The BUCK-SHOT® RATTLE SPOON is the planet’s hottest minnow imitating jigging spoon! It is molded from metal, & features a noisy brass Buck-Shot® Rattle and highly reflective “holographic” Baitfish-Image™ body that lures fish from a wide radius! It thumps, ticks, clicks and clatters and “rings-the-dinner-bell” for Perch, Walleye, Bass, Trout and Pike.
“The BUCK-SHOT® RATTLE SPOON is the noisiest and most lifelike minnow imitating jigging spoon on the market today. It’s molded from metal and features a deadly “Buck-Shot® Rattle Shell” that creates a nerve jarring vibration to call fish in . . . and trigger ‘em to strike. I have found them to be deadly for vertical jigging around weeds, rocks, brush and standing timber. for Walleye, Perch, Bass, Trout & Northern Pike!” It lures ‘em in & rattles ‘em up!”
Tony Roach
Team Northland® Fishing Tackle
Jake on 03/21/2014 11:52am
Slayed the perch on these again. Just tip with a minnow head and jig it around when you mark them. Sometimes REALLY agressive then pause and wait.. or pull them off the bottom. You can coax them into biting one way or another but with electronics you can really see what presentation they like best.
Mark on 02/18/2014 03:34pm
Ice fishing walleye and perch
Rob on 08/10/2013 09:41am
I fish for spiny rays in the Pacific Northwest all year around. I normally fish at
least once a week but often do more depending on my commitments. I will use not only
live bait but also plastics, crank baits, flies, and of course spoon lures in all
different types and configurations. Of all these, I have found perch patterns to
be the most effective on all types of trout, blue gill, bass and yellow perch.
The Northland Tackle BRS2-23 Buck shot rattle spoon Golden Perch has been by far
the top all weather producer for me the last couple of years without question. With
this type of lure, I will typically drop it down to the bottom and jig it to stir
up the mud to attract attention. If I do not have fish under the boat I will fish
two poles. One perch pattern spoon straight down and another I will cast and
retrieve bouncing the spoon off the bottom stirring up mud and pulling up vegetation
all the way back to the boat. This method will bring fish in out of curiosity if
nothing else.
As I have gained more experience with this type of lure, I have modified it to be
even more productive. When jigging below the boat or on ice I first remove the
treble hook from the tail of the lure leaving only the ring to which I tie off to my
line. I then add another ring to the front of the lure and then put a shiny
stainless #6 or 8 single barbed hook on that ring. I will then place live bait on
the hook. The vertical spoon presentation looks as if a small perch is feeding on
the bottom, since it's head is pointed straight down, and that it has a hold of
something live in it's mouth that it has pulled out of the mud.