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More red comments
This is from this week's Inside Line:
Team Yamamoto pro Bob Lester visited the Indiana Boat Show this weekend. Bob reported on these new trends: "More than anything else, everything is red. Hooks have been getting red for some time now, but snaps, split rings, swivels are red, red, red! Every spinnerbait I saw on the show floor had red stuff - red skirt strands, small red front blades, red eyes, red hooks. I think red's become an overkill and it just may backfire. Too much red may become a bass repellant by the end of 2005," mused Lester. |
"Ronnie Garrison" wrote in message . .. This is from this week's Inside Line: Team Yamamoto pro Bob Lester visited the Indiana Boat Show this weekend. Bob reported on these new trends: "More than anything else, everything is red. Hooks have been getting red for some time now, but snaps, split rings, swivels are red, red, red! Every spinnerbait I saw on the show floor had red stuff - red skirt strands, small red front blades, red eyes, red hooks. I think red's become an overkill and it just may backfire. Too much red may become a bass repellant by the end of 2005," mused Lester. I might have to agree with that statement. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers wrote:
"Ronnie Garrison" wrote in message . .. This is from this week's Inside Line: Team Yamamoto pro Bob Lester visited the Indiana Boat Show this weekend. Bob reported on these new trends: "More than anything else, everything is red. Next, year, Purple will be the 'new red'. |
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E. Carl Speros wrote:
I agree with Roland Martin; "Any color will work as long as it's chartreuse" The first time I heard something like that was when Tom Mann said "Any worm color will work as long as it is black" back in the 1970s. That was during the height of his Jelly Worm craze. He knew he was making those flavors and colors to catch fishermen, not just fish. |
I thought that was a Henry Ford saying...
"Ronnie Garrison" wrote in message ... E. Carl Speros wrote: I agree with Roland Martin; "Any color will work as long as it's chartreuse" The first time I heard something like that was when Tom Mann said "Any worm color will work as long as it is black" back in the 1970s. That was during the height of his Jelly Worm craze. He knew he was making those flavors and colors to catch fishermen, not just fish. |
One good thing about some red hooks - the red paint easily comes off and
underneath they are gold (something new for the bass to see :-) Cheers, Nikolay P.S. And RichZ, with all my respect man, did you absolutely have to tell everyone ?! (lol) On Wed, 23 Feb 2005, RichZ wrote: Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers wrote: "Ronnie Garrison" wrote in message . .. This is from this week's Inside Line: Team Yamamoto pro Bob Lester visited the Indiana Boat Show this weekend. Bob reported on these new trends: "More than anything else, everything is red. Next, year, Purple will be the 'new red'. |
Bob Lester may well on target. Today's "Red Gold" may well be tomorrow's
"Red Blight". That is just another example of the beauty of our instantly, universally interchangeable blade attachments. A few bucks investment can let you add red to any & all of our spinnerbaits, and a few seconds can instqntly make it go away. You should demand the same value & versatility from all your lures. BTW, no spam here; just cold facts about how to wisely spend your hard earned dollars. -- Bob Rickard (AKA Dr. Spinnerbait) www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "Ronnie Garrison" wrote in message . .. This is from this week's Inside Line: Team Yamamoto pro Bob Lester visited the Indiana Boat Show this weekend. Bob reported on these new trends: "More than anything else, everything is red. Hooks have been getting red for some time now, but snaps, split rings, swivels are red, red, red! Every spinnerbait I saw on the show floor had red stuff - red skirt strands, small red front blades, red eyes, red hooks. I think red's become an overkill and it just may backfire. Too much red may become a bass repellant by the end of 2005," mused Lester. |
On Wed, 23 Feb 2005 00:32:48 -0500, RichZ wrote:
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers wrote: "Ronnie Garrison" wrote in message . .. This is from this week's Inside Line: Team Yamamoto pro Bob Lester visited the Indiana Boat Show this weekend. Bob reported on these new trends: "More than anything else, everything is red. Next, year, Purple will be the 'new red'. No disrespect to anyone, but I think we are to easily going against the fact that years of research and development have gone into how bass (and other fish) react to colors. In controlled studies done by Doug Hannon he has clearly shown that bass are attracted to red, and strike aggressively. This was done back in the early 80's I believe (I will double check my source). I agree they may have gone a little far jumping on the band wagon because there is a buck to be made when a craze is started, but to discount years of research because a tackle manufacturer went overboard I believe is a mistake. The media could definitely make purple the color of the year, if they wanted to. And people would catch fish on purple because that is all they would be throwing, they would figure because of the purple stand on the jig that is why that fish bit. But Gary Klien said it best, if there is a tree in an area that holds a 5lb fish, Denny Brauer will come by with a black/blue jig and catch it, or Rick Clunn would come by with a crankbait or buzzbait and catch it, or Dean Rojas with Kermit , etc etc. I think the real point is that fisherman give way to much credit to the bait they are using (color, brand, etc) and not enough credit to themselves for presenting the bait in the right area at the right time. There are definitely times when size, color, weight , and presentation matter, but If you fish a bait with confidence and present it confidently you are going to catch more fish. Once that part is settled, then the subdtleties come into play and maybe the red (or purple) hook make a small difference because of fishing pressure, weather change, rising water, I think you get the point. I just have a hard time discrediting research done by a respected person in the field of fisheries biology (Doug Hannon). Bass fishing is so competitive now, that every single little edge you can get should be exercised. Anglers are doing their homework, and are able to understand the fish better. Anything I can do to make my presentation a little different without affecting its effectiveness I will do. So far red hasn't hurt me, and neither have scents, as far as I know anyway. Chris |
With all due respect Bob... anytime you try to influence someone to spend
money on a product that you have an interest in.... it's spamming. "Bob Rickard" wrote in message om... .. A few bucks investment can let you add red to any & all of our spinnerbaits, and a few seconds can instqntly make it go away. You should demand the same value & versatility from all your lures. BTW, no spam here; just cold facts about how to wisely spend your hard earned dollars. -- Bob Rickard (AKA Dr. Spinnerbait) www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) |
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