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Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/08/2020 in all areas

  1. Thanks for sharing your experiance. I built stirrer with a little motor that attaches to the bucket. It mixes pretty good. But of course I got to give her the old hand stir test afterwards. "You gotta shake it before you bake it"
    1 point
  2. I didn't know about it at first, but i've used baitjunkys, lureworks & baitplastics & i just ordered another 5 gallon batch of baitplastics plastic. The only thing i don't like is the jug it comes in & would rather it have the regular old small gallon jug mouth. The bag in the box from lureworks is great too in my opinion.
    1 point
  3. Dead on plastix sells their 5 gallon for 114. I just started this hobby so I do not have much experience to know what good quality vs bad quality is but some of the people I follow swear by this stuff so I use it and I like it.
    1 point
  4. Be well and stay safe. Isolation works here in NorCal, along with masks, gloves, and hand washing. I have a spray bottle of denatured alcohol I use to disinfect anything that someone else has handled, like packages and mail. I was thinking of you today. I made a wake bait, and it blew out on the retrieve, so I did a Dave, and shortened the lip until it became stable. Thanks again.
    1 point
  5. It looks like an Allcock Nature Series lure made by Samuel Allcock Co. from the U.K . They were a fishing tackle distributor that also made some lures. I would not fish it. It could be worth some money. Hardy Brothers lures, James Gregory lures, and Gutta-Percha made somewhat similar lures in the U.K./europe.
    1 point
  6. This is an honor for me. Thank you very much!
    1 point
  7. Hi all Rohit from Bombay India. Just joined the forum now. Was searching for soft plastics recipes on google and landed on this forum. Nice recipe for biodegradable soft plastic alternative. You can actually use cotton gauze rolled up lengthwise to address the tear issue. Just an idea
    1 point
  8. I've given up trying to predict which paint schemes will work best in what kind of water. Bass, bass fishermen, and many bass baits are just too unpredictable. But the classic theory is that translucent baits work better in clear to lightly stained water because you don't want the bass to have TOO good a look at your bait. Some go to the extreme of fishing clear plastic baits that are entirely unpainted. Bass can hear and they can feel pressure waves so they have more senses than just color vision. You will not run a crankbait near a hungry bass undetected. Your hope is that it gives off enough correct sensory clues that the bass will evaluate it as food. Color is just one of several. As far as depth goes, I think color schemes become less critical as the depth increases and colors begin to get filtered out. Is there a depth at which color doesn't matter at all? I don't know. But 95% of crankbaits are used in water less than 12 ft deep and I'm pretty sure color can still be a factor at that depth.
    1 point
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