PickerelHunter Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 Hey guys....curious about your experience with spoons (or other lures) that glow in the dark for deeper species (lake trout, whitefish, burbot etc.). I'm just getting in to fishing for these deeper species and always saw these lures as a bit of a marketing thing. Baitfish don't glow in the dark so why would a Laker go after a glow in the dark spoon? A buddy of mine swears by them, but aside from that I haven't heard much else either way. Would love to hear some feedback.
dave524 Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 The only place I've seen glow spoons outperform regular spoons on a consistent basis is pier casting for staging salmon late summer/early fall after dark. Other than that they may have their day on occasion.
fishindevil Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 they work and work well.....I have been using glow spoons since the 80's on lake Ontario,and in the last few years the glow is getting better and better all the time......I have used them for lakers as well and in the winter for ice fishing as well....
Canuck Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 I think they work at times. Anything that catches the attention of a fish works at different times. Sometimes its a strange colour, sometimes just flash and sometimes its a bit of glow. That's why a salmon/trout lure wall at a good store has all the colours of the rainbow. None of those colours other than maybe silver black and bluish are colours of actual baitfish. A few years ago it seemed like the only lure I would catch salmon on was a black ladderback NK magnum. The ladderback was glow tape. Now I almost never use it. Its Moonshines now that I have the best success with, in all colours except black, glow as well as non-glow. Go figure.
fishindevil Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 I still have a bunch of glow NK ladderback spoons....as well I used to buy glow tape in the rolls and make my own colors and experimented with glow paint as well
LeXXington Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 I normally start with glow spoons for deep salmon \ trout early in the morning when downrigging. Just that little extra flash
PickerelHunter Posted June 15, 2017 Author Report Posted June 15, 2017 Thanks for the feedback guys. Canuck, good point about trying to attract/catch attention of fish rather than solely just trying to match baitfish patterns Seems like the glow is something to include in the arsenal when heading out. I'll pick up a couple to put in the tackle box and see what happens with them.
manitoubass2 Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 Hit or Miss for me but that's basically all lures. I mainly use them through the ice. The past 2 seasons im pretty much ice fishing Northland buckshot spoons exclusively. Tipped with a shiner they basically catch everything. Love those spoons
Old Ironmaker Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 (edited) Bought a huge swim bait in Florida that lit up when you jerked it. Come to find out it wasn't fluorescent, it had a battery. Wall hanger now. It sure worked in Florida, everything hammered it including Pelicans. Edited June 15, 2017 by Old Ironmaker
PUMP KNOWS Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 I wish Cleos came with the Moonshine paint. The Moonshine shapes are weird and don't cast well
dave524 Posted June 15, 2017 Report Posted June 15, 2017 I wish Cleos came with the Moonshine paint. The Moonshine shapes are weird and don't cast well Not sure if they still make them, but Krocodile spoons used to come with a glow finish and those thing cast like missiles.
moxie Posted June 16, 2017 Report Posted June 16, 2017 The only place I've seen glow spoons outperform regular spoons on a consistent basis is pier casting for staging salmon late summer/early fall after dark. Other than that they may have their day on occasion. X2
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