Rock The Minnesota MulletĀ |
Looking for kicker-sized largies and multi-species action? Northland has just the thing!Ā |
BEMIDJI, Minn.Ā (June 10, 2024) āĀ While its name may summon 10thĀ grade hair fashion for anyone who lived through the late ā80s and early ā90s, itās a lot more than ābusiness in the front, party in the back.ā Weāre not talking āhockey hairā or David Spade, Billy Ray Cyrus, Michael Bolton, Hulk Hogan, or Kenny Powersāweāre talking a brand-new bass jig from Northland Fishing Tackle, which should go well with the crowds of young-ish bassers rocking the retro hairdo themselves. Hair jigs have been a bass secret for years, with some companies even offering their own commercial versions of what top-finishers secretly tie on when itās time for a kicker fish. The problem? Most largemouth-intended bass hair jigs are too stiff, with more feathers than fluff. Northland took the opposite approach, creating a jig that has all the best attributes of a tiny marabou jig for rod-whipping giant bronzebacks (which Northland also makes) and combined it with a classic bucktail hair jig design. |
Yes, the new NorthlandĀ Minnesota MulletĀ has loft ā and lots of it, for fishing everything from shallow water, over summer weed tops, to open water where largemouths go crazy eating young-of-the-year and even larger panfish. The Minnesota Mullet is a big, flowing, hovering, water pushing machine. The big hair features a synthetic fiber material that creates a breathing, lifelike appearance in the water while also providing flotation to the jig. This will allow you to hover the bait over flats, weed beds, and suspended fish while pulsing the hair, and its tantalizing back feathers tease big bass and other predator fish to absolutely annihilate the bait.
Northland lure designer, Sam Larsen, offers: āMost of the best fish-catching baits are simple in design. We took that direction with the Minnesota Mullet, which is made of three materials on a premium Northland Elite Series Mimic Jighead with 60-degree upward hookbend and heavy wire for solid hooksets. We utilized a unique, synthetic fiber with a lot of loft, buoyancy, and flow; a couple chicken feathers off the back that undulate like a trailer; and just the right amount of tinsel. Then you have the thread tied farther back on the jig hook shank so itās really streamlined.ā
āEspecially in the upper Midwest, tournament bass anglers are going to town fishing big hair jigs for bigger bass. We knew we could create a better jig to use in the same manner in-the-know anglers have been doing for the past several years. Thereās really nothing like it, especially given that we added an entire extra step to the jig production process by applying vertical lines to the material to give it an even greater forage-matching appeal. These baits look like the real thing that big bass eat,ā continues Larsen.
āThere is no other bass hair jig that hangs, pauses, breathes, and sheds water so easily, while remaining easy to fish. It gives the right suspending action while having a lot of material to push waterānotify big bass of its presenceāand really stimulate their lateral lines.ā
ABOUT THE NORTHLANDĀ MINNESOTA MULLET
Born in the state of hockey, the Minnesota Mullet is a big, flowing, hovering, water pushing machine. This big hair jig features a synthetic fiber material that creates a breathing, lifelike appearance in the water while also providing flotation to the jig. This will allow you to hover the bait over flats, weed beds and suspended fish while pulsing the hair, and its tantalizing back feather that teases big bass and other predator fish to absolutely swallow it!
Currently available in Ā½- and Ā¾ ounce with other weights to follow soon. Right now, there are four forage-mimicking colors include Perch, Crappie, White, and Green Bluegill, with a bunch of additional patterns coming down the pipeline. MSRP: $14.99.
āIn my opinion, the Northland Minnesota Mullet is a lot more than a midsummer, open water bait,ā says winning bass pro, Noah Schultz. āIāve been fishing āem since ice-out throughout the Midwestāeverywhere from a foot of water out, through old reeds and cattails, and obviously, out deeper through weed flats and weed edges now. And, of course, it will come into play in open water when those fish move out. Right now, Iām fishing them around bluegill beds during the spawn, and then Iāll be fishing them over coontail and through cattails.ā
āThe way I fish them primarily I call āfloatingā ā I just straight-retrieve the Minnesota Mullet over the weed tips and if I feel a weed tick, rip it a little bit,ā adds Schultz.
As far as rock and deeper water, heāll let the jig drop to the bottom and then swim along the bottom, occasionally twitching it to get hairs moving.
āIts success comes from its subtlety and how the Minnesota Mullet breathes, floats, and hovers in the water unlike a lot of bass hair jigs. Then you add the Elite Series Mimic Jig, and it stays level in the water column and the pointed nose gets through the grass like a rubber swim jig.ā
Schulz has caught lots of tournament bass on it recently ā including some top 2 and 3 finishes. āItās a good kicker bait. The Minnesota Mullet generates some big fish bites when you need āem most.ā
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