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mark poulson

Chartreuse

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I fish a tidal system that has off colored water most of the time, and is muddy currently.

I recently began adding a few strands of chartreuse silicone skirt material to the bottom of both my spinnerbaits, chatterbaits, and jigs, and it has made a huge difference in getting bit in off colored water.

I cut a standard silicone skirt tab into four pieces, and that's plenty.

It lets the bass see the lure better, but it's not overpowering, so I can use it on any color combination.

I was out yesterday with a new friend, on his boat.  We fished his spots, including some water that was stained, and threw the same baits, but I outfished him from the back of the boat.

He is a stick, and I am not, so I know the skirt color made a difference.

I'm not trying to brag, just to share something that really works well for me, and is easy to add to any skirted bait.

I recently bought some punch skirt hubs from Lurepartsonline, and tied up some skirts using a tab of my primary color and a tab of a chartreuse/black skirt, tied on in alternating half tabs.

My thinking is that punching is almost completely a reaction bite, and the chart. part of the skirt will catch their eyes and give them a better target as it flashes by them on the way down through the mats.

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Chartreuse is a green/yellow mix.  How much green you add to the yellow, or vice versa, determines how green or yellow your chartreuse is.

Here's the skirt color I use:

 

http://lurepartsonline.com/Online-Store/Silicone-Material/Barbed-Wire-Silicone-Material.html

 

It's #630 on your program, but #1 in your heart.  That's a tip of the cap to Don Cornelius of Soul Train.  Ah, the 70's, when men were men, and sheep ran scared!  Hahaha

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I have become a huge fan of chartreuse last couple of years or so, it started for me on a Rico popper

And just kept going, I had some lures painted for me last year as I don't have my airbrush set up going

And on every one of them I added that color to it, as you said,it don't take much

Peace, love and soul

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Interesting facts to support Mark's observations:

 

*As a general rule, the eyes of fish species that live in relatively clear water tend to distinguish a wider spectrum of colors than those that live in dirty or tannin stained waters.  Fish that are adapted to the latter conditions don't get exposure to blue and violet wavelengths and tend to be adapted to the spectral ranges of red-orange and yellow-green (chartreuse).

 

*Largemouth bass, perch, bluegill, crappie and walleye are most sensitive to light wavelengths in the 590 - 650nm  range (red-orange) and are also sensitive to the 510 - 570nm range (yellow-green).

 

Keen observation on Mark's part.  

 

I was the probably only white kid in Mesquite Texas who watched Soul Train back in the 70's.....Sooooooul Train, with your host Don Cornelius!!   Afro's and disco :lol:

Edited by BoisArc
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Interesting facts to support Mark's observations:

 

*As a general rule, the eyes of fish species that live in relatively clear water tend to distinguish a wider spectrum of colors than those that live in dirty or tannin stained waters.  Fish that are adapted to the latter conditions don't get exposure to blue and violet wavelengths and tend to be adapted to the spectral ranges of red-orange and yellow-green (chartreuse).

 

*Largemouth bass, perch, bluegill, crappie and walleye are most sensitive to light wavelengths in the 590 - 650nm  range (red-orange) and are also sensitive to the 510 - 570nm range (yellow-green).

 

Keen observation on Mark's part.  

 

I was the probably only white kid in Mesquite Texas who watched Soul Train back in the 70's.....Sooooooul Train, with your host Don Cornelius!!   Afro's and disco :lol:

 

Where did you find that info about what colors fish see in different colored water?

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