Fri., Nov. 15, 2024
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Waxing Gibbous
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Upstate N.Y.
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Float It

If you wanted,
how would you
float in water?

You’d relax.

That’s because you do float, if you let yourself.

Worms and crawfish also float.

Then why do soft-plastic worms and crawfish, when hooked, sink?

Float It, the company, makes plastic baits that float when hooked.

“Your worm really does work well,” Daniel McGinnis, professional largemouth bass angler, said, after winning an FLW tournament a month ago, according to the company.

When the bite slowed, one of the company’s worms, rigged on a shaky-head, caught for him.

“(And it) truly is
a floating worm,"
he said.

“I gave a bag of worms out to each of my co-anglers each day (of the tournament),” McGinnis said. “They both were impressed with how well they floated.”

The company currently makes worms and craws.

The worms are 7 inches and come in lots of different colors.

The craws are 6 inches and come in a couple of colors.

They catch, because they float at the fish's eye level,
instead of "dragging silt," the company says.

To check them out, or to order, visit Float It’s Web site.