Showing posts with label topwater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label topwater. Show all posts

Evergreen One's Bug ~ Topwater Popper

Length: 2-3/4” (68mm)
Weight: 3/8 oz (9.87g)
Type: Topwater, popper

The Evergreen One's Bug (produced by Japanese top tournament professional Morizo Shimizu) is loaded with four different types of rattles: tungsten, brass, steel & glass. These different rattles help draw explosive bites from predatory fish. This truly is Morizo's secret popper!



Evergreen One's Bug ~ Popper ~ American Shad #253




Evergreen One's Bug ~ Popper ~ Baby Gill #50




Evergreen One's Bug ~ Popper ~ Emerald Shiner #244



Evergreen One's Bug ~ Popper ~ King Shad #272

Click to visit www.BassdozerStore.comFor pricing and current availability, please visit www.BassdozerStore.com.

Thank you for your business. May your next fishing trip be your bass-t ever!

Bass-t Regards,

Russ Bassdozer

Evergreen Shower Blows & Shorty ~ Topwater Pencil Popper

ModelSizeWeightType
Shorty 4" / 105mm9/16 ozTopwater, Walking, Pencil Popper
Shower Blows 5" / 125mm15/16 oz / 26gTopwater, Walking, Pencil Popper


Size comparison of SHORTY (top) and Shower Blows (bottom)

The Shower Blows is a style of topwater called a pencil popper that originated in saltwater for striped bass surf casting, and they're also applicable to freshwater stripers. In recent years, pencil poppers are starting to be used for freshwater bass too, but many of these are still saltwater-sized - just a little too large for everyday bass angling and a little too large for the average bass angler's rod. The Evergreen Shower Blows and Shorty are practically the only premium pencil poppers that are ideally sized for everyday freshwater bass angling.

The Evergreen Shower Blows (produced by Japanese top tournament professional Morizo Shimizu) has a tremendous walking action, and the built in tungsten weight system creates a loud knock and easy casting. Whether you like a spitting, bubbling or dog walking action, this pencil bait does it all. Long distance casting ability allows you to cover a larger body of water on each cast. Even on days when fish aren't smashing other topwater plugs, they will take this plug thanks to its rear feather hook.

Two Different Approaches

Morizo Shimizu uses the Shower Blows in two different ways, depending on the time of day and mood of the fish. When conditions are very favorable for topwater action and the fish are biting such as early in the morning, Morizo will use a fast, frantic, active retrieve. The second way Shimizu uses the Shower Blows is with a slower, side-to-side gliding and much less splashing for when conditions aren't ideal such as on a sunny, calm afternoon or whenever the fish need to be finessed to strike topwater lures.

Two Different Sizes

Without losing any of the original Shower Blows' appeal, the Shorty, at just over 4 inches long, has that same incredible walking action. The loud internal rattle chamber will call fish from far away, and short twitches of your rod will keep the bait dancing in a much tighter walk than any other topwater bait on the market. Using both sizes - the Shorty in rotation with the original Shower Blows is the most effective way to catch the maximum number of fish.


Shorty



Evergreen Shower Blows SHORTY ~ Topwater Pencil Popper ~ American Shad #253



Evergreen Shower Blows SHORTY ~ Topwater Pencil Popper ~ Bleeding White #240




Evergreen Shower Blows SHORTY ~ Topwater Pencil Popper ~ Sweetfish #27


Shower Blows (125mm)




Evergreen Shower Blows ~ Topwater Pencil Popper ~ Natural Gill #262




Evergreen Shower Blows ~ Topwater Pencil Popper ~ Sweetfish #27

Click to visit www.BassdozerStore.comFor pricing and current availability, please visit www.BassdozerStore.com.

Thank you for your business. May your next fishing trip be your bass-t ever!

Bass-t Regards,

Russ Bassdozer

Megabass Vision 110 LAPSTICK ~ Topwater Propbait

Length: 110.5mm. Weight: 3/8oz

The Lapstick builds on the famous Vision 110 profile, creating the ultimate subtle-splash topwater lure.

Designed for finicky topwater fish, the Lapstick's realistic minnow profile will draw the biggest bass to the surface for an all-out attack. With a gentle twitch of the rod-tip, the Lapstick will dart underwater while causing the back props to spin at the same time. This not only creates a bubbling sound, but also creates an action that closely resembles an injured minnow or small fish.

Knowing when and where to fish the Lapstick is key to its success. Calm conditions, early mornings, and cloudy days will produce the best results. Fish the Lapstick anytime water temps are over 55 degrees and water visibility is greater than 2 feet.

On a quiet, calm morning, the 110 Lapstick will out-fish all other topwater lures in its class.





Megabass Vision 110 LAPSTICK ~ Topwater Propbait ~ #3 HT Ito Wakakasagi




Megabass Vision 110 LAPSTICK ~ Topwater Propbait ~ #12 Stealth Bait

Click to visit www.BassdozerStore.comFor pricing and current availability, please visit www.BassdozerStore.com.

Thank you for your business. May your next fishing trip be your bass-t ever!

Bass-t Regards,

Russ Bassdozer

Fall Fishing: Silverwood Stripers Video


I fished the dusk bite at Silverwood Reservoir on an evening in October and had a blast. The boils were not as numerous as I had hoped, however, the topwater bite was still on. A cold wind made the water surface somewhat choppy, probably hurting action. Even still, I landed three healthy striped bass, two 18''s and one smaller striper. Absolutely amazing to watch them explore on the surface, engulfing my Kinami Shad topwater lure. The trick was to fish it "Walk the Dog" style, just like you would fish a Lucky Craft Sammy. Cast, splash, twitch, pause, twitch, pause...BOOM! I can't wait to go back!

Drag-Pulling.

ima Big Stik ~ Topwater Pencil Popper

Length: 7" / 175mm
Weight: 1-3/4 oz / 50g
Type: Topwater
Hooks: Owner ST-66 #1/0


The Big Stik represents a big meal frantically flailing on the surface.

The Big Stik is a technically-advanced model of lure called a pencil popper that has a long history for saltwater surf fishing on the beaches of the Northeast Atlantic coast. Stan Gibbs of Massachusetts is one of several historical striper surf lure designers and his Gibbs Pencil Popper is legendary along the striper coast. Yet there are many other lure makers, local and regional within the northeast that produce saltwater pencil poppers. Most of those are made of wood – and that’s where the ima Big Stik comes into its own because it is a hard plastic lure, precision injection-molded, balanced and weighted in ways not possible with wood, including non-rattling and rattling versions. Another key difference is the Big Stik is made for freshwater bass.

The Big Stik is heavily tail-weighted and ballistic. You can launch one further than most any other topwater used for freshwater bass, whether largemouth, smallmouth or spotted. It’s also ideal for freshwater stripers in rivers and large impoundments of the Southeast, Texas, the California Delta, Colorado River system or anywhere stripers are found in freshwater across the USA.

In situations where you need to cast far, quickly to surface-feeding fish, the Big Stik simply has no equal among freshwater topwater lures.


Bill Bjork with nice catches popped up on the ima Big Stik

It’s fair to say the ima Big Stik is a specialty plug for suckering big bass, and in that regard, it will work most any time trophy bass are hungry. Ideally, best conditions for the Big Stik are when big pelagic baits like blueback herring or gizzard shad are in the vicinity. Bass fond of feeding on stocked rainbow trout are ideal to target with the Big Stik too. Nevertheless, even in the absence of such larger baitfish stocks, the Big Stik will still trigger something very primordial in the more aggressive and larger-than-average bass in any given fishery at any time. Bigger bass are used to feeding opportunistically on bigger forage of whatever preyfish species they can catch, and there are many of those, including suckers, hitch, crappie, you name it. The Big Stik simply represents a big meal frantically flailing on the surface.


The specially-designed, brimmed mouth is something that can only be injection-molded in hard plastic, never in wood.

You will know you are working the Big Stik correctly when the head of the lure is slapping back and forth on the surface so fast that it is difficult to even see the lure for all the splashing it creates. It is as if the lure is basically a firecracker that just can't stop exploding on the surface! All the time you are violently whipping the rod while turning the reel handle. This creates a frenzy of surface activity that no other topwater possibly can!

The results can be huge bass that become extremely excited and enraged by the Big Stik. Apparently, the surface-whipping frenzy of the lure does not allow a big bass to clearly see what is causing the commotion. Often you will just see a big head, back and broad tail suddenly emerge from the water behind your Big Stik - and viciously lunge at your lure and begin creaming it time and again, not stopping until the fish nails it. Just don’t stop whipping the rod tip and reeling. Keep up the action until the fish literally hooks itself. Chances are, if you stop or break the cadence, or if you jerk the lure too far away by trying to set the hook prematurely, the bass will depart quickly.


Bill Bjork with nice catches popped up on the ima Big Stik

More Tips from ima Pro-Staffer Michael Murphy

ima pro-staffer Michael Murphy favors using the Big Stik on heavy tackle. A Denali 7’6” heavy flipping stick with 20 lb test allows Murphy to put everything he’s got into a cast, practically emptying his spool to reach distant breaking bass.

Michael will routinely toss the Big Stik first whenever he first pulls up to a spot, making 2 or 3 casts with the Big Stik first to draw the big fish up before they become fully aware of his presence. If no takers after a few casts, the next trick Michael makes is to switch to a second rod with a more typical-sized topwater, the ima Skimmer. Murphy finds that fish he activated or aroused with the Big Stik but didn’t strike it, those fish will often prove willing to hit the ima Skimmer better thanks to those first few “wake up calls” made through the area with the Big Stik. Murphy gets bass looking up, thinking about feeding with the Big Stik first, and then closes the deal with the Skimmer.

Under ordinary conditions (little or no wind or surface chop), Murphy uses rod action to work the Big Stik so it slaps its head side to side on the surface. For the first half of a cast, due to the long distance, it’s necessary to work the rod tip while holding it high, approximately from 10 to 11 o’clock. Once the Big Stik gets closer, Murphy works the lure the rest of the way with the rod tip held down near the water’s surface.

When the water’s choppy or rough, however, Murphy finds that the turbulent surface itself can pack enough power to slap the perfectly-balanced Big Stik from side-to-side with little or no rod action required. Such conditions are also when Murphy makes sure he’s using the rattling Big Stik model, as the noise and the rolling beads inside work in concert with the choppy surface, generating a natural, rhythmic cadence in tune with the environment.

One last tip is that Michael feels the Mylar-tied flash tail of the Big Stik results in more strikes. So if you ever need to replace the tail treble, Murphy recommends using a flashy or feather-dressed treble on the Big Stik.




ima Big Stik ~ Pencil Popper ~ Silent ~ Bone




ima Big Stik ~ Pencil Popper ~ Rattling ~ Misty Shad




ima Big Stik ~ Pencil Popper ~ Rattling ~ Tennessee Shad



ima Big Stik ~ Pencil Popper ~ Rattling ~ Bluegill



ima Big Stik ~ Pencil Popper ~ Rattling ~ American Shad

Click to visit www.BassdozerStore.comFor pricing and current availability, please visit www.BassdozerStore.com.

Thank you for your business. May your next fishing trip be your best ever!

Bass-t Regards,

Russ Bassdozer