A wide shad profile, HDS color technology and amazing swimming action mimic baitfish with uncanny realism. It’s a slow-sinking lure that descends to submerged structures where big fish lurk. Weighted to run at 1-3 ft. on the retrieve and encourage hard-hitting strikes from below. Each of these lures features Cabela’s innovative High-Definition Series (HDS) technology to deliver unsurpassed realism. A special printing process transfers an actual image of a live baitfish onto the lure, resulting in color and detail only a real fish can match. Teamed with a natural swimming action, HDS creates appeal the big ones can’t resist. Per each. Size: 4", 5/8 oz. Color:(001)Northern Pike, (008)Chub, (043)Perch, (222)Alewife, (333)Goldfish, (444)Pumpkinseed, (503)Golden Shiner, (009)Rainbow Trout.
Champion fishermen told me: "to catch big fish, use big lures." This one caught a twenty inch brown trout at Grantsville Reservoir on my third cast. See the photographs. After many caught rocks and green slime near the bottom on other lures, I chose this swimbait to swim it near the surface and above the rocks where the big fish hide out watching for smaller fish to eat and particularly with the full moon to silhouette it against the bright surface of the water where it's realistic swimming action is easily seen. With this lure, I cast out directly over a line of rocks with confidence that I can swim it to rocks, increase retrieve speed to swim it up over the rock and then slow to swim it down the rock or use rod length to swim it around a rock. The predictability of it's swimming action puts me in control to swim it right up to where fish are and in ways that make it appear vulnerable and enticing to fish. Fish follow it. The more evasive you swim it to try to get away from a fish, the more fish instincts are triggered to get it before it does get away. I have a lot of lures, but will include this one when I take just a few.
My wife bought a few of these because they were pretty after i have caught numerous walleye and northers on them I'm sold you can bounce them off bottom real slow and they look like a bait fish foraging for food