|
FLASHING LURES
FLASHING LURES REVOLUTIONIZE FISHING
by Ken Liebeskind
Yalesville, Connecticut
Flashing lures have been acclaimed as "the final evolution of the artificial lure" because they successfully catch fish in a way that no other lure has ever done - by flashing a red light predator fish believe is bleeding prey, so they immediately strike.
The first flashing lure was tested in the Gulf of Alaska in 2003 and the results were immediate.
"I used the flashing lure while my partner fished without one. He hooked nothing but I ended up slamming a 170 pound halibut almost immediately," one angler said. Others used flashing lures to catch giant cod and trout.
Flashing lures work because they generate a natural reflex response in fish - predator fish see the light and think it's a live fish bleeding. They're programmed to attack injured prey so they strike.
Catch fish like this with a Bite Light
flashing lure when you are bass fishing
|
|
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.
|
Skeptics have wondered about the red flashing light, since it is unclear whether fish can see colors, but Dr. Ellis Loew, a Cornell University professor of physiology, states that many fish "have the necessary nervous system elements for color vision to be present."
www.scientificfishing.com, renowned worldwide for its scientifically designed lures, leads the way the Bite Lite, the electronic flashing lure with a battery powered electrical system that flashes a blood-red light down the lure's tail when it's moved in water. On every retrieval, the Bite Lite emits a different light pattern so if a fish misses it the first time it will strike on the next flash. A tiny steel ball inside the lure keeps its head erect, so it swims like a real fish and it causes a clicking sound to attract attention.
The Bite Lite lure works in clear or murky fresh and saltwater, day or night. The battery that powers it lasts for 1,000 hours.
The Bite Lite lure is new but it has already set records - three Mexican anglers caught 650 largemouth bass in 25 hours and in a Florida test, the Bite Lite beat best-selling lures three to one.
|