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If you don't, and your kids or grand kids don't use live worms or
crickets, this will not interest you, just move on to the post Guys I need your help, as most of you know, I design terminal tackle for a living. I'm very selective on what new tackle I submit to manufacturers, first it's got to work,, and work better than anything currently on the market, I find this out by extensive testing, or course then it has to be manufactured for a price the consumer will accept, finally it has to have a market, it must do something that the fishermen want done. After I prove all of this, I take it to the manufacturers for licensing. Here is the input I need from y'all, does this have a market, would you buy such a thing if it was at your local tackle shop ? I am not trying to sell y'all anything here, and I will never offer them for sell from my web site. I just need to know if such a product is wanted by fishermen. The way I ask this, is I tell you what it does and how much it should retail for. Some of you will have no use for it what so ever, because you do not fish this way, If you use worms or crickets, this may be of interest to you. There are billions of worms and crickets sold each year to pan fishermen, actually more people pan fish than any other type of fishing. There is one problem that has never been solved using worms and cricket for bait, that is the ease of fish removing them from the hook, kids loose more bait than adults due to them not setting the hook before the bait is lost. In the past, hook companies have tried to solve this problem by adding barbs on the shaft of a hook, this has helped a little but very little. I started the 2005 season on a quest to solve this problem, in a cheap but effective way, and one that fishermen could instantly understand how it works. To refresh your memory, pan fish, especially bream, suck the cricket or worm off the end of the hook, they slide it down the shaft, and around the bend. I sought a way to keep this from happening, and found a solution, a very effective solution. Unfortunately, not one that could be bent into the hook it's self, the bodies of crickets and worms were to fragile for a truly effective means, using just a specialty bent hook. This is an add on, on to the hook I tested this on both large and small blue gills, with unheard of results, I caught as many as 10 large blue gills on a single cricket, or section of night crawler worm, the baits were mutilated after a few fish, but they were still on the hook. Other fish continued to hit them the average was 5 fish per cricket, 8 per worm section (pinched off 1 inch sections). I then tested it along the shore on little 3 and 4 inch blue gills, (an over sized number 4 hook was used) I was using a float, and just wanted to see how many times the float could go down, before they finally "tore" the cricket off, this averaged between 10 and 20 hard bites (the float going completely under) before they managed to bust the cricket up so bad they refused to hit it again. This would greatly increase the number of fish caught by kids who miss bites. These will retail for around 10 cents a piece, or 10 for a dollar, they add less than 3 sec's. time to baiting the hook, and so simple to use, 7 year olds that bait their own hooks, have had no problems with doing it right, after only being shown how once. It in no way interferes with setting the hook Is there a market for a cricket and worm, dead bolt lock ? Locks don't stop thieves, they only slow them down :-) -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Long Shot "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, Decoy Activator and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
#2
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Sounds good to me!
Good Luck! "Rodney" wrote in message ... If you don't, and your kids or grand kids don't use live worms or crickets, this will not interest you, just move on to the post Guys I need your help, as most of you know, I design terminal tackle for a living. I'm very selective on what new tackle I submit to manufacturers, first it's got to work,, and work better than anything currently on the market, I find this out by extensive testing, or course then it has to be manufactured for a price the consumer will accept, finally it has to have a market, it must do something that the fishermen want done. After I prove all of this, I take it to the manufacturers for licensing. Here is the input I need from y'all, does this have a market, would you buy such a thing if it was at your local tackle shop ? I am not trying to sell y'all anything here, and I will never offer them for sell from my web site. I just need to know if such a product is wanted by fishermen. The way I ask this, is I tell you what it does and how much it should retail for. Some of you will have no use for it what so ever, because you do not fish this way, If you use worms or crickets, this may be of interest to you. There are billions of worms and crickets sold each year to pan fishermen, actually more people pan fish than any other type of fishing. There is one problem that has never been solved using worms and cricket for bait, that is the ease of fish removing them from the hook, kids loose more bait than adults due to them not setting the hook before the bait is lost. In the past, hook companies have tried to solve this problem by adding barbs on the shaft of a hook, this has helped a little but very little. I started the 2005 season on a quest to solve this problem, in a cheap but effective way, and one that fishermen could instantly understand how it works. To refresh your memory, pan fish, especially bream, suck the cricket or worm off the end of the hook, they slide it down the shaft, and around the bend. I sought a way to keep this from happening, and found a solution, a very effective solution. Unfortunately, not one that could be bent into the hook it's self, the bodies of crickets and worms were to fragile for a truly effective means, using just a specialty bent hook. This is an add on, on to the hook I tested this on both large and small blue gills, with unheard of results, I caught as many as 10 large blue gills on a single cricket, or section of night crawler worm, the baits were mutilated after a few fish, but they were still on the hook. Other fish continued to hit them the average was 5 fish per cricket, 8 per worm section (pinched off 1 inch sections). I then tested it along the shore on little 3 and 4 inch blue gills, (an over sized number 4 hook was used) I was using a float, and just wanted to see how many times the float could go down, before they finally "tore" the cricket off, this averaged between 10 and 20 hard bites (the float going completely under) before they managed to bust the cricket up so bad they refused to hit it again. This would greatly increase the number of fish caught by kids who miss bites. These will retail for around 10 cents a piece, or 10 for a dollar, they add less than 3 sec's. time to baiting the hook, and so simple to use, 7 year olds that bait their own hooks, have had no problems with doing it right, after only being shown how once. It in no way interferes with setting the hook Is there a market for a cricket and worm, dead bolt lock ? Locks don't stop thieves, they only slow them down :-) -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Long Shot "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, Decoy Activator and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
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