It’s time to continues our look at customising your soft plastic lures with an examination of easy ways in which the size, profile, sink rates and actions of these great lures can be tweaked and manipulated via some simple cutting and shaping: In my last blog about customising soft plastics I explained that this is an avenue of tackle tinkering that too few anglers seem willing to explore. Many seem to assume that these lures must be used in exactly the form they were originally purchased in. Trust me, that’s certainly not the case! I theorized that this hands-off approach to tweaking plastics is most likely a hangover from our hard-bodied luring days. Beyond possibly upgrading some hooks and rings, very few anglers significantly modify their hard lures. But soft plastics are much easier to customise than hard lures, and doing so can produce some surprising results. The big secret is not to be afraid to give it a go! Last time round I focused on “blinging” your plastics by using various dyes and marker pens to alter or enhance their colours and patterns. This time I want to take customising one step further and actually get into playing with the shapes, sizes, profiles, sink rates and actions of our soft plastics. To do this, all you really need is a sense of adventure and a pair of sharp scissors. Making that first step of actually taking the scissors or craft blade to your plastic tails is perhaps the biggest leap of faith required to get into customizing soft plastics. After that, it gets much easier. TO READ THIS BLOG IN FULL & ACCESS OTHERS IN THE SERIES, GO TO “STARLO’S INNER CIRCLE” BY CLICKING...
Snag-Proof Your Soft Plastics!...
posted by Starlo
Rigging your Squidgies and other soft plastic lures “weedless” or “snag-proof” is much easier than many people seem to think! And once they’re rigged this way, it’s possible to cast these lures into places you could never otherwise reach or cover effectively without constantly snagging up your line and losing expensive tackle. Trust me, you’ll catch a lot more fish as a result of adding this little trick to your rigging repertoire. These days, at least 75 – 80% of the plastics I cast for barramundi and saratoga in northern Australian waters are rigged weedless/snag-proof. But these innovative rigging strategies go far beyond those species. The same approach works like a charm on any fish that favours hanging out in or around dense snag, rock or weed cover. Bream, bass, estuary perch, flathead, mangrove jack, fingermark, Murray cod, golden perch (yellowbelly) and even trout can all be targeted very effectively by “Texas-rigging” your softies on wide-gape worm hooks. The most important part of this rigging system is a wide-gaped worm hook, or a jig head or other delivery vehicle that incorporates a wide gape worm hook. These hooks may look a bit odd at first glance, but they work really well. Lots of companies now make this style of hook. Some good ones include Mustad, Owner, Gamakatsu, and VMC. One really interesting new addition to the wide gape worm hook field is the KVD Grip-Pin hook from Mustad. This clever hook incorporates a little pin that helps keep the head of the rigged plastic in place, preventing it from being too easily ripped free or scrunched down into the hook bend by a striking fish. Another very innovative presentation vehicle for this style of rigging is the TT Lures Snake Head. The best way to...