Having done the bass tournament thing for years and used larger lures of all types to catch bass, I have no doubt I could still catch bass using them -
but only bass. Of course, river smallies slammed Mr Twister curl tails in my local smallie river, but then again so did other lures.
I believed that soft plastics had to have
action-tails whether a curl tail or a Sassy Shad paddle tail. Same thing for plastic worms. But then Gary Y blew it all away with the wacky rigged Senko. Round tips on both ends of a weighted soft-plastic stick caught bass galore the first year I cast it! Recently it got me think'n:
stick vs action tail - hmmmm.... But then again, what is a Zara Spook or 3" floating Rapala other than a
stick by another name?
Waddle, roll & dart come to mind as the action combo for all stick-type lures - and man has it caught fish! I've had aluminum molds that have Senko shapes and others that have thinner and smaller cavities,
Recently I experimented casting the smaller stick shapes using the same retrieve I used for hard lures having no lip nor action tail to speak of. I found that the action-part of the lure
is the body. What sets different soft and hard stick lures sticks apart?
Diameter and shape determine lure action.One stick shape that shocked me with the number of fish caught and how aggressive the hit by different species:
the taper-tail or carrot stick. What action?:
waddle, roll & dart when using rod tip twitches and 1/4 turns of the reel handle. What blew me away was the aggressive strikes by sunfish and that
they would not let go. Fish even attacked the lure after the 2nd missed hookset!
Six fish species shown - including bass - got caught (pickerel makes it seven):
A variation of the stick's shape is adding the body of a grub as tail:
...as well as adding a long tapered tail:
All three shapes have slightly different actions, but ALL catch fish when rigged on a 1/16 oz or 1/24 oz jighead.
There are other body-tail variations, but U get the
picture.