Birdman2136 Posted July 19, 2018 Posted July 19, 2018 Today I was asked by a co-worker to put a list of lures together where he could spend 100 bucks on lures and get started bass fishing. This is the list I put together, but it made me think what everyone here would recommend to someone if they asked you the same question. Yum Dinger w/ 1/0 EWG hook for wacky rigging Rebel Pop-R 1/4 Bitsy Flip Jig w/ Craw trailer Suicide Shad w/ swim jig head I'm not a brand specific guy so I went with affordable lures that I feel would help anyone catch some fish. Quote
mattkenzer Posted July 19, 2018 Posted July 19, 2018 I don't see anything that wouldn't catch em ...... I can only assume that this list has your experience in it ..... we are all a little different. Quote
Super User Choporoz Posted July 19, 2018 Super User Posted July 19, 2018 Sounds like a fun, but daunting task. My lazy side might just split this with him: http://www.pondking.com/product/complete-bass-fishing-kit/ Quote
bhoff Posted July 19, 2018 Posted July 19, 2018 If I was personally tasked with doing something like this I would try and cover as many types of fishing as I could. Meaning, have some moving baits, topwater, bottom contact, hardbaits etc. So for me it would be something like this. 1x Squarebill Crankbait 1x Topwater Hardbait or buzzbait 1x Pack of straight tail worms 2x jigs in applicable colors 1x Pack of jig trailers 1x Pack of creature baits Hooks/weights to go with the various rigs that I'm guessing he would need to learn. At least with something like this he would be able to figure out what type of fishing he prefers fairly quickly without much of a monetary investment in any one particular method. It would also kind of depend on where he plans on fishing as to how effective certain presentations would be. 2 Quote
EGbassing Posted July 19, 2018 Posted July 19, 2018 1. Spinnerbait 2. Various texas rig baits (most important) 3. Flipping jig 4. Walking bait 5. Crankbait 6. Lipless crankbait Those are some of the most effective lures. If he has a ML or M power rod, something like a ned rig, or dropshot would be better, but with a MH the lures listed above would be best. 1 Quote
SlappinKraken Posted July 19, 2018 Posted July 19, 2018 I'd have him buy some senkos and terminal tackle for wacky and Texas rigs and only fish that until he gained skill and confidence. Then he can expand from that later in the year with other presentations. 1 Quote
Terry_ Posted July 20, 2018 Posted July 20, 2018 5 hours ago, SlappinKraken said: I'd have him buy some senkos and terminal tackle for wacky and Texas rigs and only fish that until he gained skill and confidence. Then he can expand from that later in the year with other presentations. X2...all the other ideas are great, but this suggestion will save you some monies and help you to gain some invaluable experience. Keep reading and continue practicing. Take time to enjoy catching a few fish and gaining confidence in one technique before you introduce yourself to the bait monkey. Quote
Glaucus Posted July 20, 2018 Posted July 20, 2018 I can't list colors because that all depends on your location and water clarity. 2x 3/8oz Strike King Spinnerbaits 2x KVD 1.5 Squarebill Crankbaits 1x 1/4oz Rat-L-Trap 1x 1/2oz Rat-L-Trap 1x Pack of Zoom Original Trick Worms 1x Pack of 7in. Berkley Power Worms 1x Pack of 4in Senkos 1x Pack of 5in Senkos 1x Whopper Plopper 110 1x 3/8oz Strike King Buzzbait 1x Pack of 2/0 Gammy EWG Hooks 1x Pack of 3/0 Gammy EWG Hooks 1x Pack of 1/0 Gammy Octopus Circle Hooks 1x Pack of 1/8oz Bullet Weights 1x Pack of 1/4oz Bullet Weights Right around $100 after taxes. Great way to start. This is what I would do. 2 Quote
Glaucus Posted July 20, 2018 Posted July 20, 2018 In addition, I would definitely pass on Jigs, Swimbaits, and Frogs at this stage. Jigs and Frogs especially take experience, and they can be frustrating if you don't know what you're doing - even if you do know what you're doing. Quote
Super User soflabasser Posted July 21, 2018 Super User Posted July 21, 2018 Welcome to the forum Quote
Birdman2136 Posted July 23, 2018 Author Posted July 23, 2018 Thanks for the input guys, I actually decided to direct him to RoadWarrior's famous post about catching bass. That is where I started so hopefully it will help his as well. Quote
thinkingredneck Posted July 24, 2018 Posted July 24, 2018 On Friday, July 20, 2018 at 12:03 PM, Glaucus said: In addition, I would definitely pass on Jigs, Swimbaits, and Frogs at this stage. Jigs and Frogs especially take experience, and they can be frustrating if you don't know what you're doing - even if you do know what you're doing. I would agree. A few plastics such as senkos and trick worms or 6 inch worms. I think ewg hooks are easier to learn on,. And a weight assortment. A couple spinner baits, a popper, Rattle trap, square bill. If you are gonna include a jig, maybe a bitsy bug. You might do better to downsize at first, which should get more bites. You can always go with a Ned rig. I like the pond king kits that was mentioned by Choporoz. May be confising to him, though. 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.