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| Anyone else have the same problem I do. Seem's like you always gravitate towards the same bait color when you get to the musky section in the store.
My box contains an awful lot of flourescent colors. Lots of flo orange, flo green, firetiger and orange firetigers. I actually have to make a concious effort to buy more natural colors when I pick out a bait. I have even gone to the extent that I will sometimes send the wife or kids to the musky section. I tell them what bait and then let them pick out the colors. I get a litte variety that way.
Good Luck and Be Safe,
Scott |
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| Bright colors are always the best sellers. They standout on the store shelf, and people like to see there baits work. With dark natural colors you dont get that very often.
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| I don`t let color bother me anymore cause lately i have been catching fish in very stained water on the baits that are supposed to work in clear-water.Weather,pressuer,algae,I dont know??But I ain`t complaining.Heading to the U-per tonight and will use all my dark-water baits on clear-water,will let you know in a couple days.Jeff
P.S-I never,ever let the wife buy my musky tackle,bad mojo!![:devil:] |
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| Hi Guy's, Letting my wife buy my
muskie tackle?........Scarry!
I also fish mostly stained water so I also find myself buying alot of the same colors. I just keep a few of the naturals in my box just in case.[:bigsmile:] |
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| Wow, I have just the opposite problem. When I was a kid threw alot of rapalas in silver/black and gold/black. Seemed like most baits back then were of this variety. I always gravitate to the natural colors and they are my confidence colors. It's what I catch most of my fish on even in murky water. Even on my murky bass lake I notice I catch more bass on a silver/black crank then I would a firetiger and the lake has less than a foot of visibility. I always seem to do better with natural colors. |
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