Dancing Lizards for Smallmouths PDF Print E-mail
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Tuesday, 11 December 2007
ON TENNESSEE’S DALE HOLLOW LAKE, the Smallmouth Guru, Stephen Headrick, has developed his own unorthodox method to entice big bronzebacks when they move to the shallows to spawn.

To coax strikes from these fussy fish, the Celina, TN native uses 6-inch Zoom soft plastic lizards or salamanders he rigs using a “secret” style favored by local anglers. First, he removes a plug of plastic from the nose of a lizard with a .22 bullet cartridge.  Then he inserts a 1/16-ounce bullet weight pointed-end-first into the hole and seals it up by melting the plastic with a lighter or match.

Headrick then uses a length of thin wire, with a small eye bent into the wire at one end, to pull a length of line through the body of the lizard.  He pushes the sharp end of the wire into the lizard between its front legs, then passes the end of the line through the loop and pushes the wire and the line through the body and out at the base of the tail.

Headrick reinserts the wire into the lizard at the base of the tail and draws the line out at the bend in the lizard’s tail.  Once a No. 6 short-shank hook is tied to the end of the line, the hook is then embedded in the tail or left exposed, depending on cover.  The lizard will spin on retrieve and twist the line, so Headrick trims the rod end of the line to 3 inches and ties on a high-quality ball bearing.  “You might think that little hook won’t hang on to a five-pound smallmouth,” says Headrick. “But trust me, it will.”

LURE:
Zoom Lizard (6-inch) in pumpkinseed or other bright colors.

TACKLE:

G. Loomis Model BCR803 rod (6 feet 8 inches; medium-heavy action), 12-pound test Berkley Vanish Fluorocarbon line and Abu Garcia Ambassador baitcasting reel with 6.2:1 gear ratio.

TECHNIQUE:

“Cast the lure and let it sink to the bottom,” says Headrick.  “The weighted nose stays down and the tail with the hook in it stands straight up. Shake the rod tip slightly so the tail dances.  You don’t want to move the lizard much, if at all.  Nine times out of ten, the bass will grab the tail of the lure first, which is why the hook is there.”


OUTDOOR LIFE - The Source for Hunting Adventure March, 2005
p. 53 (Used by permission)
 
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