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SALT WATER BASS ASSASSIN LURES
SALT WATER BASS ASSASSIN LURES CATCH SNOOK, TARPON, FLOUNDER
by Ken Liebeskind
Yalesville, Connecticut
Bass Assassin lures, the Mayo, FL company renowned for its soft plastic lures offers a variety of salt water Bass Assassin lures that are becoming popular. One angler said the saltwater Shad Assassin is "as deadly in salt water as it is in freshwater" and it's frequently used on the Gulf Coast of Florida for catching snook, tarpon, flounder, dolphin and stripers.
The recent boom in shallow water soft water angling has made salt water Bass Assassin lures extremely popular. Many anglers who used to fish on freshwater have begun to fish in salt water. They're used to soft plastic lures, so they'll use them for salt water angling. They also prefer salt water Bass Assassin lures to live bait, because they're cheaper and easier to use.

Catch fish like this with
Salt Water Bass Assassin Lures
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Bass fishing will never be the same with the Bite Light fishing lure.
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Salt water Bass Assassin lures are also preferable to hard baits, where size and shape often limit the lure's optimal working depth and action. Soft plastic baits can be rigged to suit different situations. The same body can be fished weightless on a worm-style hook or twitched over an oyster bar. Salt water Bass Assassin lures also work well because they're soft. The right amount of softness increases elasticity, so the baits stretch without snapping.
Salt water anglers also like salt water Bass Assassin lures because of the new colors that hadn't been offered before, including chartreuse, pink diamond and fire tiger. Another exciting lure that works well in fresh and salt water is the Bite Light lure from www.scientificfishing.com. This is the electronic lure that blinks blood red to mimic an injured prey, which is the best way to catch hungry predators, including a variety of salt water breeds. The Bite Light lure operates on a battery-powered electrical system that flashes a blood red light down the lure's tail when it's moved in water. Every retrieval causes a new flash, so if a fish passes on the first flash it may strike on the next one.
The Bite Light has set records among three bass fishermen in Mexico who caught 650 largemouth bass in a 25 hour period, or one every seven minutes for each angler.
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