First, sorry for the shameless pun. Seriously, though, my friend and I were night fishing in unfamiliar brackish water and in preparing for the trip, we'd both considered using them. Not exactly sure why, probably because neither of us had any preconcieved associations about what would work there at night. Nonetheless, in an effort to learn more I prepared dual rigs (small umbrellas), both with 5 inch white curly-tailed grubs, one glow and one regular. Unfortunately, lacking the discipline to start fishing with an untried lure in favor of the regular version (It was cold. I was tired), I switched after only two casts of the glow rig, and on my first cast of the regular one (cast #3) I had a fish on. Not enough of a sample to draw any conclusions, and I never switched back. That's why I'm not a scientist.
Anyway the question lingered. I'd gathered some data from well-placed sources (tackle shop owners), but even tbe experts were hard-pressed to describe the applications beyond day fishing structure in deep water where there's limited light.
My gut says that a striped bass, especially a big smart old one wouldn't want to eat a glowing fish any more than I'd be inclined to eat ice cream that was glowing. I haven't got a clue, so I'm going to crowd source it and throw it out to you guys.
Thanks.
Anyway the question lingered. I'd gathered some data from well-placed sources (tackle shop owners), but even tbe experts were hard-pressed to describe the applications beyond day fishing structure in deep water where there's limited light.
My gut says that a striped bass, especially a big smart old one wouldn't want to eat a glowing fish any more than I'd be inclined to eat ice cream that was glowing. I haven't got a clue, so I'm going to crowd source it and throw it out to you guys.
Thanks.