BareHook Posted April 21, 2016 Posted April 21, 2016 The other day I was shopping for a frog and trying to decide what color to get and I noticed something that all topwater lures seem to have in common. From the fishes point of view they are pretty much all the same color on the bottom. The frogs ranged from white to yellow. Does it even matter what color the top of a frog or topwater lure is? They look great, but the fish is not seeing them from above Ken Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted April 21, 2016 Super User Posted April 21, 2016 Probably not, but we still have our favorites! Quote
Super User buzzed bait Posted April 21, 2016 Super User Posted April 21, 2016 most of my topwaters are one of two colors.... white or black 2 Quote
onetime Posted April 21, 2016 Posted April 21, 2016 I use black, white, and natural frog, if fishing crystal clear water it may make a difference what the top looks like, but most likely it won't. Quote
Super User Raul Posted April 21, 2016 Super User Posted April 21, 2016 I don´t care if the fish sees the lure, I care about I being able to see it, no wonder why all my topwater lures have highly visible colors. Quote
0119 Posted April 21, 2016 Posted April 21, 2016 No matter what kind of topwater I'm using, an orange belly always out performs others. My waters are stuffed with Mayan Cichlid's that look like their bellies are on fire. I believe in matching the hatch, or at least that it helps. No expert documentation, just personal experience. As always using what you have the most confidence in, trumps everything. Quote
Super User the reel ess Posted April 21, 2016 Super User Posted April 21, 2016 I have a black frog and the rest are natural frog patterns or at least a shade of green. If the bass is looking up at a frog or if it's a low light time, it'll see a silhouette. But if it's open water, a good bit of the frog hangs in the water. Honestly, when's the last time you saw a frog walking across the surface in a place with bass? That's suicidal. A toad will swim on top to land, but I imagine it's rare for a toad to cross a pond by choice. But then I catch bass on hard bait topwaters in frog patterns. It's universal. I guess I don't believe that the bass is thinking "FROG" when it sees one. It's just thinking "there's something in my domain and I am honor-bound to murder it." And as long as it looks like it kinda belongs, he's good-to-go. So, from that POV, it could be a bumblebee, bird or cicada-colored frog and they'd still kill it. All that said, I buy frog colors. 1 Quote
Super User J Francho Posted April 21, 2016 Super User Posted April 21, 2016 I like a frog that I can see easily at a distance. I've even put pink dot stickers on the back, just so I can see it better. Really big bass tend to slurp a frog, and it can be subtle. Can't see your frog? Set the hook! 5 Quote
Super User the reel ess Posted April 21, 2016 Super User Posted April 21, 2016 2 minutes ago, J Francho said: I like a frog that I can see easily at a distance. I've even put pink dot stickers on the back, just so I can see it better. Really big bass tend to slurp a frog, and it can be subtle. Can't see your frog? Set the hook! But beware, if it's on top it will come at you like a missile. 1 Quote
Super User J Francho Posted April 21, 2016 Super User Posted April 21, 2016 If I can't see it, it's not on top, lol. That's the point of the bright dot. 3 Quote
blckshirt98 Posted April 21, 2016 Posted April 21, 2016 Profile and movement/action are the main things that will draw a fish to a topwater bait. Like the reel ess said from underwater a fish will just see a silhouette. Maybe in crystal clear water a dark vs light belly will make a different but for the most part it's the bait profile and the movement/action that will get the fish to strike. Quote
wiel0059 Posted April 22, 2016 Posted April 22, 2016 As others have mentioned, almost certainly no, the top color doesn't matter. Same with spooks. BUT, as anglers its fun to have pretty looking lures . I'm with others, if I had just straight white and straight black (and perhaps a green shade in the middle) for frogs I can pretty much guarantee I'd do just as good as I do with having 20 colors in the box now, since pretty much every one has a black or white bottom anyways. Quote
Super User Bankbeater Posted April 22, 2016 Super User Posted April 22, 2016 My two best colors are white and chrome. 1 Quote
Super User scaleface Posted April 22, 2016 Super User Posted April 22, 2016 I really like the chrome flash on top water baits like a Spook and Pop R . Or the silver flash in the Bomber Long A Minnow . Quote
Super User Gundog Posted April 22, 2016 Super User Posted April 22, 2016 Light or dark is pretty much it. Dark on cloudy, dark days and at night. Light colors during the sunny days. I know topwaters come in many colors but none of that matters. All that matters is what the fish see. Quote
Dye99 Posted April 24, 2016 Posted April 24, 2016 I try to match the bait fish or frogs already found in the area. 1 Quote
BassThumb Posted April 24, 2016 Posted April 24, 2016 On April 21, 2016 at 0:25 PM, the reel ess said: But beware, if it's on top it will come at you like a missile. I call them "frog-rockets", and I've bounced more than a few off my body and my boat! 1 Quote
ErikmonBillsfon Posted April 26, 2016 Posted April 26, 2016 I really want a dark brown belly frog or a crazy change up like a junebug. I have two packs of rare Stanley ribbit I use for white cloudy days. A black and blue ribbit and a chili junebug color (purple w green flk). I really want a live target mouse that is solid grey or solid brown yet all of their bellies are white which I feel is good against blue sky but not overcast white sky. Quote
MDBowHunter Posted April 26, 2016 Posted April 26, 2016 One more for black and white, all the other colors are there to try and make you think you need all of them for different situations. Thus selling more lures which means mo money mo money. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.