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Posted

I Poured and tied some gray ¼ oz Roadrunners a few years ago, but never fished them much, because I didn’t know when, where, or how to fish them. I had heard that grey Roadrunners can be very good on Table Rock at times. Some of them have Indiana blades, while others have willow leaf blades.

Posted

3/8oz blade runner with 4/0 Mustad and white Fluke Jr.

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-- Jim

If people concentrated on the really important things in life, there'd be a shortage of fishing poles. -- Doug Larson

Posted

I wonder why he chose a super fluke over a swimming fluke. Seems the tail would move a little better. Maybe he was going for more of a subtle presentation. I don't know and probably never will haha

Posted

everybody looks at the head and the spinner, but IMO it's all about that fluke. Toss it down there on any head you want, it's an automatic top 5 hall of famer.

Posted

Did ya'll get the 1/8oz down to 35ft or was it 3/16oz? It seems like all my guides would freeze over before the 1/8oz touched down in the abyss.

We were using 1/8 oz on 6-pound line.

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Posted

Champ don't know ya personally but from your posts over the years. I don't believe for one second you and your better half would fish that little thing that deep, no way no how!

Willy, we wouldn't have except I kept seeing occasional schools of them on my graph glued to the bottom at 32-38 feet. I finally caved to the temptation, put my jerkbait down and dropped the varmint down to them and immediately got bit.

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Posted

I Poured and tied some gray ¼ oz Roadrunners a few years ago, but never fished them much, because I didn’t know when, where, or how to fish them. I had heard that grey Roadrunners can be very good on Table Rock at times. Some of them have Indiana blades, while others have willow leaf blades.

Really anyplace or situation where you might swim a grub. School fish, deep fish, flats, etc. Throw it, count it down a bit, and slow swim it back without much action. Trick is in figuring out the depth.

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