Rattle Trap Fishing
Article: February, 1999

This
month I will be talking about a bait that has been around since the early
'70s. I can remember on Lake Conroe one afternoon when a gentleman came in
with a case of rattle trap's and set them on the counter. He told the
proprietor of the Marina to distribute these baits to his guides and his
local fishermen. Since that day the rattle trap has made a drastic change. I
can remember that someone left a rattle trap on the dash of their truck and
from the heat of the sun the bait swelled. With the chamber being a little
larger the bait gave off more vibration. There were people boiling them in
hot water trying to get the bait to expand. Soon there were many baits that
copied the ever popular rattle trap. The best way to describe this type of
bait is to call it a lip less crank bait. During the month of January,
February and March you can take the rattle trap and cover a lot of water
from the bank out to fifteen foot of water. You can actually throw a rattle
trap year-round. I have never seen a bait that will get bass to strike at it
in 46 degree water. I have thrown a multitude of baits in cold water but
none has ever drawn the strikes that the rattle trap does. I have slow
rolled spinner baits and crank baits, flipped jigs in this cold water and
none surpass the rattle trap. On Lake Fork, the red crawfish pattern bait is
the most popular during this time of year. To work the rattle trap
effectively, you need a high speed 6.1 ratio reel and a medium heavy rod
with 15 to 20 pound line. If you use one of the slower retrieve reels, it
will wear out your arm. There is an art to fishing this bait. When fishing
grass I like to tick the top of the grass and rip the bait up and let it
fall back down. Be prepared as the bait is falling back to the mat as that
is when most strikes will occur. Sometimes the bite will feel like a slight
pressure or as if you have picked up some grass. You will have to be on your
toes to detect these strikes. As the water warms the strike will become more
pronounced. Another technique is to fish the bait through timber and
periodically run it into the standing timber and stall the retrieve and
start again. Also, run the bait through limbs and over logs. As the bait
passes over the structure let it fall and start again. The strike will
normally occur on the fall or just as the bait starts again. Size and color
is another area you will have to experiment with. Some days a 3/4 ounce is
best and on others a 1/4 ounce is best. The trap has two hooks on it and I
normally change these hooks as soon as I take the bait out of the package. I
like to use a little stronger hook. Sometimes I change the belly hook to a
larger size which helps to hook more fish. The trap is well known for being
thrown free while fighting fish. Normally I use this larger hook around
grass more than timber. When fishing in the timber or very shallow water
this bait has a tendency to hang up a lot. Once you realize you have hung
the bait and it is not a fish, don't whip or bow your rod by pulling on it.
This will load your rod just like you were drawing an arrow on a bow and
should the bait come loose it will come back at you at twice the speed of
sound and with those two treble hooks, look out! The worse part is it may
miss you and hit your buddy or the worse case scenario, the guide. MERCY! To
be serious, when you retrieve your trap and it does hang up, don't jerk on
the line but drop slack and shake the rod tip loosely. If this does not
dislodge the bait try the old banjo trick. Disengage your reel, get enough
line to wrap it around your hand and leave slack. Grab the slack with the
other hand and pull it taught and release it as if you were plucking a
banjo. Sometimes the slack line will shoot towards the bait and shake it
loose. It is a lot easier to show someone this trick than put it in print.
If you are using braided line, I don't recommend wraping it around anything
that I want to keep intact on my body. Get yourself a stick and wrap it
around that. If there is one thing about fishing a rattle trap that I want
to impress upon you it is to be careful. As I said earlier, a fish can shake
this bait free in a matter of seconds and it can come screaming back at you
like a bullet. It is funny how the fish can get away but if the bait hangs
on something it is there for life. I always said if I were going to fly on
an airplane I would take along a couple of rattle traps because if the plane
was going to crash I could jump out and the traps would hang on something
before I hit the ground. I hope this will help you to catch some winter
fish.
Thanks and Good Fishing,
Jim
Fishing Tip
by EX Lake Fork Guide Jim
Reaneau