Lipless Crankbaits
By: The Bass Doctor (Charles Stuart)
My first introduction to lipless crankbaits, was when I won twenty of
them in a raffle on Lake Cayuga in upstate New York.
The
following week, I tried in vain to catch fish with this noisy,
skinny looking object. What I did catch was wood, weeds and rocks.
So the lures remained in the bottom of the tackle bag collecting
dust like so many baits that I believed were for catching fishermen,
not fish!
Two
years later, I was fishing a tournament in Alabama with another
angler who was catching so many fish I had to stop to see what he
was throwing. When I saw the rattletrap on his line, I watched how
he would change the retrieve constantly and move the rod tip from
left to right and well as up and down.
Have
you ever heard the expression, "the light suddenly came
on"? Well I realized that the lures I had won all that time ago
could actually catch fish, but I still needed a lesson in how to use
them correctly.
I
tied a "trap" on the line and tried to mimic his retrieve
tactics. Once again I hooked wood and weed. Maybe it was just me,
but I could not get the damn thing to run the way he did! Then I
realized that the reel I was using had a retrieve speed of 5.1 to 1.
I looked at his reel to see that he was using a 6.3 to 1! Click! On
went the light (again) and I switched to a high
retrieve reel. After the second cast, I hooked and landed my first
"trap" bass, a nice three-pound fish. I caught 4 more fish
that afternoon and placed well in the tournament standings for the
day thanks to this bait.
So, here are the tools you will need and a few tips on "working
the lure".
I
prefer a six to six and a half-foot medium action rod with a high
gear ratio (6 to 1 and above) baitcasting reel for larger baits. A
spinning reel will work better with the smaller sizes but again,
check the ratio.
Perhaps
for those of you who are not familiar with gear ratio, I should
explain. When you turn the handle of a fishing reel one complete
turn, you will have gathered a certain amount of line back as the
spool turns. The higher the speed ratio, the more line you bring
back on each turn. For crankbaits, spinnerbaits and lipless
crankbaits, a high retrieve is excellent. Of course there are
situations when you may need to slow down a spinnerbait or regular
crankbait, in which case you should choose another reel with a lower
gear ratio. However, for the lipless variety of crankbaits, a
high-speed reel is the key.
Line
diameter and breaking strain should be your next consideration,
Heavy line with a larger diameter will keep the bait higher in the
water than a thinner and less pound test line. Situations dictate
what line you can use, but as a rule of thumb, if the water is deep,
you want the bait to run deep. Use ten to fifteen pound line with
little or no stretch. This type of line will allow you to "feel
the bait" as it runs through the water. Do not use a braided
line unless you feel comfortable using it. To me, the monofilament
or co-polymer lines are excellent for this particular style of
fishing. In skinny shallow water presentations, choose a fifteen to
twenty pound test line which will allow you to muscle fish out of
shoreline structure without too much difficulty.
Lure
size selection! Well they come in many sizes, so try to match the
size of the baitfish in the area. If you do not see any bait fish to
"size up with", start with a small quarter of an ounce
offering and change up until the fish bite. As for color selection,
try chrome and blue, chrome and black and the white with a green or
red back. All these work for me in most
situations. Of course, your lake or river may need another color, so
do not be afraid to experiment.
Finally,
as you retrieve your lure, speed up and slow down. Also move the rod
slowly as you retrieve from left to right. Then on the next cast, up
and down. Try to remember when you fish any artificial bait that it
is supposed to imitate a fish, and fish do not swim in straight
lines! So why would you just throw a lure and turn the handle of
your reel until it comes back?
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