LIVETARGET Baitball Series: Lure Concept is Revolutionary

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Anglers everywhere have watched fish feed in a frenzy at one time or another.  A bait school swims by and a hungry bass, crappie, walleye or other larger predator on the feed leaves his lair and you witness a spectacle to behold, as surface commotion and water splash causes bait fish to fly in all directions.  Then just as suddenly, a huge fish swirls its tail and returns to the deep.  Over in an instant! Yikes and wow!  You begin to tremble a bit.  Been there?

Such moments in fishing are among those instant memory flash points that we never forget.  You wonder why when your lure was cast in another direction, why that fish made his move way over there, in a different place.  Such wonders of fishing keep us coming back.

In the spring of year and at other times of the year too, the largest of predator fish need to feed more often than their smaller counterparts.  The biggest fish are often caught during cold fronts, they eat more often, that is that.  The bigger fish seek efficiency too, they search for a school of bait.  It’s the easy way to feed and they have it figured out.  When we see it happen as fishermen, it is a spectacle, but the truth is, big fish feed like that very often, but not always on the surface where we can see them.

When LIVETARGET Lures came out with their BAITBALL SERIES, you can understand why these beautifully colored jerkbaits caught my attention.  I ordered a few in different colors and was amazed at the quality of the construction.  Perfect balance right out of the box, high quality lure components, sharper than sharp hooks, and perfectly functional in the design.

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The overall effect was ultra-realistic with the multiple-minnow appearance and the translucent body, with multiple little minnows in the baitfish color of your choice.

Not long ago I fished with several Elite Series Bass Professionals, including Darrin Schwenckbeck, an exclusive jerkbait success story all by himself.  Darrin taught me how to work a jerkbait about a half dozen different ways, but we always used the same style lure, a minnow style stickbait that would suspend.

When LIVETARGET came out with the appealing color patterns and the unique Baitball minnow profile, fishing a jerkbait became a whole new adventure of more frequent fish-catching.

LIVETARGET offers the Baitball idea in several different style lures too, including a rattlebait that is perfect for casting around and through light weed beds.

Cast it, jerk it down, pause it, twitch-twitch, jerk it down and reel, and repeat.  Vary the frequency and casting distance to change the effect of the dynamic internal rattles that sync in sound with the hooks that rap up against the body of the lure to create two distinct underwater echoes that seem to fish-calling clatter sounds.  Minnows mating?  Not sure.

When you stop the lure to pause, it stays right there, as if it was injured and beckoning to a finny predator.  Whatever these lures sound like to us anglers with an underwater mic doesn’t matter much, because it doesn’t take long to see that the fish think it’s a signal to gobble-up an easy meal.

Not sure how LIVETARGET came up with the idea, but the results have been surprising and is still a big secret among many tournament anglers.  Throw it around points and shoals, tree trunks and other cover to see the appeal this lure series offers to resident fish.  I like to fish it often, since you can cover so much water so very quickly, looking for those fish that are on an active feed.

The LIVETARGET Baitball Series has changed the way many anglers think about a jerkbait.  It also explains how this company has won “Best Lure of the Year” so many consecutive times at the ICAST Show.

Check out the LIVETARGET Baitball Series line-up:
http://www.livetargetlures.com/freshwater/emerald-shiner-jerkbait

Try one and see.

Undeniable Hollow Frog is a Live Target

Bass Inhale Surface Intruder Frogs in Southern States RIGHT NOW!

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Watch Video Here

The Koppers Fishing and Tackle hollow-body floating frog is a very life-like artificial bait found in tackle stores under the Live Target brand name. The colors, hooks, action and weight of this lure are premium and perfect for catching big bass, lots of them. The story of how I learned – Forrest Fisher

As a pre-high school kid in 1960 that couldn’t wait for summer so my buddy and I could fish for bass, I learned early that the biggest bass seemed to live in cover, especially near lily pads and in some areas under surface-matted weeds.

Big Bass and hollow-body floating frogs in the right color are the right bait in Florida during early spring, with fish even whacking them in open water. Here, snowbird Tom Marks, a Great Lakes Charter Captain, is enjoying some fun in the sun with one of his favorite floating frog baits.

We discovered this quite by accident when our small motor quit one day and a strong wind blew us in toward shore where our 12-foot boat hung up on the edge of a very thick weed bed.  Unable to move under power, the oars were tied down securely and we had to undo those, so following the protocol that we were taught by my dad, we did the next best thing – we dropped anchor.

OK, we were safe.  A little scared and frustrated too, I asked, “Jeepers, why did we end up here?”  Since I was always looking for an excuse to cast a line anyway and neither of us knew much about motors, we took out the rods and decided to wait for another boat passing by.  This turned out to be a good plan.

We were five feet from the edge of the weeds and getting our lines out there into the wind would be tough.  We tried anyway to no avail.  All we had was hooks and split shots that we had planned to use to dunk worms and crabs along the weed edge.

Fish the hollow-body frog in the toughest to get-to places to find big bass. Be sure to use the right line, a stout rod and a Baitcasting reel with durable gears.

I had just been gifted with a pack of Crème plastic worms, there were five in the package and of all things, they were sort of slimy and purple in color!  Finding them in the tackle box, we threaded them on to the size 1 hooks we had and decided to toss them toward a tiny opening in the weeds.  The wind was at our back now and this would be easy.

Of course, we missed the opening in the weeds and landed about a foot away.  Not knowing anything about rigging weedless, we were hung up right away.  The hook point was buried in the thick mat.  We tried to pull it out, we could see it there, but it was firmly stuck.  We didn’t want to break our new line, we had shoveled a lot of driveways to earn the money to buy this new Berkley “Cat-Gut” line (monofilament), because the guy in the tackle store said it was the best, the fish couldn’t see it.

Frustrated, we shouted at the weeds, hollered at the motor, screamed out loud at the wind and then the weirdest thing happened that nearly scared us both off the boat and into the water.  No, it wasn’t lightening.

The weeds exploded!  The noise from the splash near our lure was loud! It was a fish!  More bellowing, more screaming, and finally, a broken line.  Wow.  Now some bad news bawling was in my mind, but we toughed it up.  The fish was a monster with a very wide tail, that’s all we actually saw, but that’s all we needed to see.

We sat there bewildered.  “Oh my gosh!” I shouted to my buddy.  Did you see that?!  “That was the biggest fish ever saw,” he said.  I agreed.  We tied on another worm the same way, why switch now” It was un-weedless, hook protruding and we got the same snag on the surface-matted weeds.  This time, nothing.  We did this about 10 times.  We caught a lot of weeds.

 

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Check out this blog for more info on hollow-body frogs, but note that the Live Target hollow-body frog is Number 1 in the ratings: http://bassjunkiesfrogpond.blogspot.com/2012/06/koppers-live-target-hollow-body-frog.html

On the 11th try, in a different direction from the original explosion, it happened again!  Kabooom!  A fish exploded on our weed-stuck, hook-exposed worm.  This was no accident now. There were fish that actually lived here!  The age of discovery had just occurred.

Soon after, a passer-by saw us and we waved him over to get the tow back to the dock and kindly thanked him for the courtesy.  Both of us were still shaking from our encounter.  We didn’t want to share this with anyone, actually, but we decided to tell my dad.  He remembered there was an ad in the last issue of Field and Stream magazine about a weedless lure, a floating frog.

Now we couldn’t wait to get home.  There it was on one of the last pages.  We begged my dad to buy us one and after we agreed to pay him back for it, we dropped the stamped envelope into the post box and waited.  Three weeks later, there is was, one solid-green color plastic frog that floated and had two hooks sort of buried upside-down on each side of the top of the lure, allowing it to ride the weeds without foul hooking, so it said.  It was quite a weird-looking concoction to us at the time.

The instructions said to cast it right into the weeds.  Two weeks later we did that.  We went back to the very same spot where our boat had landed that windy summer day about a month earlier.  This time, using a Bronson casting reel and 25 feet of 20-pound test black color braid line laying on the floor of the boat (casting it like a fly rod, these were old reels!), I casted the lure out to a small opening in the weeds. I missed.  It went five feet past.  I twitched the lure that glided smoothly over the weeds, it was almost to the opening now.

Hook point sharpness and durability to maintain sharpness is a key ingredient for all anglers. Live Target hollow body frogs are also properly positioned and use Owner Hooks that are razor edge sharp to penetrate the hard bone mouth of the biggest fish and hold.

BLAM!  A huge fish blasted the surface and sent weeds flying in all directions.  I reared back to set the hook and pulled.  I had the fish on!  It was fighting and pulling back and it went down and buried itself into the weeds.  After digging a bit, we did get the fish, a 6-pound monster largemouth!  Excited was not the right word, both of us were ready to pee our pants.

Nobody else we knew fished this way.  Over time as we grew up, we bought newer and better tackle, and watched ever since those early days in 1961, how floating frog lures have evolved to the highly technical manner of their shape and function today.

Since then we have worked to find the best of the best, there are many companies that market floating frog lures today.  One of the most effective floating frog lures we have found is made by one company in Ontario, Canada, Kopper Fishing & Tackle.  In the United States and elsewhere too, this incredible frog lure is marketed under the brand name of Live Target Lures.  They are worth every penny they cost.

Why are they the best?  Simple reasons.  Quality construction, flawless in-the-weeds performance, flawless fish hook-up performance, easy and proper casting weight, tantalizing action – even in open water, and perfect color scheme options.

Gimme my rod! Gotta go!

http://www.livetargetlures.com/freshwater/frog-hollow-body