Color and Fishing-Part 1 Crankbaits Print E-mail
Monday, 30 January 2006 00:00

I am a firm believer that most bass lures are made to catch the bass fisherman and not the bass.  Bubba Bass does not notice the pretty patterns on all of those high dollar crankbaits; however in saying that, I have more than 230 crankbaits in my boat, on the counter, and in boxes in my closet.  Every color of the rainbow is included, and not just one of a particular color I have three to five different versions of the same bait. As far as plastics go, I know that watermelon with red flakes is on fire here at Buggs Island.  Looking at my plastics, I see shades of white, black, orange, and pink, not to mention shades and hues of green, red, and blue. As I pull out my (3) spinner bait boxes, I notice gold, nickel, copper, silver, and even a couple of painted blades in there.  Don’t even look at the 4th box that includes all of the extra skirts in 1000 different color combinations.

Where am I headed with this?

Does color matter to a bass fisherman?
---Oh, my Lord, absolutely YES.
Does color matter so much to a bass?
---AHHH, I’m not so sure

As I flip through my new Bass Times, there is an ad for Zoom plastics on the inside cover.  They offer 99 colors.   Lucky Craft has 11 colors just for the popular Sammy.  Bill Lewis has 54 colors for the Rat-L-Trap.  Gary Yamamoto has 57 colors available for his line of plastics.

Those are enough choices to make my head spin.

You can not convince me that bass can tell or see the difference between Green Pumpkin/Watermelon and Watermelon/Lemon.  As far as I am concerned technique and presentation far outweighs the color factor.

When I first started fishing tournaments I bet I carried more than 50 crankbaits in 20 different colors and patterns.  I had a hard time deciding what to throw and sticking to it.  As I look back at the last tournament season, I soon realized that I only used a handful of those crankbaits.  The other ones were just space eaters and added weight to my tournament bag.

After some serious thoughts and with a look back at my successes and failures on the water, I have cut down my crankbait selection to just a few colors.  I think crankbait colors should imitate two specific forages, shad and crawfish, so I rely on simple colors that mimic these two forages.  There are some fancy names for these colors so I will try to name them the way most will recognize them.  For most all of my crankbait fishing, I use Tennessee shad, silver, chartreuse/blue back, brown/orange combos.  Also, firetiger is a big crankbait color for me here on my home lake, Buggs Island.

I am not so convinced that bass get conditioned to a certain color either.  Last season, in one particular tournament, we were throwing a silver/blue back trap.  We had been catching fish all week on this bait, but on the day of the tournament our fish shut down.  So my partner made a switch to silver/black back traps and I changed depths and smoked him.  He continued to struggle even though he switched colors.

Day in and day out, green pumpkin is in every single tournament angler’s plastic bag.  Go ahead and look; I bet you it’s there.  It depends on who you ask about fish becoming conditioned to colors.  Some anglers scream, yes they get used to certain colors.  Some, like me, don’t agree that bass get used to certain colors.  With presentations like flipping and pitching, bass don’t have time to decide or analyze the color.  They hit out of reflex, anger, or hunger.  Re-action bite anyone?


Keith Redd (Reddman)
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Get The Net - The Fishing Net

10 pound bass

We only get to fish for bass on the days that our schedules allow. Rain or shine, wind or calm, the days we get are the days we have and we must make many adjustments in order to be productive on the water...

Bass and Wind

Share |

Get to know the staff

Ron "Fogy" Fogelson
I’ll be 42 this year and feel very blessed to have shared the last 17 of those years with my ...
Mike Noble
I am Mike Noble, a member of UltimateBass.com since it's inception. Born and raised in B...

Fishing and Outdoor Products

Fishing and Outdoor Products