Crowcommander Posted April 22, 2011 Posted April 22, 2011 Is there a rule of thumb for Spinnerbait color of blades at night? I've just started fishing at night and with so many choices(copper,gold,black nickel,silver).It gets confusing and costly to buy all of them.Any help appreciated.Crowcommander Quote
Super User Jigfishn10 Posted April 22, 2011 Super User Posted April 22, 2011 I personally don't think it matters other than the sound the blade makes. Conventional wisdom says colorado's in a gold finish would be the rule of thumb there, to answer your question. For me, it doesnt matter on blade style. Crawfish roam a lot at night and I've had great success with a jig and chunk trailer....pretty silent. I'll give them anything in a dark colored skirt spinnerbait, to keep on topic. Nickel blades are great on a full moon (brighter skies) and darker colored blades on a new moon (darker skies). Pick for the moon in between. JMHO Keep it simple to start with. Dark blades for low light conditions and bright blades for high light conditions. Streamlined blades (Willow) = less thump and vibration, while wider blades (colorado) = more thump and vibration. Quote
Super User Hooligan Posted April 23, 2011 Super User Posted April 23, 2011 I personally don't think it matters other than the sound the blade makes. Conventional wisdom says colorado's in a gold finish would be the rule of thumb there, to answer your question. For me, it doesnt matter on blade style. Crawfish roam a lot at night and I've had great success with a jig and chunk trailer....pretty silent. I'll give them anything in a dark colored skirt spinnerbait, to keep on topic. Nickel blades are great on a full moon (brighter skies) and darker colored blades on a new moon (darker skies). Pick for the moon in between. JMHO Keep it simple to start with. Dark blades for low light conditions and bright blades for high light conditions. Streamlined blades (Willow) = less thump and vibration, while wider blades (colorado) = more thump and vibration. I don't buy into the blade colors at night, or bait colors at night. I can count the number of fish I've caught on a "night" spinnerbait on one hand versus the many thousands I've caught on the same I use during the day. Quote
Super User clayton86 Posted April 23, 2011 Super User Posted April 23, 2011 Just throw a buzzbait at night blk to be exact u can even let sink and retrieve it dead slow so its like a super thumpy spinner. That's my go to for night fishing bass Quote
B-Dozer Posted April 23, 2011 Posted April 23, 2011 Just throw a buzzbait at night blk to be exact u can even let sink and retrieve it dead slow so its like a super thumpy spinner. That's my go to for night fishing bass I never tried that, but it sounds like a good idea Quote
Robert William Osler Posted April 23, 2011 Posted April 23, 2011 i always get request for black blades on night spinnerbaits because a company out there said it should be black. well i don't think they should be black as i always catch on any color blade. just make sure to use a #5, #6 or #7 blade the bigger the better. a very slow buzz bait you can't go wrong. Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted April 23, 2011 Global Moderator Posted April 23, 2011 I don't think the color of the blade makes a big difference but I do have a preference towards a big single colorado blade at night to give off extra thump. In super clear or pressured waters I could see the potential for a willowleaf blade to outfish a colorado though. I've had more luck with a black or dark colored spinnerbait at night but I've also done very well with a plain white bait on dark sky nights when there is no light to sillouete a black bait. Quote
Super User Catt Posted April 23, 2011 Super User Posted April 23, 2011 I have been night fishing for close to 40 years and despite popular beliefs bass do not morph into new creatures after the sun sets. Fish the same baits, same locations, and same techniques you would during the day. The only thing different I add to my repertoire at night is a Q-Beam! My favorite color spinner bait at night is a ½ oz double gold willow leaf, white skirt and white trailer; this imitates shad which is the predominate prey species. Red is my #2 choice and I almost never use a Colorado blade. The reason I prefer a willow leaf over a Colorado is because I throw Stanley Wedge Spinner baits and their wedge shaped blade gives off more vibration than any Colorado blade. Another plus for the willow leaf blade is it comes through vegetation cleaner. Quote
Triton21 Posted April 23, 2011 Posted April 23, 2011 Just throw a buzzbait at night blk to be exact u can even let sink and retrieve it dead slow so its like a super thumpy spinner. That's my go to for night fishing bass Black Buzzbait is my night bait. Sometimes I make 50 casts to target. Repeated casts of a buzzbait to same area aggravate the fish into biting. This is also true during the day. Kelley Quote
agssebvtsece Posted April 24, 2011 Posted April 24, 2011 Black always at night. Colorado blade and black is what I use. Quote
backwater4 Posted April 25, 2011 Posted April 25, 2011 Fish the same baits and colors as during the day. My go to baits at night are an all white buzzbait, blade and skirt and a Nichols Pulsator spinnerbait in white gold color. I do well with dark colored plastics though. Quote
lynyrdsky1 Posted April 25, 2011 Posted April 25, 2011 K.I.S.S. : Keep It Simple Stupid. Black spinnerbait with a single colorado blade and hold on. I don't think you even need a trailer. Black Buzzbait would work perfectly too. Quote
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