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Use Spinners to Catch Bass

Spinners can be used to catch bass in just about any weather or water temp or time of year. Tournaments can be won fishing a spinner. They’re a great lure for spring and fall when the bass are feeding heavily as well as in winter when the water is cold. You can also fish them in the warmer waters of summer and just buzz them by the fish to entice them to bite.

It’s a good idea to keep several spinners in your box and keep spare blades and skirts on hand so you can test the waters and see what’s biting. But the go-to spinner in my box is always a 3/8th ounce spinnerbait with a #5 willowleaf and #3 Colorado blade. Have one of each in gold and silver. A chartreuse and white skirt and a 3″ white curly tail trailer.

Spinners in Warm Water

Warm water, at and above 60 degrees, means fast retrievals. When the water is warm, run the bait just under the surface fairly quickly until the blade just brakes the water. Then slow down and let the skirt flare.

When the water is warmer, and the feeding is slower, speed up your retrieval and try for reaction strikes by buzzing it right by the bass and letting it brake the water’s surface.

Spinners in Cool Waters

Cool waters, bellow 60 degrees, you want to slow it down. Use a heavier spinner, around 1/2 once. Get heavier and slower as the water gets colder. The added weight will allow you to fish deeper and slower.

Tips for Using Spinners

  1. The clearness of the water will tell how quickly to run your lure. In clearer waters you can run it fairly fast but slow it down in murky waters.
  2. Try bigger blades. Up to a #7 blade has caught fish and was a popular method a few years ago and still catches fish.
  3. Try different colors of skirts and trailers if the fish aren’t biting.
  4. Attach the lure with a clip and swivel to allow for quick and easy changing.

Spinners are one of my favorite lures. They are easy to use, easy to fish and you almost never lose a fish on one. The big hook seems to keep them on the hook effectively.

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Ultralight

ultralight – Lighter than standard fishing rod and/or tackle.

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Tiptop

tiptop – Line guide at the tip end of a fishing rod.

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Open-faced Reel

open-faced reel – A typical or standard spinning reel in which the line comes off the fixed spool in loops and there is no nose cone.

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Monofilament

monofilament – A single, untwisted, synthetic filament.

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Mono

mono – Short for monofilament fishing line.

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Livebox

livebox – A box or container to designed to keep bait or caught fish alive.

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