Baby-E Swimbaits Winning Big Money On The Pro Trail
The Baby-E swimbait made by California Custom Worms is winning big money on the B.A.S.S. tour and the FLW. Art Berry recently took second place at Lake Toho with these baits.
(PRWEB) March 22, 2005 -- Lately every fishing magazine you pick up is
telling of the big fish that are being caught on big swimbaits and "Eagle
Swimbaits" are one of the main ones they're writing about.
The West is
being won with the new wave of large swimbaits, and are now moving to the East
Coast with the same results! These baits are great for cranking and bed fishing,
and this is a "BIG" bass bait.
They are unique, designed specifically for
the fisherman that pursues those big lunkers. Eagle Swimbaits are a popular and
proven highly effective soft bait, usable in nearly every type of fresh or
saltwater fishing. Eagle Swimbaits, with their variety of color and size, and
lifelike feel and movement, mimic nearly every baitfish imaginable, including
fresh water large and small minnows. The Eagle Swimbait comes in two sizes, The
9 inch and the Eagle Jr. 7 inch.
All of the baits used by today's top
pro's on the B.A.S.S. tour and the FLW tour are available at Delaware Tackle,
one of the fastest growing tackle stores in the northeast.
Ish Monroe has
been using the Baby-E swimbait for sometime now, and bringing in big sacks of
bass with them. He is on the Pro Staff of California Custom Worms, and you can
hear Ish Monroe, Jay Yelas, and other top anglers today, talk about these baits
and others at www.anglersradio.com and at the parent site, Delaware Tackle
at www.delawaretackle.com
California pro Art Berry made a
big move on day two in the FLW, and climbed from 39th to 9th on the strength of
his cow-spotting skills and frog bite.
In practice, he said he looked
for hard-bottom areas. "My main strategy in practice was looking for cows," he
said. "Wherever there was cows in the water, the bottom was hard."
(Editor's note: BassFan published a story Friday with Brent Ehrler about
the cow pattern. Ehrler is Berry's roommate. Berry said he divulged the pattern
to Ehrler).
Berry found that a local plant, called arrowhead grass, grew
in the hard-bottom areas and the bass used the stalks to spawn.
"I was
catching them on a Zoom Horny Toad, but I did something else that I think was
really effective," he said. "A lot of the fish were missing the Toads – maybe
because they were on beds or guarding fry. Whenever a fish blew up and missed
the Toad, I cast back to it with a Reaction Innovations Swamp Donkey. With that
method I caught over 80 percent of the fish I missed. "All of my bites came
within a foot of an arrowhead plant."
He carried that exact strategy
into the tournament and spent all of days 1 and 2 on Kissimmee. But on day 3 –
after the cold front – his spots got blown out.
"On day 3 my spots were
chocolate mud. I came back to Toho and caught a few, then fished Toho all day on
day 4."
He changed his gameplan on day 4. Instead of targeting
arrowheads, he fished a small canal –"barely wider than (his) boat" – that he
found on day 3. He caught one small keeper in the canal, then moved out to a
large flat in front of it. "I told myself I'd just make hundreds of casts with
the spinnerbait. The water was real cold, it was real windy, the conditions were
poor, but I caught one about 3 1/2 pounds.
"I was really excited about
that and kept going and going. It was about 20 or 30 minutes before weigh-in and
I had eight rods on my deck. I was throwing all kinds of stuff. But I had one
rod in my rod locker with a swimbait tied on. "Something told me, 'Art, try it.'
And I'm not kidding, on my second cast I caught my biggest fish of the day on a
Baby "E" swimbait. It was a 4-pounder and I caught it on the Baby "E." "That
made me think I should've picked it up hours earlier. I thought, man, I could've
been throwing this thing for hours."
"I took a trailer-hook keeper,
which is a little ball you get with trailer hooks, and slid that over the
hookpoint and all the way up the hook until is was next to the bait. That kept
the Toad on much better.
"I had a great practice. I practiced hard every
day. I was embarrassed by how I did at Okeechobee. I had bad luck, tied the
wrong knots – I was really disappointed. So I just really, really practiced hard
and found that arrowhead pattern."
If you want a high quality,
handpoured swimbait, that has proven itself many times over in all waters from
California to Delaware, then the Baby "E" is what you are looking
for.
Delaware Tackle is "Serious Tackle For Serious Anglers"
www.delawaretackle.com
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/3/prweb220193.htm
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