Lunker sluggo. What colors are the best that you use, an size.
Lunker sluggo. What colors are the best that you use, an size.
I used to love the rainbow trout colored slug o!! Haven’t had any in forever….
Pink!
2018 Phoenix 920 Pro XP
Red shad.
Bubble Gum
Red Sox in 6!
Shad
Dale Sinclair original
Shad and Rainbow Trout. From 3”-9”.
My Sluggo secret from back in the day was to take a pack of Arkansas Shiner and throw it in with a pack of Chartreuse. Let them marinate until the shiner color has just a tint of green on it. I used to catch a lot of fish on that color. Makes me wonder why I stopped throwing them.
I always liked the black with gold, gold pepper.
Have caught fish on a ton of colors though. I still throw them sometimes.
"It's even, but it ain't settled. Let's settle it." Fast Eddie
I still can't believe they actually won...Cubs Fans Everywhere
I always liked the bubble gum color.... i didn't know they were still being made.
Black with gold here also... last I looked they were getting close to a buck apiece for the 6". I switched over to Super Flukes.
I was very lucky, I got to use some of the prototypes, it was fun to watch how the fish reacted to them
I thought they quit making them used kill stripers on them.
21 XD 225 Merc
White Pearl..
Arkansas Shiner, pink, white, black with gold flecks and 6-8 inch depending on water color, its the action that gets them !
Pink/Bubblegum...almost always have one on. They still work and are definitely still being made. Just think of them as a jerkbait you can throw on 15/20 lb line with a 5/0 hook, weedless and can make them jump out of the water.
Here you go!
https://lunkercity.com/collections/slug-go
"The man of system is apt to be very wise in his own conceit; and is often so enamored with the supposed beauty of his own ideal plan of government that he cannot suffer the smallest deviation from any part of it…He seems to imagine that he can arrange the different members of a great society with as much ease as the hand arranges the different pieces upon a chessboard.” Adam Smith, The Theory of Moral Sentiments