Super User deaknh03 Posted December 3, 2010 Super User Posted December 3, 2010 Mepps inline spinner and a daredevil Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted December 3, 2010 Global Moderator Posted December 3, 2010 Roadrunner, when you have to fish to eat you have to fish a bait that will catch anything! Quote
OH-bass614 Posted December 4, 2010 Posted December 4, 2010 a fire tiger bomber flat A crankbait on my first cast i hooked up with one. i can still remember how proud i was that i caught the first fish of the day and my dad taking the treble hooks out then saying good job little man. Quote
Super User Crestliner2008 Posted December 4, 2010 Super User Posted December 4, 2010 1/4 oz. Daredevle, red/white with copper bottom. Back in the late 50's. Quote
TrippyJai Posted December 4, 2010 Posted December 4, 2010 My first was a Mister Twister Grub on a plain lead jig head. Caught some huge bass and pike on it. Quote
Super User bilgerat Posted December 4, 2010 Super User Posted December 4, 2010 My first was a Mister Twister Grub on a plain lead jig head. Caught some huge bass and pike on it. A bait that should be in everyone's tacklebox. Quote
bass or bass ? Posted December 4, 2010 Posted December 4, 2010 Mine was (and I still have it and use it) a white and black frog pattern Jitterbug. Quote
tnbassfisher Posted December 4, 2010 Posted December 4, 2010 My first lure used was a 1/4oz. rooster tail spinner and caught a nice smallmouth on it......haven't stopped fishing since!!!!! Also my first artificial lure. I guess it was the 1/4 oz. size even though I don't remember the details. It came creek fishing. Quote
Super User islandbass Posted December 4, 2010 Super User Posted December 4, 2010 I think it was a floating rapala minnow (size 5) for bass a dardevle eppinger spoon, also red and white for trout. Quote
Super User slonezp Posted December 4, 2010 Super User Posted December 4, 2010 Blue Fox Vibrax. Don't believe I ever caught a bass on one but used to do well on pike. Quote
bweave09 Posted December 4, 2010 Posted December 4, 2010 yellow zoom trick worm on a red saltwater jighead....YIKES Quote
SeanW Posted December 4, 2010 Posted December 4, 2010 For bass fishing it would be a Big O crank bait. For all fishing it would be a panther martin spinner in bumble bee. Quote
Super User Wayne P. Posted December 4, 2010 Super User Posted December 4, 2010 A frog color Jitterbug around 1950. Quote
River Rat316 Posted December 4, 2010 Posted December 4, 2010 Black and white daredevil... used to cast those things for hours in a river by my mom and dads house. Every day in the summer me and my friends would ride bike down to the river and cast daredevils, inline spinners, and spinnerbaits for toothy critters! The first for bass fishing was a 3 or 4" grub on a 1/4 oz jig head fishing the Mississippi for smallies. Lazy ikes were always good to, still have a couple of those! Quote
VABassin'14 Posted December 5, 2010 Posted December 5, 2010 My first was a Mister Twister Grub on a plain lead jig head. Caught some huge bass and pike on it. A bait that should be in everyone's tacklebox. Very true. When i was a young kid, this was one of the very few lures that my dad, brother, and I used when fishing a small private pond. Another was a black and yellow Roadrunner. One of those two was my first artificial lure. Quote
RyneB Posted December 6, 2010 Posted December 6, 2010 I found a silver and blue Ratl Trap on the river bank when i was a kid. I basically just used a nightcrawler on the bottom for carp or catfish. I had my dad tie it on and a few casts later i caught a small white bass. I ended up snagging it a few trips later. Quote
SharkHat Posted December 6, 2010 Posted December 6, 2010 An old beat up jitterbug out of my Grandpa's tacklebox. It was the only lure in his tacklebox, everything else was homemade lead weights, hooks, and stinkbait. Quote
WdyCrankbait Posted December 6, 2010 Posted December 6, 2010 A good ole' Rooster tail. Cheap and reliable! Quote
Super User A-Jay Posted December 6, 2010 Super User Posted December 6, 2010 Luhr-Jensen Super Duper ~ In the world of fishing, if there ever was an "America's Lure" it may very well be the Super Duper. Its unconventional "U" shaped design catches water and creates a swimming action game fish find irresistible. That's from their website ~ A-Jay Quote
NateFollmer Posted December 6, 2010 Posted December 6, 2010 When I was little, I only ever used white, yellow or black rooster tails. They always worked! I then upgraded to only rooster tails and torpedos... Now, I hardly ever throw either of these baits. Quote
Lcomfort Posted December 6, 2010 Posted December 6, 2010 I was about 8 years old, and Dad rigged me up a Black shad Culprit worm. that was the first lure I ever fished we caught about 8-10 bass that day and I have been hooked ever since. It has turned in to a 250-275 days a year passion! Quote
Super User Goose52 Posted December 6, 2010 Super User Posted December 6, 2010 Luhr-Jensen Super Duper ~ In the world of fishing, if there ever was an "America's Lure" it may very well be the Super Duper. Its unconventional "U" shaped design catches water and creates a swimming action game fish find irresistible.That's from their website ~ A-Jay A-Jay - this is from my tackle box... Quote
Super User RoLo Posted December 16, 2010 Super User Posted December 16, 2010 To my best recollection, my first artificial lure was an in-line spinner fitted with an Indiana blade by Hildebrandt to which I attached a fly. The fly I used was one of my wet trout flies such as the royal coachman, blue dunn, black gnat or light and dark cahills. Jason Lucas was the Buck Perry of the 40s and 50s, and Jason referred to the spinner/fly combination as a "Cockatoush", a term that has long since vanished from the angling vocabulary. In New Jersey, the cockatoush usually caught more chain pickerel than largemouth and smallmouth bass combined. In addition to the cockatoush, other outstanding lures that stole the limelight, were the Johnson weedless spoon, Helin Flatfish, Heddon River Runt, Creek Chub Pikie Mnnow, Rapala Original floater (1936), and the Zaragoosa Minnow (1922). Among my favorite artifical plugs was the "Heddon Sonic", the forerunner of today's lipless crank Roger Quote
Super User Goose52 Posted December 16, 2010 Super User Posted December 16, 2010 Roger - you mentioned some of these (although that's a SuperSonic in the photo, not the original Sonic). These are all baits that I had in my tackle box in the 60s. Come the spring, I'm going to get them all out, sharpen the hooks, and catch at least one fish on each one - then they're going to be retired to a curio cabinet in the house. They have more sentimental value now than fishing value... Quote
Super User Bankbeater Posted December 16, 2010 Super User Posted December 16, 2010 I can't remember the first lure that I used, but the first lure that I caught a fish on was a Big-O. Quote
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