![]() ![]() So the Alabama Rig, the first artificial lure to be banned from competitive angling, and other umbrella lures have joined the same outlaw company as spitballs in baseball, square-grooved clubs in golf and the Speedo LZR Racer suit in swimming.” Striper Fishing Lures, The Alabama Rig In October, BASS extended the ban to all of its events, including its amateur series, college tournaments and regional club-level events. It was banned by the organizers of the United States’ two major bass fishing competitions, BASS (in 2012) and F.L.W. TOO Good?īut that is the problem: The Alabama Rig is too good. In essence, he has built a better mousetrap, and he is rightly proud of it. In July 2011, he built his first prototype by hand in his garage in Muscle Shoals, Ala., and he spent nearly 17 months perfecting it. Its inventor, Andy Poss, dreamed up the device, which he called the Alabama Rig while watching a tuna chasing a school of sardines on “The Blue Planet,” a BBC documentary series. It mimics a school of baitfish, and striped bass, walleye, largemouth bass, and northern pike apparently cannot stay away from it. We always like to start off our Alabama Rig chat with the best article ever written about this Striper Fishing Lure! Please follow New York Times Author James Card, 12-2-14, A Fishing Lure So Effective, It Catches Criticism, for more information! “The device is composed of five wires angled like spokes of an umbrella, with fishing lures attached to each end.
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