
It doesn’t matter if you’re trolling for ocean salmon, river run salmon, reservoir trout, landlocked kings or kokanee, rolling baits are some of the best offerings you can employ. For many years, I’ve been rigging plug cut herring, slipping whole anchovies on homemade wire baiters and pinning small threadfin shad on painstakingly tied leaders that feature a special sliding snell all with the goal of presenting a baitfish with just the right roll or rotation.
Why trout and salmon are drawn to a baitfish or a portion of a baitfish rotating through the water in a most unnatural way is a mystery to me, but ours is not the reason why, ours is to catch fish. And if the fish are enthusiastic about a rolling rotating bait, that’s what we need to present them with. As most avid trollers will attest, rolling natural baits are highly effective yet many guys don’t employ them because such baits are hard to rig, hard to care for on the water and messy. Plus, using natural baitfish is a big no-no at some of our high mountain fisheries.
Luckily for saltwater and freshwater anglers alike, the folks at Brad’s Killer Fishing Gear came up with a simple solution for the conundrum of rolling natural baits with their invention of the original Super Bait Cut Plug a few years ago.
The first time I saw a Super Bait Cut Plug rotating in a tank at a big fishing trade show in Las Vegas, I knew the brain trust at Brad’s was on to something big. There before my eyes was a bait that rolled perfectly every time all the time and it was made out of plastic. It didn’t have to be stored on ice and the lure was available in a number of different UV color patterns. If you wanted green or blue or hot pink baits, the days of dyeing herring were long gone, along with the mess and burned time such projects create.