Twitching for Trout

 
 
In the mid 1990’s the Japanese jerkbait craze hit the United States bass fishing market. Japanese based companies like Lucky Craft, Megabass and Yo-Zuri began crafting minnow-type jerkbaits that were so realistic looking, I wanted to put them in an aquarium to keep them alive.
In addition to the detailed 3D holographic finishes, these jerkbaits from oversees featured “weight transfer systems,” which helped the lures cast farther and suspend in the water column, almost like an injured baitfish that freezes in fear.
My favorite places to throw these flashy, freezing jerkbaits were on the grass flats of Lake St. Clair and Lake Champlain for voracious smallmouth that attacked the lures with an uncompromised aggression. Watching a big bronze flash inhale a paused jerkbait over a grass flat is something that ranks pretty high on my fishing list. That’s why when I learned that mammoth spotted seatrout attack the very same suspending jerkbaits with an equal amount of aggression on the clear, crystal grass flats on the Gulf Coast, I found a new reason to live!
Make no mistake about it, seatrout love a suspending jerkbait. The lures perfectly mimic so many types of baitfish that swim in the lush seagrasses where big trout lurk. If I’m fishing vast grass beds with decent water clarity (2 feet or more), I almost always have one tied on.

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