Oh yeah, frog fishing is an absolute blast! Really, what’s not to like about it?
The reason there are so many hollow body frogs available is that they are, as a bait class, very efficient at drawing strikes from bass that are hiding out in the thick stuff.
Not only do they get lots of attention, they are the quintessential weedless topwater tool that can be thrown on and through just about anything that you can encounter.
So you would think that the market is saturated to the point that there is no room for another iteration in this genre? Not so fast. There is a new kid on the block, the Terminator Walking Frog.
Yes, once again, our curiosity got the best of us and we just had to get some to see for ourselves what the buzz was about.
There are times when we all get in a hurry. We lose our focus and default to those baits that have become a staple in our arsenal or to a new comer that we canât wait to try.
One of the most productive styles of topwater lures is the good ol’ stick bait.
Our site is about fish—the pursuit of fish and the appreciation of fish.
Any discussion of new topwater baits has to include those that have taken not just a small step away from proven older designs but those manufacturers who have completely re-imagined a lure in such a way that it ushers in a new standard for an accepted genre of lures.
Stick baits, or spook style baits have been all the rage for the past several years but we are now seeing an older design resurface.
We’ve been fishing a bunch of new top-water baits lately but as every good angler knows, when you’re fishing top-water, you have to have a follow up bait.
When the air temperatures in this neck of the woods starting climbing into triple digits we go out with one thing in mind, top-water bass.
e, fishing the thick stuff is in full swing which means using some heavy line for specific applications. Today we’re talking about pitchin’ and flippin’ around stick ups, cattails or other heavy vegetation that bass tend to inhabit.