuable time digging around in bags and cartons looking for something I know I have but can't find.

 

About blades: If they get tarnished you can restore some of the shine by rubbing them with metal polish or toothpaste. But, they'll never be the same. Keep them dry, and away from your plastics and they'll stay like new for years. You won't have to shine them.

 

My skirts are handled exactly the same way — sorted by length and color, in a boat box for immediate use as well as several other boxes for long-term storage. Plano 3700 boxes are perfect for them, too.

 

About skirts: They are very susceptible to damage from sunlight and plastics, especially those that are salt impregnated. Keep them out of direct sunlight, and never store them with plastic trailers. That'll mess up the rubber or plastic legs on them.

 

I know some guys say you should put a little baby powder or cornstarch on them to keep the legs separated. I suppose that might work. I've never done it, though, and I haven't had any trouble with mine, some of which are 20 years old.

 

Finally, I carry a bunch of swivels and split rings with me. As you might suspect I use Plano containers. Pick one that works for you. Just be sure you sort everything by size and function so you know where to look when you need it.

 

Buying these boxes and properly sorting your tackle will save you a lot of money in the long-run. It'll also help you catch more bass. You'll know what you have and what you need. You won't buy stuff you already own or buy stuff you'll never use.

 

I mentioned this in the last lesson, but it's so important I wanted to say it again. Every dollar you save by not buying stuff you don't need, is a dollar you can spend on what you do need. Likewise, every minute you save looking for something in your boat is another cast and maybe the fish of a lifetime.


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Site Owner/CEO 

January 3, 2010 at 8:33 PM Flag Quote & Reply

BassmanKVB
Member
Posts: 2218

tournament fishing is all about CONFIDENCE and TIME MANAGEMENT

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KURT VONBRANDT-PRO STAFF


February 26, 2011 at 3:32 PM Flag Quote & Reply

Delawarebass
Site Owner
Posts: 15248

Here is something by Mark M about confidence and also ties in to our color discussions and my article on Can Bass See Color?

 

Colors and bass: Shades of distinction

Is the way lures look to your eye really just all in your head?

 

By Mark Menendez From Bassmaster 

JAN 5, 2012

 

 

As I was organizing my tackle last week, I found a bag of custom painted Strike King crankbaits. I had them painted for the 2009 Bassmaster Elite Series postseason championship. They've been in the same place since my boat was parked in the garage after the last event.

 

Are these works of art really helping me catch bass?

 

 

My first experience with custom colors came in the 1980s. I was at Truman Reservoir practicing for the first regional championship I ever qualified to fish. I went to the timber-filled Missouri lake with everything I owned. My partner was an old B.A.S.S. competitor. He had won many events on this lake. My confidence was bubbling!

 

 

I made it to his Skeeter boat well before sunrise and loaded what looked to be a yard sale worth of tackle into the passenger side of the boat. I’m sure when my partner got to the dock he thought “Greenhorn!” Then, I took a glance at the single rod that was lying on the front deck. It was a Texas rigged, 8-inch plastic worm. It was nothing out of the ordinary. The ribbontail worm was paired with a 3/8-ounce slip sinker.

 

 

The sun was still climbing in the eastern sky when boat number 14 was called. My partner hammered down on the throttle as I desperately tried to prevent three tackleboxes, 15 rods and reels and a lunch cooler from flying out of the boat.

 

 

Eventually he set us down along a deep tree line. My partner was in the bow of the boat as he made the first cast of the morning. That's when I got a good look at the color of his bait. It was a strawberry worm with gold flake. I had never seen one before. After he had landed a limit, he was kind enough to offer me a worm. I asked him about the unique color as stepped back to the livewell to check on his solid 15-pound limit. "This is the only lake I have ever caught a bass with this color," he said.

 

 

It made me think.

 

 

My next learning experience was with a roommate on the Bassmaster Tournament Trail. He was from “homemade heaven.” East Tennessee has hundreds of fishermen that hand craft crankbaits. They are absolutely works of art! Many of these artists use spray paint cans to paint their works. It's truly amazing what they can do.

 

 

My roomie had thousands of these baits. They all seemed to look alike to me. We were fishing an event at Lake Seminole. He had a good day on the first day with 12 pounds. The next day he busted 20 pounds. He explained to me he had to make a change in color to catch the bigger fish. Upon investigating his “new” crankbait, it appeared to be the same color. He insisted that a change to a slightly darker olive green on the back of the bait made the difference.

 

It made me think.

 

 

 

Just last week with the rediscovery of my postseason custom baits, it made me think of the instances I thought I had the perfect lure color for a situation or body of water. As I reflected on past success, one thing began to be abundantly clear.

 

 

The custom baits had worked on specific species! I had found my answer, or so I thought. I remembered a 1/2-ounce spinnerbait that I dressed up with a cantaloupe-colored skirt with five strands of red in it. That crazy combination helped me catch the biggest bass in the first 31 years of B.A.S.S. competition history — a 13-9 giant from Richland Chambers Reservoir in Texas. The same fruity-colored bait helped me qualify for a Bassmaster Classic in 2001.

 

 

I remember painting a Strike King Series 3 hot pink and getting a nice check in freshly muddied water. Then, there was the time that I left a mixed pile of plastics in the bottom of my boat. The baits bled onto some pumpkin-colored lizards, and I won a Lake Barkley tournament flipping a "swirl" lizard into some bushes. The list goes on and on.

 

 

The answer was as clear as mud! It was all about confidence. I was confident in those weird colors. That was the secret ingredient to my success! When an angler has confidence, he can catch bass on a chartreuse hotdog.

 

 

Yesterday I was back in my garage preparing my tackle for the upcoming season. My Strike King Series 6XD box was open, and I was replenishing my supply of these deep diving baits. As I put my last Sexy Shad crankbait in its place, I realized that it wasn't too long ago that this particular hue was a special custom color in one well-known angler's box. That guy has all the confidence in the world!

 

It made me think.




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Site Owner/CEO 

January 6, 2012 at 9:43 AM Flag Quote & Reply

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