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Plug Building - Got Wood? Got Plug?

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Old 05-01-2005, 09:53 AM   #1
fishaholic18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BigFish
Please describe....all I am getting is a Providence Journal solicitation for my e-mail address and such and they ain't gettin' it!
Here it is BF:

The big-bass lures have big price tags

01:00 AM EDT on Saturday, April 30, 2005

BY TOM MEADE
Journal Sports Writer

SEEKONK -- Eastern anglers are following the lead of their California counterparts, investing in expensive, handmade lures designed to entice trophy largemouth bass.

Bill Quatrucci, the owner of Bill's Bait & Tackle and a big-bass hunter himself, sells one California lure, the 3:16 Armageddon, for $250. Over the last year, he has sold more than 300 Generic Rat lures at $40 apiece and about 15 Generic Live Trout swimming baits at $100 a pop.

"These baits are designed to catch the next world record," Quatrucci says. "That's why people are buying them."

The 3:16 Armageddon is 10 inches long and weighs 6.9 ounces, requiring heavier than normal tackle to fish it effectively, Quatrucci says. For a little over $200, an angler can buy a rod, reel and line that will do the trick, but there are better and more expensive rigs also available to cast the new large lures.

"I, personally, have not thrown the Armageddon because of its price," Quatrucci says. "My girlfriend Helen would kill me if she saw it missing from the case."

The $250 lure has become a conversation piece in Bill's Bait & Tackle, Quatrucci says, but it's a hot item among collectors in Japan who pay $500 for the lure, and among big-bass hunters in Southern California. The bass there are much larger than they are in New England because of California's warmer weather.

Large bass eat other large animals. In lakes where trout are stocked, the stocking truck is like a chuck-wagon for lurking largemouths.

"Swim Armageddon slowly, dead-stick it, twitch it, walk it along the surface, or pull it underwater," lure-maker Mickey Ellis advises on his company's Web site. "It will swim nicely across the surface like a lazy trout, triggering violent strikes. However you fish the Armageddon, the bait will produce. The Armageddon is built for anyone with the guts to go after trophy and record bass."

(George Washington Perry caught the reigning record -- a 22-pound, 4-ounce lunker -- 72 years ago.)

The Armageddon's swimming action is built into its four segments, jointed with graphite hinges. A story about the lure and its California maker appears in the April issue of Field & Stream magazine. The piece should stimulate more interest and sales for the 3:16 Lure Company, Quatrucci says.

In the meantime, he is selling plenty of artificial baits made by another Californian, Jerry Rago, also featured in the April issue of Field & Stream.

Rago's Generic Rat bait has become a bestseller at Bill's despite a slow start. "I ordered 30 of them to start with, and they sat in the case for about a month," Quatrucci remembers. "Two or three people bought them, and then word-of-mouth took overA lot of people have caught the biggest bass of their lives on this bait. Word spread."

One angler who caught and released a trophy bass on the rat bait had a replica of the fish made and gave up the $40 lure so a taxidermist could incorporate the Generic Rat into the mount. The fish looks as though it's attacking the rat.

The 2-ounce lure has a jointed 5-inch body and a 4-inch tail, made from a soft-plastic worm. Terrestrial rats, muskrats, and other rodents are prey to big bass, but other fish ---- including yellow perch and crappie, have also hit the Generic Rat, Quatrucci says. Bass that are smaller than the lure have attacked it, too.

A former tournament fisherman who converted to the solitary pursuit of trophy bass, Quatrucci says he's been surprised by the number of New England bass anglers who have been buying the expensive lures. "There are a lot more people than I would have thought who are just after big fish, a lot of serious guys who don't fish tournaments," he says.

The next world-record bass almost certainly will come from waters warmer than New England's, but that won't stop eastern anglers from buying baits that may catch the biggest bass in the region, no matter how expensive the lures are.

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Old 05-01-2005, 09:57 AM   #2
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If anyone in New England believes they are going to catch a largemouth anywhere near 22+ pounds then they should instead take the $100.00 and invest it in a good therapy session! <Get back on the couch fool!

Almost time to get our fish on!!!
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Old 05-01-2005, 10:17 AM   #3
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I could somewhat understand it if was designed to catch giant tuna or sharks. something huge or complicated and expensive to make, designed to catch giant fish, but for a freshwater bass - you've got to be kidding.
Like salty said it is a hype article, trying to sell folks the new 'silver bullet' of fishing. (have you seen the infomercial with the lure that has a blinking light? )

why couldn't someone just use saltwater plugs if that's what they wanted to do?
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Old 05-01-2005, 10:19 AM   #4
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Bingo!

Almost time to get our fish on!!!
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Old 05-01-2005, 10:38 AM   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Young Salt
why couldn't someone just use saltwater plugs if that's what they wanted to do?
When I lived in south TX people used many of the same plugs we use in the surf for the freshwater stripers and hybrids.Needless to say many a striper fisherman down there also caught huge largemouths on their striper plugs.
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Old 05-01-2005, 10:50 AM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BigFish
If anyone in New England believes they are going to catch a largemouth anywhere near 22+ pounds then they should instead take the $100.00 and invest it in a good therapy session! <Get back on the couch fool!
Or on rehab Put down that pipe, son
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Old 05-01-2005, 05:07 PM   #7
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Okay you guys your going to let me have it, I know. I have many of the Cali swimbaits used for Largemouth bass. I got into them three years ago after trying Surf plugs with great success. They don't come cheap, but neither do todays surf plugs. In the North East the world record will never be broken, but out west the fish of a life time is possible. These guys who make these plugs are making a killing on the trophy hunter. If someone was to ever catch the next world record bass he or she would be a millionare over night. So to these crazy bass nuts $40 or even $100 is nothing for an edge to bring them closer to that fish. I'm not saying that the whole thing is right. I'm just saying that these guys have started a trend on the west coast and it's starting to catch on here in the east. Many of my trophy largemouths do come on swim baits and I am one of the few to blame for starting the use of swim baits here in the east coast. They do work. yes some are outrageous in price, but more resonable ones do catch fish and the rago rat is an amazing fish catcher. I think that if some of you plug makers got into some of the trout patterns and rat like lures you could make a killing here in the east. Billy Q is one of the top trophy bass fisherman around and his nowledge of such baits is great. he has also caught on the the new trend. So if any one wants to see some of these cali wooden baits just let me know. I have many even the 3:16, and I already know I need help...lol

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Old 05-01-2005, 05:46 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RoyL
Okay you guys your going to let me have it, I know. I have many of the Cali swimbaits used for Largemouth bass. I got into them three years ago after trying Surf plugs with great success. They don't come cheap, but neither do todays surf plugs. In the North East the world record will never be broken, but out west the fish of a life time is possible. These guys who make these plugs are making a killing on the trophy hunter. If someone was to ever catch the next world record bass he or she would be a millionare over night. So to these crazy bass nuts $40 or even $100 is nothing for an edge to bring them closer to that fish. I'm not saying that the whole thing is right. I'm just saying that these guys have started a trend on the west coast and it's starting to catch on here in the east. Many of my trophy largemouths do come on swim baits and I am one of the few to blame for starting the use of swim baits here in the east coast. They do work. yes some are outrageous in price, but more resonable ones do catch fish and the rago rat is an amazing fish catcher. I think that if some of you plug makers got into some of the trout patterns and rat like lures you could make a killing here in the east. Billy Q is one of the top trophy bass fisherman around and his nowledge of such baits is great. he has also caught on the the new trend. So if any one wants to see some of these cali wooden baits just let me know. I have many even the 3:16, and I already know I need help...lol
I agree on the next world record largemouth being worth huge dinero. A world record striper would pale moneywise in comparison.

As a majority surf fisherman are on the frugal side. Where as Bass fisherman (especially the tournament guys) spend a lot more on average. And there are alot more of them than us saltwater types. Bass Pro Shop would probably pay a million for the fish if it were kept alive to put it in their tank. Think of what a traffic draw a fish like that would bring to them. Then all the endorsements from the big names. Yes a very competitive game with alot of players.
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Old 05-01-2005, 06:11 PM   #9
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I, for one, would like to see some pics of these plugs Roy...if you could.

My point was simply, if some cheesehead buys these and thinks if he takes them to Long Pond in Plymouth and thinks a monster 23 pounder is there for the taking...he needs his head examined. I do think they might be worth while in places like Florida, California and New Mexico where the large are more than likely living.

Almost time to get our fish on!!!
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Old 05-01-2005, 07:42 PM   #10
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I think we should sell our stuff in California -- check out the pic's of the rat and mouse.

Last edited by gone fishin; 01-14-2008 at 11:50 PM..

low & slow 37
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