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Posts: 425
| What is your favorite Creeper and color? Mine is the black Hi Fin Hawg Buster but looking for some other ones to try.
Thanks!!! |
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| if you can find one, definitely pick up a B.S.Willy. or three.
some of the custom RyLure creeps are pretty sweet too.
get a color that you like, i don't think the fish care.
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Posts: 814
| I'll second what Mike said about the B.S. Willy Creepers they are the best in the business! What makes the bs willy's better than the rest are the wings, they are much thicker than the rest.....fish after fish these things perform and they stay in tune. Some of the other custom creepers are really finicky, they are a pain to try and retune after a fish or two....not the bs willys! |
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Posts: 646
Location: In a shack in the woods | i jsut got a lee lures creeper. i havent had a chance to use it much yet but definately like it so far. |
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Posts: 3518
Location: north central wisconsin | I just got a bs willy from lambeau and plan to give it a run soon. Looks really well built.
That said, for me, creepers and creeper tuning is an odd labor of love. Once you get a few, you'll see that they all sound different, and all tune a bit differently to achieve differing actions/speeds/sounds. Just because a wing is thicker, doesn't always mean the lure will sound/work any better. Some fo the best creepers are the old lelures that Frenchy built. Some of his wings were built to flop back on a hookset and would need to be put back into place after a hit. I really like Rylure creepers in different varieties, but some of my favorites are also custom Joel Wick creepers which have some of the thinnest wings around. I keep a backup ready, as when a Wick gets smoked, it gets tuned the next morning.
Good luck in your search. There are alot of really nice creepers out there.
Edited by Reef Hawg 7/29/2009 6:43 PM
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Posts: 2024
| Do folks find that Creepers tend to sink at the very beginning of a cast, particularly if it's a long one or you don't engage the reel immediately? |
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Posts: 1286
Location: WI | esox50, I've never had a Creeper sink unless a fish ate it.
Ty Sennett's Creeptonite is my current favorite Creeper. LeLure makes a decent one as well.
Edited by JKahler 7/30/2009 12:00 AM
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Posts: 283
Location: beloit | Tanner Wildes creepenstein is very nice |
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Posts: 1030
Location: APPLETON, WI | Maybe this is off-topic... but how do you guys fish creepers? I've never had much confidence in these topwaters. Do they only work in very calm conditions? Is it just a slow, steady retrieve back to the boat? |
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Posts: 547
Location: Oshkosh | I also like the LeLure Creepers for the price.
Peter |
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Location: Twin Cities | PSYS - 7/30/2009 6:48 AM
Maybe this is off-topic... but how do you guys fish creepers? I've never had much confidence in these topwaters. Do they only work in very calm conditions? Is it just a slow, steady retrieve back to the boat?
Slow N steady for me, i've actually done well in wind with the louder one's. |
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| Tanner's Lil' creepers are about the best production creepers out there. Simple, time proven (didn't try to re invent the wheel), no non sense design... Better than some so called "custom" creepers I have seen out there.
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Posts: 32880
Location: Rhinelander, Wisconsin | BS Willy gets my vote too. |
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Posts: 425
| Steve, which BS Willy do you like, the Jointed or the regular? |
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Posts: 1030
Location: APPLETON, WI | Bleh. Is it true there isn't anymore BS Willy Creepers going around? A few different links I saw on Google indicate they aren't made anymore. |
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| nah he still make them jointed or straight
[email protected] |
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Posts: 32880
Location: Rhinelander, Wisconsin | I have both, and like both. The jointed model can be worked faster, I believe. |
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Posts: 1030
Location: APPLETON, WI | Are these lures only efficient and productive in very calm water/conditions? |
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Posts: 311
Location: Ontario | Buster's Wave Walker and Water Spider are pretty ridiculous too. The Wave Walker is just a big, goofy, loud, slow, ball of calories waiting to be digested. Musky Buster lures might be the most over-engineered lures I've seen. They are built beyond tough, excellent quality. I grabbed a jntd BS Willy off Demolished this spring and she'll get bitten too, very good and I agree about the wings, heavy duty.
Nobody has said it yet but if you have fish that want a slow, obnoxious crawl, take a 10" jntd Believer for a walk one night and see what you think. Old ones with no rattles work and so do the newer ones with a variety of rattles. |
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| jointed is better in the waves |
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Posts: 2361
| You can fish a good creeper at a pretty good rate, if the wings are good and creeper is good, you can nearly stay clear of the water. Just a little before dark, and on a dark day, both are good. Creepers get sold but not fished as much as they were in prior times. I personally am more likely to go to a hawg wobbler for the same task, and better hooking than a creeper. But if you get a creeper working good, stay with it, I wished I had more opportunity to fish them.
Sinking creepers aren't unusual if they are on the heavy side, they come down like a rock and go under water initially on the landing. You can either control the cast and the tragectory to lessen the sinking, give it a second to surface, or start your retrieve at a very slow rate allowing bouyancy to carry it back up to the surface as it moves. Another thing contributing to the creeper staying down is the wings being too close to 90 degrees from the body. They should forn an acute angle, I'm wildly guessing at about 55-60 degrees to the body side. This, and tilting the surface of the wing downward slightly will bring a creeper right up to the surface. Too close to 90 and too flat ,and you will have a bait that plows, and wants to stay under as you start retrieving, and it will also want to spin.
Currently I use a cheap hi fin, a Gutsch, and a Bauer Creeping Hawg(sort of smallish). The Gutsch is the best of the three, but it has to be tuned, and the wings become a little less rigid over time, and pulling it out of reeds, weeds etc. will generally detune it. I like the Bauer simply because it is more stable and easier to tune than the other two, sound is a little different, no big bloop bloop. There look to be some great creepers on the market these days. I would think some of the longer bodied baits would be very attractive and effective in rougher water. Day or night.
Edited by firstsixfeet 7/30/2009 9:08 PM
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Posts: 646
Location: In a shack in the woods | How do you figure 8 a follower with a creeper? I tried sticking it below the surface and the fish took off.
I had a chance to use that lee lures creeper tonight and really like it. It sounds like a xylophone in the water. |
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Posts: 1286
Location: WI | I just do an extended L-turn, or try and walk it around the boat. All the ones I've tried to fig 8 started spinning as soon as you took them subsurface.
Creepers are good for fish porposing, I've had a good number of strikes and follows in those situations. |
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Posts: 909
| Anyone have luck with the ones from Tacklebooty? (Krakens)
Brian |
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Posts: 727
| I have a Kraken and its been in the water alittle. I've had one fish nail it but the (non) hookup was my fault. It sounds pretty good in the water. |
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