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Tackle Shop
Advice on Lures and How to Fish Them
New to Canadian Fishing?
Not to worry!! We can ADVISE YOU ON THE RIGHT LURES and GIVE YOU TIPS ON HOW TO FISH THEM for catching your limit of Walleye, Northern Pike, Lake Trout or Smallmouth Bass.
You can spend $100s of dollars on tackle for a trip to Canada. Make sure you spend your hard earned money on lures that work. Trial and error can be an expensive teacher. We send you a list of lures, with detailed ordering instructions of where to order them on the web. We also send you tips on how to fish them <click on this>to be the most effective. These lures are proven effective, no matter the body of water, and especially selected for the species you are fishing.
Over 20 years experience. Let us help you be successful!!!
Order Below:
Walleye List of lures, with detailed ordering instructions of where to order them on the web + tips on how to fish them to be the most effective = $4.99 
Pike List of lures, with detailed ordering instructions of where to order them on the web + tips on how to fish them to be the most effective = $4.99 
Trout List of lures, with detailed ordering instructions of where to order them on the web + tips on how to fish them to be the most effective = $4.99 
Bass List of lures, with detailed ordering instructions of where to order them on the web + tips on how to fish them to be the most effective = $4.99 
Get all 4 Lists of lures, with detailed ordering instructions of where to order them on the web + tips on how to fish them to be the most effective = $16.99


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Here is an Example of the Type of Tips We'll Provide
Here is a partial set of the tips we'll send you about Jigheads. This is just a part of the information we'll give you on jigheads and an example of what you can expect for all our recommended lures
  
  
  
If you are limited on space or finances and can only bring just a few lures, then jigheads have to be at the top of your list. Jigheads come in a variety of shapes, colors and weights. Above are just a few of the more common ones. The most popular weights for Canadian fishing for walleye, bass and pike are 1/16, 1/8, 1/4 and 3/8 ounce. Each weight has a different use. If you need to go deep, use the 1/4 or 3/8 oz version. If the fish are hitting light, use a 1/8 or 1/16. The jig is the single best fishing lure of all time because it is so versatile. You can attach just about any type of bait—live or plastic—to a jig. Some like to tip a grub tail or hair jigs with live bait, but live bait on its own on a jighead is a widely used and effective technique. Some common bait includes: worms, leeches, minnows, crawdads. A simple rule of thumb on where to hook the bait is - when it doubt, hook the snout, except for crawdads which are better hooked through the tail to mimic their backwards-swimming motion. For walleye, add a crawler to the jighead and then use a syringe to inflate it with air for an even larger presentation and to help keep it off the bottom.
You can also add silicone or rubber skirts to a jighead or adorn them with hair or feathers. You can jig a jig. You can hop, pop, skip, swim, drag or stick one. You can cast, troll, drift or fish a jig under a bobber, and a jig’s ly no matter what the season. You can fish a jig in a lake, river, reservoir, pit, pond, creek, stream or ocean. You can fish for crappies with a tiny, 1/100-ounce jig or for lake trout with a black or white three-ouncer. Learn how to fish a jig well, and you’ll catch more, and bigger, fish of almost every species. To properly fish a jig you need good control over its depth and speed. If your lure isn’t at the same depth as the fish, you won’t catch one. And even when you’re at the right depth, your bait must still be presented at the speed the fish want. Success goes up once you’ve got these factors under control. With jigs, there are two ways to achieve the needed depth and speed. One way is to pick the right weight. The other is to select the proper jig-head design. Round heads are great for vertical jigging, and ideal for casting and dragging over sand, gravel or even moderately rocky bottoms. They can also be fished with live bait or plastic such as grubs and worms. You can even stick a ball head inside a tube jig—just be sure not to shove the head right up to the end or you’ll lose the spiralling action. The only potential drawback is that round-head jigs lie on their sides when on bottom. That’s not necessarily bad, but if you want to draw attention to your live bait or plastic trailer on the bed of a lake or river, there are better options. And don’t throw round heads with exposed hooks into grass, weeds, reeds or brush. If so, you're asking for a snag. Instead use a weedless ballhead or a stand-up head.
<= This is an example of a Stand-up head. Stand-up heads are designed to be fished in the weeds. That becomes readily apparent when you look at one: the line-tie is such that when the jig is sitting in your hand or on the bottom, the hook points upward.This means you can cast stand-up heads inside the weedline and snake them through vegetation, small sticks or rocks without constantly snagging. And when the jig rests on the bottom, the hook’s location on the top allows you to keep live or plastic bait above the moss or debris, making them easier for fish to see. In fact, stand-up heads can duplicate the action of a minnow feeding in shallow water. You can also use use stand-up heads for vertical jigging. Try tipping one with a minnow and then plunking it up and down, bumping it on the lake bottom. <This is just a part of the information we'll give you on jigheads and an example of what you can expect for all our recommended lures>
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