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Forgotten/overlooked Baits 2024


fishing user avatarAvalonjohn44 reply : 

I have been orgnaizing my obnoxious amounts of fishing gear and stumbled on a little Flambeau tacklebox I probably haven't opened in years. In it were some baits that used to just kill for me when I was growing up, but got lost somewhere in the shuffle. Seems like there's a new bait or technique every time you turn around and another $200 to spend re-outfitting to accomodate the trends... I don't remember it being as 'complicated' as it is today.

Here is a list of what was in that tacklebox that used to be staples for me:

Sluggo's, Heddon Torpedos, Rebel Craw, Helgies, French Fry, Slider Worms, Rapala Countdowns, Mepps Fury, Large Kalin Grubs, Bang-O Lures, Silver Buddy, Johnson Spoon (gold, silver and hematite) and a ton of no-name ring worms, curly tail worms, etc.

I used to do great out of that single tacklebox back in the day. From shore, with one rod, a $30 shimano spinning reel and 10lb mono I had summers full of amazing days wading down the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers... Tons of 50 - 100 bass days (nothing very huge, but some days it was just fish after fist after fish...) I'm going to take just that box out this year, hop in the river and see how I do...

Bet I have more fun this year than the last 5 combined...


fishing user avatarMarty reply : 

I'm sure that those lures will continue to catch fish. They probably became overlooked because of poor marketing and/or the explosion of "hot" new lures, not because of any deficiencies in attracting bites.


fishing user avatarwhitwolf reply : 

Manns Augertails......noname cycle tail worms..Faltfish...All these used to catch so many fish


fishing user avatarHi Salenity reply : 

My brother went fishing with me last weekend. He dug through my stuff until he found the Mepps spinners and said "I can work with this"

He went out and killed them with that thing! Nothing big but sometimes "it was bass a cast".


fishing user avatarbigbill reply : 

The older lures is what i mainly still use today. I still use the mepps inlines plus the joes fly 1/4oz bass size too. Joe offers them in all colors with some brighter colors for cloudy and low light conditions. I'm also using the older colored crankbaits too. I refuse to mess with success. For the past decade and then some these older colors have worked and still continue to work too. I always say on a tought day just throw that lure we never tired before. The one we carried in our tackle box for many years. I would rather fish the smaller unfished bodies of water than be in a boat on a large body of water. I still get non stop action with the older colored lures. I was ready to repaint them but why if they still work....

Its not luck in fishing its skill, luck is at the casino. Bigbill


fishing user avatarWookieeJedi reply : 

Those old Bang-O-Lures were special. Bagley's really made some good lures, I don't know how they managed to tank.


fishing user avatarhookset on 3 reply : 

Av John, man don't even get me going about Slug-gos and the rest of the Lunker City soft plastics.

I was fortunate enough to be in a bass club that the president was a friend of slug-go inventor Herb Reed.

We got to test them out before he went public.with the sale of the lure. If you rig them exactly how the instructions indicate, you will get that random darting action that makes them so deadly.

I like to use small lead or tungsten nail weights inserted into different sections of the slug-go and fish the mid-depth region.

post-19969-0-46053500-1334121027_thumb.j

They have been re-discovered by a new generation of basser, who eventually realizes there is no substitute for the original Slug-go.


fishing user avatartboydva reply : 

This is a bit scary, but just yesterday I was thinking about an old lure that we used on the very same waters (Shenandoah, upper Potomac - and the Cacapon River). It was called a floppy (rubrex - French lure). Seems like you can find them on ebay and it was a very popular lure in Australia (they made a saltwater model). These lures were made out of rubber and had an adjustable lip. We always called them "Mr. softy" (which in late middle age is something no guy wants to hear!). I moved back (from the West coast) to the region after years away in the mid-90s. Although the floppy was a memory even then, we had days with a fish every cast. Small Rapalas used to absolutely kill. Sadly, I think those days are over (unless the 7-9 year cycle is applicable to these rivers?). I've floated the Shenandoah and had single-digit days. Same for the upper Potomac. I keep thinking I should buy a floppy off ebay and see how it works now? Hard to toss out a "collector" bait though....


fishing user avatarretiredbosn reply : 

I keep some inline spinners, old rapala minnow broke backs, etc in the boat for the tough days, seems many times the old standby's really catch fish when nothing else will. I think the fish are conditioned to lures, and many times the newest craze is thrown by every angler until the fish just start ignoring them.


fishing user avatarcraww reply : 

I have a 6 year old thats getting into fishing. He's taking a liking to artificials, but is not quite ready for plastics and such. We were in the boat awhile back and he wanted to throw an artificial. I looked in my small crank box and found a forgotten flatfish. I used to love to throw them as a kid. I tied him up and proceeded to watch him catch the fiestiest 3lber ever lol.

Some other lures for me are:

Broken back rapala

Slider grubs

daredevles

beetle spins

heddon dying flutter

heddon zara gossa


fishing user avatarsmalljaw67 reply : 
  On 4/11/2012 at 7:58 AM, whitwolf said:

Manns Augertails......noname cycle tail worms..Faltfish...All these used to catch so many fish

I have and still use th Augertails!!! In fact I have a bunch of discontinued Manns baits that fish haven't seen and when fishing gets tough I'm reaching for them. Manns Dragin' worms are incredible teamed up with shaky heads and the best is the Manipulator worms, not a better worm is made.


fishing user avatargrimlin reply : 

I forgot how to fish the daredevil(smaller ones)....I used to use as a kid all the time.....Planning on buying a few and take them out on the river again this year.Although I got a feeling the pikes are gonna like this one too much. I still fish inline spinners though.Same with grubs....I used them last year and just caught the heck out of them.


fishing user avatargrimlin reply : 
  On 4/11/2012 at 11:26 PM, smalljaw67 said:

I have and still use th Augertails!!! In fact I have a bunch of discontinued Manns baits that fish haven't seen and when fishing gets tough I'm reaching for them. Manns Dragin' worms are incredible teamed up with shaky heads and the best is the Manipulator worms, not a better worm is made.

You can still find the augertail,draggin' worms and manipuator...Give me a PM and I'll tell you where you can find them. I don't think I'll be able to link the website here.


fishing user avatarAvalonjohn44 reply : 
  On 4/11/2012 at 1:15 PM, hookset on 3 said:

Av John, man don't even get me going about Slug-gos and the rest of the Lunker City soft plastics.

I was fortunate enough to be in a bass club that the president was a friend of slug-go inventor Herb Reed.

We got to test them out before he went public.with the sale of the lure. If you rig them exactly how the instructions indicate, you will get that random darting action that makes them so deadly.

I like to use small lead or tungsten nail weights inserted into different sections of the slug-go and fish the mid-depth region.

post-19969-0-46053500-1334121027_thumb.j

They have been re-discovered by a new generation of basser, who eventually realizes there is no substitute for the original Slug-go.

That's awesome! I agree, there is nothing like a sluggo... This year I am going to experiment with carolina rigging them. Can't wait.


fishing user avatarAvalonjohn44 reply : 
  On 4/11/2012 at 8:19 PM, tboydva said:

This is a bit scary, but just yesterday I was thinking about an old lure that we used on the very same waters (Shenandoah, upper Potomac - and the Cacapon River). It was called a floppy (rubrex - French lure). Seems like you can find them on ebay and it was a very popular lure in Australia (they made a saltwater model). These lures were made out of rubber and had an adjustable lip. We always called them "Mr. softy" (which in late middle age is something no guy wants to hear!). I moved back (from the West coast) to the region after years away in the mid-90s. Although the floppy was a memory even then, we had days with a fish every cast. Small Rapalas used to absolutely kill. Sadly, I think those days are over (unless the 7-9 year cycle is applicable to these rivers?). I've floated the Shenandoah and had single-digit days. Same for the upper Potomac. I keep thinking I should buy a floppy off ebay and see how it works now? Hard to toss out a "collector" bait though....

I haven't fished the Cacapon river yet, but wil do it this year. I have fished the state park and that little pond is loaded with good LMbass. The Upper Potomac and the Shenandoah around harpers ferry are still crazy productive for me, even with all of the tubers and kayakers out there. Last year rock hoping with rapala glass raps we must have caught 60 bass btwn my brother an me in a few hours... I have to check out the floppy lure. I'll use it. Good thing about wade fishing is if you snag you can swim over to get it back... :)


fishing user avatarRaul reply : 

Fishing has never been complicated, it´s us who complicate it, the roots of perfection are in simplicity, it´s much more important for you to know a bunch of techniques and rigging methods than having a big bunch of stuff that you never/seldomly use, also, there´s no such thing as "rules", nowhere is written like if it were a commandment that X lure should be rigged/worked X way, lack of creativity locks you down. Bass are no different now than they were 30+ years ago when I began fishing for them, I still catch them consistently with the lures I have from those early day, Sluggos , Torpedoes, Rat L-Traps, ribbontail worms, straight tail worms, curly tail grubs, French Fries & more still work as well now as they did 30 years ago.

It ain´t the arrow, it´s the indian. :Victory:


fishing user avatarhookset on 3 reply : 

Carolina riggin' you say. I will tell you that in clear, highly presured lakes the move now is towards soft plastics with minimal action. They use a new technique that Jackall brought over from Japan, called I-Motion.

I-Motion is imitating bait fish that are slowly swimming along in a non threatened state.

I've used 4 inch slug-gos in a slit shotting set up, it's killer.


fishing user avatarBankbeater reply : 

I still like to throw my big-o's. They were the first crankbaits I used when I started bass fishing.


fishing user avatarAvalonjohn44 reply : 
  On 4/12/2012 at 8:33 AM, hookset on 3 said:

Carolina riggin' you say. I will tell you that in clear, highly presured lakes the move now is towards soft plastics with minimal action. They use a new technique that Jackall brought over from Japan, called I-Motion.

I-Motion is imitating bait fish that are slowly swimming along in a non threatened state.

I've used 4 inch slug-gos in a slit shotting set up, it's killer.

I have too, very good technique... Also thinking about trying one of the small 3" on drop shot. It will be the year of the the Sluggo!


fishing user avatargr8outdoorz reply : 
  On 4/12/2012 at 4:56 AM, Raul said:

Fishing has never been complicated, it´s us who complicate it, the roots of perfection are in simplicity, it´s much more important for you to know a bunch of techniques and rigging methods than having a big bunch of stuff that you never/seldomly use, also, there´s no such thing as "rules", nowhere is written like if it were a commandment that X lure should be rigged/worked X way, lack of creativity locks you down. Bass are no different now than they were 30+ years ago when I began fishing for them, I still catch them consistently with the lures I have from those early day, Sluggos , Torpedoes, Rat L-Traps, ribbontail worms, straight tail worms, curly tail grubs, French Fries & more still work as well now as they did 30 years ago.

It ain´t the arrow, it´s the indian. :Victory:

It couldn't have been said any better! Well done Raul! :respect-059:


fishing user avatarWookieeJedi reply : 

I must have missed the memo telling us to stop using slugs, I have never stopped fishing them.


fishing user avatariceintheveins reply : 

The old hula grub is an overlooked flippin' and pitchin' bait when a more subtle presentation is needed. Usually only lasts for a couple fish, but with some parasite clips and mend it you won't have to buy tons of packages.

I'm another who loves the sluggo. The fluke rocks and is better all around, but when the fish are shallower and turned way off, the dying sluggo will mop them up at times better than the fluke.


fishing user avatarCrestliner2008 reply : 

I still use the 3" Slug-go on my drop shot rig for smallies. Great lure!


fishing user avatarBlue Streak reply : 

I have caught more river smallmouths up to three pounds on a Mepps spinner than any other lure, and in the small streams it is almost magic.


fishing user avataroutdoorsman110 reply : 
  On 4/11/2012 at 7:22 AM, Avalonjohn44 said:

I have been orgnaizing my obnoxious amounts of fishing gear and stumbled on a little Flambeau tacklebox I probably haven't opened in years. In it were some baits that used to just kill for me when I was growing up, but got lost somewhere in the shuffle. Seems like there's a new bait or technique every time you turn around and another $200 to spend re-outfitting to accomodate the trends... I don't remember it being as 'complicated' as it is today.

Here is a list of what was in that tacklebox that used to be staples for me:

Sluggo's, Heddon Torpedos, Rebel Craw, Helgies, French Fry, Slider Worms, Rapala Countdowns, Mepps Fury, Large Kalin Grubs, Bang-O Lures, Silver Buddy, Johnson Spoon (gold, silver and hematite) and a ton of no-name ring worms, curly tail worms, etc.

I used to do great out of that single tacklebox back in the day. From shore, with one rod, a $30 shimano spinning reel and 10lb mono I had summers full of amazing days wading down the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers... Tons of 50 - 100 bass days (nothing very huge, but some days it was just fish after fist after fish...) I'm going to take just that box out this year, hop in the river and see how I do...

Bet I have more fun this year than the last 5 combined...

Lazy Ike's!!! My goto lure.
fishing user avatarDeadeye-1 reply : 

Back when I was a young teen, my cousin and I was fishing in a local pond. We had tried everything we had, which wasn't all that much back then. I had two Roostertails in the box, one in Bright Orange and one in White/Red. I remember saying "Let's try these we have nothing to lose".

We did and proceeded to catch a bass on almost every cast. Roostertails are simular to Mepps, in that they are an in-line spinner.

Hmmmm. Haven't had one of those tied on for years. Might be time to get a few again.


fishing user avatarSuskyDude reply : 

Inline spinners can be lethal and don't get enough play by alot of anglers.


fishing user avatarAvalonjohn44 reply : 
  On 4/12/2012 at 9:55 PM, outdoorsman110 said:

Lazy Ike's!!! My goto lure.

I have to pick some up. Like a flatfish, right? Always seen them, never tried one.


fishing user avataroutdoorsman110 reply : 

Yes, like the flatfish. works wonders on the Shenandoah river.


fishing user avatariceintheveins reply : 
  On 4/12/2012 at 9:48 PM, Blue Streak said:

I have caught more river smallmouths up to three pounds on a Mepps spinner than any other lure, and in the small streams it is almost magic.

Inline spinners are fantastic for stream smallies. Panther martins are my favorite, but Mepps are good too. I prefer the bigger models, the #9 and #15 panther martins, and the #3 and #4 mepps.




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