Ya, I've basically stopped using them, even for trout. I find many advantages to spoons: the trout love them, they aren't too expensive, they cast MUCH farther, and I think they have a much better action. All inline spinners do is drag through the water with the blade spinning, which is barely anything. Spoons are SO Much better in my opinion and through my experiences. I would only use inline spinners for some close-to-shore or boatside crappie fishing. You could pop bluegill with them, too, if you're one of those people who enjoy catching bluegill for whatever reason. If you do use inline spinners for bass, try a Mepps Aglia #4 and retrieve it close to the top of the water column, bass do take that. Basically just go big if you're using inline spinners for bass fishing. For trout fishing, I throw out two rods: an egg sinker-rigged pair of Berkley Gulp Alive floating salmon eggs and a spoon that I cast and retrieve. That gets me good results.
Posted Tue May 26, 2015 7:44 pm