soft-bait

    Smallmouth on Hand-Poured Creature Baits: A Weekend on the River

    By Mason Reed
    Smallmouth on Hand-Poured Creature Baits: A Weekend on the River

    The setup

    Two-day float on a midwestern smallmouth river, mid-60s water temp, overcast both days. I brought a single box of hand-poured 3.5" creatures in four colors: green pumpkin, watermelon-red, brown-orange, and a custom black / blue flake I had poured the week before. All rigged on a 1/4 oz tungsten and a 3/0 EWG.

    Day one: dialing in the color

    Started on green pumpkin because that is always my first cast. Caught a 14" smallmouth in the first hole and nothing for the next hour. Switched to the black / blue flake and immediately picked up three fish in the same water. The overcast sky made the darker silhouette pop. That was the tell — I stayed on the black / blue all day and finished with 18 fish, the best a solid 19".

    Day two: the mold pays for itself

    Lost four creatures to snags and hook rips on the first float. With a store-bought pack at $6 for 8 baits, that would have been an annoyance. With my hand-poured creatures costing roughly $0.30 each in materials, I did not give it a second thought. That is the real value of pouring your own — you stop rationing baits and you fish aggressive water you would otherwise avoid.

    The bait that would not quit

    The winning bait was a custom recipe: medium base plastisol with 1 tsp hardener per cup for durability, plus a pinch of black pigment and 1/4 tsp blue holographic flake. I can pour 30 of them in under an hour. That bag will fish all summer, and when I run out, I can pour exactly the same recipe again.

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