Super User Columbia Craw Posted June 8, 2020 Super User Posted June 8, 2020 I fished a club event Saturday on a smallmouth highland reservoir with very clear water. The two top teams fished the same general area and the same lure. Their weights were near identical. The winners fished a goby/sculpin colored Ned rig. That made sense. The other team fished the Ned rig as well but their color choice was bubble gum. It would seem the profile and action or retrieve was much more critical than color. If someone had suggested bubble gum to me I would have scoffed. I love this sport. 6 Quote
Super User fishballer06 Posted June 8, 2020 Super User Posted June 8, 2020 When they're biting, they're biting. 1 Quote
Super User RoLo Posted June 8, 2020 Super User Posted June 8, 2020 Let the record show, there is no hard evidence on file, that color alone can impact fishing success. RIGHT GUYS? tap-tap! tap-tap-tap! HMPH, seems like my phone went dead 2 1 Quote
Born 2 fish Posted June 8, 2020 Posted June 8, 2020 All the fancy colors are made to catch us buyers. Not fish lol 1 Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted June 9, 2020 Global Moderator Posted June 9, 2020 When I'm guiding, I like to throw a Bubble Gum or White Lightning colored TRD. They're nontraditional colors but I always get fish to eat them and some days they're more productive than the standard colors. I've seen days when the color of the flake in a worm made a difference, more often than not though, put the right profile bait in the right spot with the right presentation and the color matters very little. 3 Quote
Captain Phil Posted June 9, 2020 Posted June 9, 2020 Pink floating worms were hot in Florida about 20 years ago. Merthiolate (hot orange) was too. I've caught bass on every color worm imaginable. A color gets "hot" because someone starts catching bass on it and tells his buddies. This flows through the grape vine until everyone is throwing the hot color and it quits working. Years ago when multicolored worms came out, they were all the rage. Anyone remember Pace or Fleck worms? Worm color isn't nearly as important as size and shape. Quote
Jaderose Posted June 9, 2020 Posted June 9, 2020 Bubblegum holds a slot in my Senko box. When the water clarity is good but not great and they don't seem to be interested in darker colors, I'll put on a Bubblegum. That usually does the trick. Quote
Todd2 Posted June 9, 2020 Posted June 9, 2020 About 3 weeks ago, I made a post on here about color not mattering that day. This past Sunday, the bite was slow and I switched to a crankbait I found floating in the lake. The bite turned on. I caught the biggest of the day on it plus a bunch of little ones. So I had to scour the internet to find what it even was. I'll probably grab a couple more of that color. So yes, sometimes it does seem to matter..I think..lol Quote
Jermination Posted June 9, 2020 Posted June 9, 2020 i think color makes a bigger difference in fishing something that sinks opposed to cranking something in. I know a few of the lakes around here green pumpkin w red flake will outfish regular green pumpkin 4-1. chart/black, chart/blue, sexy shad, & red are really the only important colors for crankbaits IMO Quote
Black Hawk Basser Posted June 9, 2020 Posted June 9, 2020 When they're biting, it doesn't matter what you're using. When they're not biting, it doesn't matter what you're using. ? 2 Quote
Cdn Angler Posted June 9, 2020 Posted June 9, 2020 I've fished the same lake all spring for pike and both bass/pike/crappie have hit virtually every keitech colour i could find: purple, blue/yellow, white, red&black, green, emerald shiner etc. On jigheads that matched well, or not at all. Didn't seem to matter. These were "high confidence" situations, but still. Quote
Super User Bankbeater Posted June 9, 2020 Super User Posted June 9, 2020 I think that when the bass fishing is dependent on color there is more going on than just the color of the bait. Quote
camman Posted June 9, 2020 Posted June 9, 2020 I agree 90% of the time color doesn't seem to really matter. My buddy and I fish and our favorite go to colors are different. His is Black/Blue and mine is Watermelon red/black flake when it comes to Senkos. 90% of the time we may end the day 1 or 2 fish difference. A few days a year one or the other color absolutely starts to crush the other color so we will switch. 1 Quote
Revival Posted June 10, 2020 Posted June 10, 2020 11 hours ago, Todd2 said: About 3 weeks ago, I made a post on here about color not mattering that day. This past Sunday, the bite was slow and I switched to a crankbait I found floating in the lake. The bite turned on. I caught the biggest of the day on it plus a bunch of little ones. So I had to scour the internet to find what it even was. I'll probably grab a couple more of that color. So yes, sometimes it does seem to matter..I think..lol Out of curiosity, what crank and color was it? Quote
Todd2 Posted June 10, 2020 Posted June 10, 2020 1 hour ago, Revival said: Out of curiosity, what crank and color was it? Bandit 200 Viral Perch.....the name is fitting for the times 1 Quote
TriStateBassin106 Posted June 10, 2020 Posted June 10, 2020 Color doesn't matter, fish location and visibility does. Match the hatch but also make the bait somewhat visible. I've caught fish on black and blue and watermelon red on the same outing. They don't care what color it is lmao. Quote
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