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Carving a Niche
Casters and crafters discuss angling’s
ongoing fascination with wooden plugs.
By Brent Swager
Water Scout Streamliner.
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Back when the earth was just
beginning to cool, my grandfather introduced me to fishing.
His rusted metal tackle box was filled with cork bobbers,
bits of line and hooks and two wooden lures he’d carved from
a salvaged chair leg. Crudely painted and pinned with
salvaged hardware, the plugs were more a work of pride than
effective fish-enticements, but I was squeamish about
hooking my own worms and as a result, caught my first lake
bass on one of Grandpa’s homemade wooden lures.
Thirty years later, most of
the plugs rattling around in anglers’ boxes are made of
plastic. They are mass-produced, injection-molded with
volume and affordability in mind. You can find any size,
color or configuration you can imagine. Some have internal
rattles, some holographic finishes, some better hooks than
others.
But among fishermen of a
certain age or mindset, there’s just something about those
wooden plugs. For some the appeal may be purely nostalgic,
but for others it derives from fish-attracting qualities
that may seem hard to reproduce.
Is wood better than plastic?
No. Just different.
At a local flea market, I ran
into Al Veach standing beside a display filled with wooden
lures. Veach, of Tampa, has been turning out handmade plugs
under the name Al-Lures for years. For him, it’s a question
of function and flexibility.
“There are a lot of reasons
to use wood,” Veach said. “For me, it was a natural fit; I
love to carve and fishing is fun, so making a lure I can
catch fish with is just two tangents coming together.
“You can create subtle
differences with wood that just aren’t feasible with plastic
or composite lures. I listened to the old-time guys talk
about the wooden lures they had success with and tried to
capture the quality and detail they seemed to think so
important.”
Veach is understandably proud
of the lures he crafts and while the African mahogany, cedar
and walnut lures generally draw a variety of lookers to his
display, it’s the results his lures get that bring serious
fishermen back for more.
Talk to anglers who favor
wooden lures, and some common threads emerge. Action, how a
lure runs on a particular retrieve, is a big subject.
“You can buy four or five
wooden lures and one out of the bunch will float or wiggle
just a little differently than the rest,” said Tony Banner,
an avid fisherman from Wesley Chapel, Florida. “Maybe it’s
the grade of the wood or the weight of the paint, but I
think that adds to the effectiveness.”
Joel Richardson, a bass guide
in North Carolina and Virginia, agrees. “No two wooden lures
are alike,” he said. “Plastic is so perfectly made that each
one comes back the same, but wood is different. You might
get one that skips a beat every ten feet or floats a little
different than the others and that’s what makes them so
good.”
One feature a lot of plastic
plugs offer that’s hard to duplicate with wood is internal
rattles. Many anglers swear by the click-clack of a brass
bead inside a hollow-body plug. On the other hand, there are
situations when a quieter profile is desirable.
“Wood
makes a natural vibration when it hits off blades of grass
on top of the water,” said Todd Kersey, a bass guide on Lake
Okeechobee and the Everglades. “Wooden lures are
particularly effective when you have a school of fish you
don’t want to spook or when you are facing finicky fish. The
noise they make is very lifelike.”
“A wooden
lure is quieter than plastic, I believe,” said Kersey. “Too
much sound is an alert to fish. Bass will spook if you make
strange noises.”
Water Scout 1934.
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The versatility of wood
inspires makers to experiment with different designs for
different purposes.
“It’s not unusual for me to
have a single body shape with eight or nine small
differences I’ve addressed after trying it out or hearing
feedback,” said Veach. “Everyone develops their own way to
fish these lures; I often create lures for people based on
their technique or on a lure they used to use and liked. I
can build the lure to dive or plunk loudly or wiggle,
depending on where it’s going to be fished.”
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