Types of Fishing Lures
Fishing with lures has many advantages:
- Lures are less messy than bait.
- Lures gut hook fewer fish (gut hooking is when the fish takes the hook deeply, or even completely swallows the hook).
- Lures allow you to cover more water, even from shore or a pier.
- You can target the species you are after more efficiently with lures.
- Lures are easy to change out.
- Lures can be expensive compared to bait.
- Lures can be snagged on underwater obstacles or in trees, and the price of them makes it especially painful to lose.
Fishing Hook Sizes Charts
There are 7 main types of lures: jigs, spinners, spoons, soft plastic baits, plugs, spinerbaits, and flies. When you finish reading this, you will be able to recognize each of these lures on sight and have an idea of how to fish them (in fishing lingo this is called “Presentation.”)
Jigs
Presentation
Jig fishing takes a lot of concentration, unlike spinners, all the
“action” (how a lure moves in the water) comes from you. If you don’t do
anything the jig just sinks. The classic way to fish a jig is to cast
it out, wait until it hits the bottom (you will know it has hit bottom
when your line goes slack), then retrieve it in a series of hops. You
make it hop by lifting the rod tip, lowering it, and retrieving your
line. Try different speeds, big lifts, little hops, twitching until you
find what works. Pay attention, though. Detecting the strike is the
hardest thing about jigging.
Spinners
Presentation
Simple as can be. Cast and retrieve, that’s it. As long as the blade
is spinning, its working. You can try speeding up or slowing down your
retrieve for variety.
Spoons
Presentation
Some spoons are made to be cast, others to be trolled, and some even
to be jigged. As a beginner you will most likely be using the most
common type; the casting spoon. Casting spoons are easy to use. Like
spinners, just cast and retrieve. You can vary your speed as long as
it’s wobbling. If the spoon begins to spin, slow down your retrieve. Add
a split ring to the eye of the lure for better action.
Soft Plastic Baits
Presentation
Presentation for soft plastic baits depends on the type of bait. For
the classic worm, the most popular technique is the Texas Rig. To rig
your worm this way, you use a bullet weight (read the section on sinkers
in the terminal tackle post
if you don’t know what a bullet weight is). Thread the bullet weight on
the the line above your hook, and then insert the hook through the top
of the worm’s head, then bury the barb into the body of the worm to make
it “weedless” (meaning it will not get hung up on underwater foliage.)
Now cast it into a likely fish holding area and let it fall to the
bottom. Twitch your rod tip a few times. If you still don’t have a bite,
hop it back to you in short twitchy hops.
Plugs
Presentation
One of the most effective (and one of the first plugs you should add
to your tackle box) is the long, narrow minnow imitation in three to
four inch length, the original is made by Rapala. It floats when its not
moving and dives shallowly when it’s retrieved. Add a split ring to the
eye if it doesn’t have one. Cast it out and wait until the rings on the
surface of the water dissipate, then retrieve it slowly or fast,
stopping suddenly and maybe throwing in an occasional twitch.[photo by Chrys Omori]
Spinnerbaits/Buzzbaits
Presentation
The most common way to fish a spinnerbait is what is called
“Chuck-N-Wind,” simply cast it out and retrieve it at a moderate speed,
keeping the lure at a depth between the surface and five feet. It is a
popular technique because it is effective.
Flies
Presentation
Dry flies are intended to float on the surface of the water, to this
end they are dressed with some kind of floatant to aid in their
buoyancy. Wet flies, like nymphs and streamers are designed to be fished
below the surface of the water. Fly fishing is a difficult but
rewarding area of the fishing universe.Now that you know the basic lures and how they are used, you should have an easier time starting your own collection. Buy only a few at a time, and take the time to learn to fish them. If you know anyone that fishes the same water you do, ask them what kind of lures they like to use and what they recommend.