Hard body lures

 

Quicklinks

 

There are times when the right bait for barra is a hard bodied lure.

Selecting the right style and swimming depth of hard bodied lure is definatley one of the keys to that process.

You can do things with hard bodied lures that you can’t do with any of the soft plastics including, depending on your hard body lure selection, you can:

  • Have more control over the depth your presenting your bait by selecting a hard body lure that intrinsically swims at a particular depth range.
  • Pause a hard body lure once or multiple times part way through the retrieve times and allow the lure, depending on your hard body lure choice, to just hang where it is, sink at a particular rate or rise in the water column at a particular rate. Barra can watch a lure nose to lure for many seconds and then just out of the blue whilst it’s still paused, falling or rising, or as soon as the lure starts moving forward, take the lure.
  • Whilst the lure is paused you can just twitch the rod tip to impart the smallest amount of movement on the hard bodied lure and that can be enough to trigger a take.
  • Cast a buoyant diving lure a long way into or next to structure and before commencing the retrieve just let it sit there so nearby fish, or fish from a surprising distance away, can investigate the noise the hard body made as it landed. On some occasions hits will seem to be as if you landed the lure on a barra’s head on other the hit may be as you commence the retrieve thus making the lure dive like a fleeing fish. On other occasions barra will follow a hard bodied almost back to the angler before striking.
  • Similarly, if it’s a bibless floating lure when you commence retrieving it through or on the surface creating a ruckus that may trigger a food or territorial response from a barra … either way that can be a lot of fun.

In any case whilst employing these tactics work through the different casting techniques.

My hard bodied lure categories are basically arranged by swimming depth.

I have not tried to include separating colors in my categories and decide that before I tie a lure on.

For barra a pretty good rule of thumb is that a chrome or light belly is a good starting point for lure selection and during the light, in clear water natural colored backs on the selected lure is my preference with greens, olives, browns and blues being good choices. For water that is discolored brighter lures or blackish lures, that are more visible to barra, are an obvious choice. In the dark I like white or blackish lures.

Also make sure that you have some lures in your selection that have rattles and other that have non rattle and can be retrieved with stealth.

My lure selection below take the above criteria into account:

» “> 

999,
‘cat’ => $myCat,
‘tag_id’ => $myTag,
‘orderby’ => title,
‘order’ => ASC
);
query_posts( $args ); while (have_posts()) : the_post();
$postTitle = get_the_title($post->post_title);
$postTumb = techn_get_post_thumbnail();
$notTitle = ‘Protected’;
$current_id = get_the_ID();
$pos = strpos($postTitle, $notTitle);
if ($pos === false) { ?>

prempublic” style=”padding:10px 5px 0px 30px;”>