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KICKTAIL RECEIVES VOTES FOR BEST FISH LURE
By Ken Liebeskind
Yalesville, Connecticut
What's the Best Fish Lure? One angler thinks plastic worms are the Best Fish Lure because they come in a variety of sizes and shapes, can be Carolina and Texas rigged and work well for largemouth bass. Another angler votes for crank baits as the Best Fish Lure because they imitate bait fish and can be fished in a variety of manners. Top water lures are a Best Fish Lure for early morning or late evening and work great on flat water that appears like glass. One example of a top water lure is the buzzbait that can be fished over the tops of submerged vegetation or along the edges of weeds. Spinner baits, also considered a Best Fish Lure, are a combination of jig and spinner that work well for bass.
The idea is to match the size of the spinner bait to the bass you're fishing, such as small spinner baits for smallmouth bass. Swimbaits are realistic baits available in large sizes that work well for trophy largemouth bass.
The KickTail XL-5 is becoming the
best fish lure in all of fishing.
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Fish are attracted to the motion
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Western anglers originally thought swimbaits were the Best Fish Lure, but now they are popular across the country because they catch large bass.
There are many different kinds of lures, which work well for different types of fish and water conditions, but if we have to pick one Best Fish Lure our vote goes for the KickTail lure from www.scientificfishing.com. This lure won the Best New Lure award at Europe's top sports show and has been featured in Game and Fish magazine. The excitement stems from the fact that the KickTail moves so realistically that it can't be distinguished from a real fish. That's what happened when professional anglers saw the KickTail swim towards them on retrieval. The KickTail features a tail divided into five sections that wags left and right as water rushes by on retrieval. Aeronautical flutter technology causes the tail to move, convincing the anglers they've seen a live fish. And the KickTail looks just like a live fish because it's designed to resemble a threadfin shad, the most popular baitfish.
The KickTail beat four other lures in a test in Orlando when it caught 41 fish versus 14 for the other four, a three to one margin that surprised the anglers. The KickTail comes in a range of exciting new colors, including chartreuse lime, black gold and yellow shiner.
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