|
BLINKING FISH LURE
HAVE YOUR TRIED A
BLINKING FISHING LURE YET?
by Ken Liebeskind
Yalesville, Connecticut
The blinking fishing lure, which flashes bright light in the water, is a new way of catching all kinds of fish, from bass to walleye and salmon. A number of blinking fishing lure technologies are available, so let's take a quick look:
* Versa Light Lures flash light with four different colored glow sticks, which is ideal for deep depth fishing.
*Osprey electronic teaser trolling lures also use glow sticks, which it calls glowing flashing heads.
* The Esca blinking fishing lure uses light technology to attract fish.
Catch fish like this with a
Bite Light blinking fish lure
|
|
Click Here - Shop Now
At The World's Most Unique Tackle Shop

Bass fishing will never be the same with the Bite Light fishing lure.
|
The blinking fishing lure has a raised silver color circle on the side that generates its own power through electrolysis when it is emerged in salt water. The light technology in the Esca blinking fishing lure is unique but it is activated by salt water, so it can't be used for fresh water fishing.
* The Bite Lite lure from www.scientificfishing.com is a battery powered blinking fishing lure that blinks blood red in the water to mimic an injured fish. This is the blinking fishing lure that has been tested, with three fishermen in Mexico using it to catch 650 largemouth bass in 25 hours, while two pros in Florida caught three times as many fish with the Bite Lite than other popular lures.
The Bite Lite reacts to movement so every retrieval generates a different flash. If a fish doesn't bite on the first flash it is likely to react to the next one. The Bite Lite comes in three sizes, for top, middle and deep water in three different colors. They work in fresh or salt water, contain rattle attachments inside and continue to shine for 300 hours in the water.
One angler said, "I use the Bite Lite and bass are going crazy on it. But it will work with any predator fish. Even bottom feeders like catfish will attack!"
|