MichaelJ7 Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 I have several different frogs that I fish around pads. I have spro, ribbit, and hard nosed. I was just wondering what everyone else's favorite frogs were to throw. And if it's a style like the spro frog do you like the origional style or the popper front style? Quote
ColdSVT Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 Right now i have a live target, ribbit, and rage toads Gonna grap some pad crashers soon...i need some dark bottomed frogs....lost one and tore one bad last year Quote
War Eagle 44 Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 Hollow body - Spro & River2Sea Toads - Gambler Cane Toad & Rage Toads I prefer the original over the popping but there is certainly a time and place for the poppers. Quote
long island basser Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 I fish spro , boo yah and live target they all work well IMO. I have the regular and popping versions which both work . Experiment and let the bass tell you which they prefer on a particular day. Quote
Super User aavery2 Posted May 22, 2014 Super User Posted May 22, 2014 Jackall Iobee frog, walks like a champ. Quote
Getfit74 Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 Booyah Pad Crashers, I use both the regular and popin versions. Quote
OntarioFishingGuy Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 Livetargets and Evolve for hollow body, rage tail for soft plastic Quote
MichaelJ7 Posted May 23, 2014 Author Posted May 23, 2014 Those live target frogs look great. What colors do you all prefer? Green/yellow? Quote
MichaelJ7 Posted May 23, 2014 Author Posted May 23, 2014 Also what size? 5/8 or 3/4? I'm not sure what size all my spro frogs are... Quote
LMB KING Posted May 23, 2014 Posted May 23, 2014 Color depends on the clarity of the water, fro example, clear water = lighter colors, dirty water = darker colors. And weight also depends on the type of water, for example, light frogs for very shallow water and small ponds and heavy frogs for deeper, heavy vegetation and big open lakes, as its better for casting and heavier is bigger so in big water, it has a larger profile. Quote
MichaelJ7 Posted May 23, 2014 Author Posted May 23, 2014 Well the lakes I fish are eithe crystal clear, or chocolate milk muddy. The main Lilly pad/ matted vegetation lakes are muddy water though Quote
Basseditor Posted May 23, 2014 Posted May 23, 2014 Paycheck transporter. http://www.paycheckbaits.com/the-transporter.html Quote
LMB KING Posted May 23, 2014 Posted May 23, 2014 For versatility get a natural color like Green or Brown. Quote
Super User tcbass Posted May 23, 2014 Super User Posted May 23, 2014 Hollow Body: I've had some success with hollow bodies but not much. I did catch some nice ones on a Scumfrog Bigfoot and Spro Poppin' frog. I also have 2 Live Targets and a Booyah and never thrown them. Solid Body: I love Ragetail Toads and have caught a ton of bass on them. Because of this I guess I forget to use my hollow body frogs. I also have tried a Stanley Ribbit frog with no success. Quote
MichaelJ7 Posted May 23, 2014 Author Posted May 23, 2014 We'll I think I have limited it down. Like I said before I have several spro frogs and I will continue to use them but now I am torn between the live target and the booyah. Never been much of a booyah fan but the frogs look good, have good reviews and are almost half the price Quote
KYBassin' Posted May 23, 2014 Posted May 23, 2014 I still love my old neon green Strike King frog with the trailer hook. Has outperformed any other frog I have tried and much better hook up rate. Usually have to keep it away from herons too. Quote
Super User Master Bait'r Posted May 23, 2014 Super User Posted May 23, 2014 Kopper's live target has the best (most realistic) patterns IMO, and is available in 3 sizes instead of 2. I like this because it lets me be as inappropriate as I want- throwing frogs when it would otherwise be totally uncalled for if I didn't have a 45 to use- and big'uns still smash them too! I can't even tell you how many times I've caught big fish on the little guys when the bigger ones weren't getting so much as a look. As for soft plastics, T-rigged horny toads and Lunker City Salad Spoons are about as good as it gets IMO. Predictable, simple, cheap and completely weedless. I don't really do hard body frogs. Don't like them. Open trebles are the last thing I will reach for in heavy cover situations when I'm thinking frogs. If it isn't weedless, I generally don't throw it anywhere near cover- there's better alternatives IMO. The key will be finding the right balance between what you want to throw, what you're most comfortable with the action of and what works for your wallet. Only you can find that comfort zone though and it's different for everyone! Quote
frogflogger Posted May 23, 2014 Posted May 23, 2014 You all are probably tired of my frog posts but if you aren't trying the furbit when there is a bit of wind you are short changing yourself. They are somewhat fragile but with tye wraps and super glue they'll catch a dozen or so bass - I've had over 20 on one bait. I fish every frog that comes out and they all catch fish - I don't know if the swamp donkey is still in production but it, the furbit, and a snag proof tweetie have accounted for hundreds of bass over 5lbs for me and dozens over 7lbs. Toad fishing, I use the horny toad, case plastics toad, and the manns hard nose when water is calm - when a bit of wind the gambler cane toad, ribbit and toads of that ilk come into play.. As for colors I'll go for pretty new patterns but know all you really need is black ones and white ones 99.9% of the time. For me frog fishing is somewhat akin to big swimbait tossing - you gotta believe! Quote
Super User iceintheveins Posted May 24, 2014 Super User Posted May 24, 2014 Koppers LT 55T, especially in green yellow and emerald frog colors. Black is good too. Quote
grumpydog Posted May 29, 2014 Posted May 29, 2014 Ribbit hollow body top toads. Baby bass color, or white and dip the legs chartrues(sp?). They can be buzzed or floated, and inexpensive enuf that I dont worry about tearing them up. Quote
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