fishing spot logo
fishing spot font logo



Your Go To Lure 2024


fishing user avatarDewittBassmaster reply : 

What is your go to lure when nothing else is working?


fishing user avatardonbeatya reply : 

SHAKY HEAD OR SPINNERBAIT


fishing user avatarquant PT reply : 
  Quote
SHAKY HEAD OR SPINNERBAIT

X2


fishing user avatarRedlinerobert reply : 

Right now, Horny Toad.


fishing user avatarpackman reply : 

little r trap


fishing user avatarDaniel My Brother reply : 

Senko


fishing user avatarCatt reply : 

I'll play again  :)

#1 Texas Rigged Gene Larew 7 ½ Salty Ring Worm Cinnamon Pepper Neon/June Bug Laminated (Camouflage).    


fishing user avatarNitroMan reply : 

My "go-to" lure always changes by the season... So far this year a finesse worm/ and senko have been my go to lures but in the winter its  jig/ jerkbait.

8-)


fishing user avatarFishin247365 reply : 

This year a spinnerbait. Last year a senko. Next year ???


fishing user avatarGrey Wolf reply : 

This year a sub-surface crank , any color any brand.


fishing user avatarEddie Munster reply : 

Plastic Worm.


fishing user avatarsdcoll reply : 

i always use senkos but when nothing hits  a pop-r and white spinerbait


fishing user avatarPaul Roberts reply : 

Over the years I've had to concede that there just isn't a single lure out there I can reasonably expect to produce every time, or when I wish it to, at least with a satisfying catch rate. Catching fish consistently really comes down to understanding water/cover type and conditions in front of you, and then having the confidence with a variety of lures to cover those.

My "GoTo's" change seasonally, daily, even hourly. With catch rate being my focus I tend to go with the fastest lure I can get away with. This may mean a buzzbait, or swimming jig, a crankbait, a topwater, or worm, depending on conditions. I expect to change lures, finishes, and retrieves throughout the day.

For instance: I love to see bass blow up on topwaters. If conditions allow I like a buzzbait. But buzzbaits tend to require overcast and/or wind rippled water. Otherwise a buzzbait simply falls off my "go to" list. If the surface calms but I still have some clouds, or even haze, or the bass simply won't commit to the rhythmic cadence of a buzzer, I'll likely switch to a jumpbait. If things calm further and water is clear enough I may have to go to a popper (slower). Might be the same pod of fish, but as conditions change I change. There's not a "go-to" out there that will cover all the bases.

I suppose some lure types produce a greater catch rate over a variety of conditions than others, deemed versatile. But the exact version of that lure type even, will vary with the water or cover type I'm presented with, my experience and confidence, and often must be adjusted to the fish's reaction.

I do have lures I've done particularly well with, but my response tends to be then to move on to something else for good reason. I'm not a tournament angler which puts me in the position of being free to experiment every time out, in order to expand my versatility my options.

I'm also a small water angler, and I commonly find certain areas in a given water body that hold the majority of bass, and some waters are small enough the bass stay put. Such areas usually lend themselves to particular lure types: a jig, or a worm, a bulged spinnerbait, or a crankbait type, brings satisfying results. But I still may have to adjust size, finish, or retrieve, depending on conditions.

Interestingly, I've also gotten to know particular fish that responded to particular lures better than others. I remember a 28-30 inch pike (he grew over the three years I fished there) that was vulnerable to small dark colored crankbaits. Other lures might only elicit a follow or short strike. I knew a large bass in another pond that loved BIG crankbaits. I knew of a particular place where walleyes targeted concentrated shad under bridge lights. I found these walleyes could learn to discern lures. I'd catch three on a particular plug, then only get short strikes, then nothing. So I'd switch plugs, and start the series again. It got so I would start my fishing at that spot with a half dozen plugs layed out. And I'd go through em one at a time. Showed me that fish can discern seemingly subtle (to us) things about lures and retrieves, and their response can vary greatly to these seemingly subtle differences. I think rods and lines magnify what we do at the rod end, and if we are not concentrating, the lures may fail to trigger for us. Thus, confidence/concentration (knowing what to do with a particular lure in real time), results in bites.

This is one reason I think lure colors are so often ascribed to explain a good catch, when it was actually subtlety in the particular lures action, coupled with the retrieve that served as the more important trigger. There's lots one can do to add triggers to a retrieve, that far outweigh color in effect. I also believe that there are colors, or more accurately, finishes, that outperform others in certain conditions but one would never discern them if they didn't have the other parameters, depth, speed, action/triggers, understood and in control.

All this said, there are some basic lures that will catch a lot of bass, even the majority of the bass we catch. Even with the above mentioned walleyes, I did discover some lures, one in particular, those eyes had a darn hard time learning. And I believe I know why. It lies in the ease at which those subtle triggers can be elicited even when you're tired, or psyched out. Some lures have this built in more than others.

In most of my bass waters, I could get by with a plastic worm (or two), but some waters and conditions lend themselves to a dramatic catch increase by my switching to...a lipless crank, a swimming jig, a spinnerbait, or a weedless frog, or... But that's the macro scale. Most anglers know where to apply these.

At the micro-scale, at times when I've plied my tricks and I'm not catching, then rarely is it a lure change that turns the tide. That comes either from the conditions/fish side of the fence, or it's a locational, or a concentration/triggering deal. Lures just don't fish themselves much of the time.

SO...if you're still with me:

When I choose a lure, I look at water/cover type and particular conditions and pick a lure I already know how to operate my Go To for that particular place and time. And then I play with it until I elicit reactions. Then I just keep concentrating and adjusting until I've dialed in, or admit defeat, or the sun simply goes down on me.


fishing user avatar.dsaavedra. reply : 

my favorite bait would be a rapala DT,

but my favorite bait when nothing else is working would be an *** *** (5") in shimmer shad.


fishing user avatarTournyFish001 reply : 

I am all about confidence in my gear too- so I'd go with a drop shot on my GLX DSR 820s with a Daiwa Fuego 2000 Spinning reel spooled with 4lb florocarbon line(the whole setup weighs less than a can of coke)- rigged with 1/4oz weight, #2 Gamakatsu dropshot/splitshot hook and a straight tail fat roboworm a panic minnow or small 3 to 4" tube- I play with the leader length sometimes its suprisingly short like 2 to 6" up here I find that when its tough the fish are generally tight to the bottom and hitting craws.

I also like my 852S GLX spinning rod rigged with my Daiwa 2500 Black Widow Limited addition spinning reel spooled with 6-8lb Florocarbon- This rig is used for my shakey head technique, which is 1/8 to 3/16oz head with the screw. The bait that I really like to use up here is a reaction innovations 3.5 smallie beaver- any time I go to a worm its usually on the drop shot.

These two rigs are my go to presentations- if they will not hit one of these there is no fish there.


fishing user avatarAaron reply : 

This year it's been a 1/2oz. Rattletrap chrome w/ blue back.


fishing user avatarbass wrangler569 reply : 

texas rigged green pumpkin trick worm


fishing user avatarbkoguy07 reply : 

Jig, texas rigged culprit, senko, and storm swimbait.


fishing user avatarRaul reply : 
  Quote
What is your go to lure when nothing else is working?

600+ cranks

100+ spinnerbaits

50 lbs of soft plastics

50 jigs


fishing user avatarscbassin reply : 

Soft Plastic

Raul you do not have enough soft plastics it takes about 500#'s to have enough. ;D


fishing user avatarJigNBig reply : 

Shakey head or skinny bear elite football jig for spots.

White Spinner bait or 1/4 Oldham's Trailor Hitch Jig in the weeds or steep banks for largemouth.


fishing user avatarww2farmer reply : 

I don't have a "go to" lure, I have "go to " techniques. When the bite is tuff, almost any thing small, green and/or brown, fished slow works.


fishing user avatarBass XL reply : 

Shakey head and a dropshot.


fishing user avatarBassFishingMachine reply : 
  Quote
Over the years I've had to concede that there just isn't a single lure out there I can reasonably expect to produce every time, or when I wish it to, at least with a satisfying catch rate. Catching fish consistently really comes down to understanding water/cover type and conditions in front of you, and then having the confidence with a variety of lures to cover those.

My "GoTo's" change seasonally, daily, even hourly. With catch rate being my focus I tend to go with the fastest lure I can get away with. This may mean a buzzbait, or swimming jig, a crankbait, a topwater, or worm, depending on conditions. I expect to change lures, finishes, and retrieves throughout the day.

For instance: I love to see bass blow up on topwaters. If conditions allow I like a buzzbait. But buzzbaits tend to require overcast and/or wind rippled water. Otherwise a buzzbait simply falls off my "go to" list. If the surface calms but I still have some clouds, or even haze, or the bass simply won't commit to the rhythmic cadence of a buzzer, I'll likely switch to a jumpbait. If things calm further and water is clear enough I may have to go to a popper (slower). Might be the same pod of fish, but as conditions change I change. There's not a "go-to" out there that will cover all the bases.

I suppose some lure types produce a greater catch rate over a variety of conditions than others, deemed versatile. But the exact version of that lure type even, will vary with the water or cover type I'm presented with, my experience and confidence, and often must be adjusted to the fish's reaction.

I do have lures I've done particularly well with, but my response tends to be then to move on to something else for good reason. I'm not a tournament angler which puts me in the position of being free to experiment every time out, in order to expand my versatility my options.

I'm also a small water angler, and I commonly find certain areas in a given water body that hold the majority of bass, and some waters are small enough the bass stay put. Such areas usually lend themselves to particular lure types: a jig, or a worm, a bulged spinnerbait, or a crankbait type, brings satisfying results. But I still may have to adjust size, finish, or retrieve, depending on conditions.

Interestingly, I've also gotten to know particular fish that responded to particular lures better than others. I remember a 28-30 inch pike (he grew over the three years I fished there) that was vulnerable to small dark colored crankbaits. Other lures might only elicit a follow or short strike. I knew a large bass in another pond that loved BIG crankbaits. I knew of a particular place where walleyes targeted concentrated shad under bridge lights. I found these walleyes could learn to discern lures. I'd catch three on a particular plug, then only get short strikes, then nothing. So I'd switch plugs, and start the series again. It got so I would start my fishing at that spot with a half dozen plugs layed out. And I'd go through em one at a time. Showed me that fish can discern seemingly subtle (to us) things about lures and retrieves, and their response can vary greatly to these seemingly subtle differences. I think rods and lines magnify what we do at the rod end, and if we are not concentrating, the lures may fail to trigger for us. Thus, confidence/concentration (knowing what to do with a particular lure in real time), results in bites.

This is one reason I think lure colors are so often ascribed to explain a good catch, when it was actually subtlety in the particular lures action, coupled with the retrieve that served as the more important trigger. There's lots one can do to add triggers to a retrieve, that far outweigh color in effect. I also believe that there are colors, or more accurately, finishes, that outperform others in certain conditions but one would never discern them if they didn't have the other parameters, depth, speed, action/triggers, understood and in control.

All this said, there are some basic lures that will catch a lot of bass, even the majority of the bass we catch. Even with the above mentioned walleyes, I did discover some lures, one in particular, those eyes had a darn hard time learning. And I believe I know why. It lies in the ease at which those subtle triggers can be elicited even when you're tired, or psyched out. Some lures have this built in more than others.

In most of my bass waters, I could get by with a plastic worm (or two), but some waters and conditions lend themselves to a dramatic catch increase by my switching to...a lipless crank, a swimming jig, a spinnerbait, or a weedless frog, or... But that's the macro scale. Most anglers know where to apply these.

At the micro-scale, at times when I've plied my tricks and I'm not catching, then rarely is it a lure change that turns the tide. That comes either from the conditions/fish side of the fence, or it's a locational, or a concentration/triggering deal. Lures just don't fish themselves much of the time.

SO...if you're still with me:

When I choose a lure, I look at water/cover type and particular conditions and pick a lure I already know how to operate my Go To for that particular place and time. And then I play with it until I elicit reactions. Then I just keep concentrating and adjusting until I've dialed in, or admit defeat, or the sun simply goes down on me.

Amazing post, and this is becoming more an more the truth as time goes on for me. There is no "go to" bait for all purposes, the condition/type of cover/depth im fishing/etc, all determine what my "go to" bait would be..although I do wish I had a bait that worked great in all conditions  8-).


fishing user avatarRaul reply : 
  Quote
Soft Plastic

Raul you do not have enough soft plastics it takes about 500#'s to have enough. ;D

I do have the 500 lbs of soft plastics, only problem is that if I carry them I exceed the weight carrying capacity of the boat by far. It 's 500 lbs of plastics or the outboard.  :)


fishing user avatarbkoguy07 reply : 
  Quote
  Quote
Soft Plastic

Raul you do not have enough soft plastics it takes about 500#'s to have enough. ;D

I do have the 500 lbs of soft plastics, only problem is that if I carry them I exceed the weight carrying capacity of the boat by far. It 's 500 lbs of plastics or the outboard.  :)

And you didnt go with the plastics?!?!? :)


fishing user avatarbillbrum reply : 

shakey head, dropshot, or finesse cranking.


fishing user avatarswampz reply : 

my number one lure would defenitly be a booyah spinnerbait with one long gold willow blade and a little bitty colorado blade, forgive me i just cant catch bass on soft plastics.  :'(


fishing user avatarbrgbassmaster reply : 

*** ***, and white terminator spinnerbaits.


fishing user avatarRaul reply : 
  Quote
  Quote
  Quote
Soft Plastic

Raul you do not have enough soft plastics it takes about 500#'s to have enough. ;D

I do have the 500 lbs of soft plastics, only problem is that if I carry them I exceed the weight carrying capacity of the boat by far. It 's 500 lbs of plastics or the outboard. :)

And you didnt go with the plastics?!?!? :)

Nope, I prefer the outboard. 50 lbs of plastics is more than enough.


fishing user avatarrfrazier reply : 

watermelon candy flick shake wacky rigged or a 10" power worm junebug


fishing user avatarBFBoy reply : 

A 1/4 oz Bleeding bitsy jig in brown/green with a 3" pumpkinseed powercraw.


fishing user avatarSimonDM17 reply : 
  Quote
A 1/4 oz Bleeding bitsy jig in brown/green with a 3" pumpkinseed powercraw.

The Bitsy jigs are great "catch-anything" jigs.  I use the Bitsy Flips since the hook is much better on them--how's the bleeding series hook?

My go-to lure has to be a jig to cover.  Black/blue, unless the water is clear, then it's black jig with green pumpkin Zoom Ultravibe or Berkely Chigger Craw.

Conditions permitting, the second choice would be either:

4 in. powerworm hopped across the bottom on a slip sinker

Soft jerkbait

Spro Frog

Rapala Minnow and a walk-the-dog bait

Those 5 baits, and I'm confident I can pretty much cover anywhere and catch some bass.


fishing user avatarBFBoy reply : 
  Quote
  Quote
A 1/4 oz Bleeding bitsy jig in brown/green with a 3" pumpkinseed powercraw.

The Bitsy jigs are great "catch-anything" jigs.  I use the Bitsy Flips since the hook is much better on them--how's the bleeding series hook?

Count me among those who like the red hooks. BTW, the hooks on the bleeding bitsy jig are very sharp. The weedguard is a bit softer, too, which I like.


fishing user avatarCRFisher reply : 

Flatfish if nothing is biting, perch or greenish color is what I've had the most luck on.   They seem to entice a hit when Rapalas aren't, something about the wicked wobble with the slow as possible retrieve.  .  


fishing user avatarbroncoboxer reply : 

For the moment, Zoom Super Flukes are my go-to bait (at least in weedy conditions).


fishing user avatarJosh. reply : 

5" senko black W/ blue flake


fishing user avatargravyfor3 reply : 

texas rigged Slurpie worm :)


fishing user avatartritz18 reply : 

5 inch senko watermelon




7150

related Fishing Tackle topic

Storm 360gt
Winter Clothing - Outerwear
whopper plopper?
Best Chatterbait? And what is the best value Chatterbait?
When do you take hard baits out of their package?
If You Could Have One Lure?
Name Your Favorite Largemouth Crankbait
Call Me Crazy August Promotion!
Worlds most realistic frog bait?
Talking Buzzbaits
2016 Tackle Room
Frogs
Favorite hook type for plastics
Tackle Brands YOU Trust
Caution! Siebert Jigs
BPS buys?
Confidence Box
Tubes
Fishing Glasses, What Do You Use?
Whats Everyone's Preferred Spinnerbait Brands?



previous topic
Space Monkey Surprise -- Fishing Tackle
next topic
Storm 360gt -- Fishing Tackle