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St. Croix Report

Downsizers Cater to Trends in Musky FishingDownsizers Cater to Trends in Musky Fishing

Park Falls, WI - A bucktail spinner was the prototypical lure employed throughout the early decades of musky fishing. In the years since, however, musky terminal tackle has become increasingly diverse and highly specialized. As lure manufacturers cranked out the big, bigger and gigantic baits demanded by musky anglers, St. Croix Rods eagerly owned the mission of designing and selling the equally specialized rods engineered and built to effectively fish every one of them.

Musky enthusiast and St. Croix pro, Chas Martin, has witnessed the evolution of musky fishing. "We're seeing the trend now that anglers are scoring on waters with down-sized presentations. In response, St. Croix has a whole series of rods that cater to these smaller presentations and the design of these rods allows anglers to effectively throw smaller baits ñ cast farther as well as work these lures in the accurate way that's required," Martin says.

Another benefit to the medium and medium-light power rods is they allow the correct pressure to be put on baits to prevent over-hooking or bent hooks. "Along those lines, the 8'6" medium-light has been my go-to for throwing lipless crankbaits and swim jigs, which are really effective earlier in the year," says Martin, who also prefers the model for down-sized deep-diving crankbaits. "Whether I'm working a weedline or rocks, I'm pumping that rod all day long and the rod really decreases fatigue. And as far as the 9 footer, that's my in-line spinnerbait and smaller topwater rod, which is great on a number of levels including bombing casts a country mile, loading correctly on the hookset, and deeper figure-8s. Honestly, the entire line allows me to fish longer with less fatigue."

Fellow St. Croix pro, Jeremy Smith of Lindner's Angling Edge, agrees. A self-described small-river musky nut, Smith espouses the results-oriented benefits of the full spectrum of smaller baits during early and late-season cold-water conditions, as well as whenever and wherever muskies receive reduced fishing pressure.

"Low-pressure fish tend to be much less selective," Smith says. "Throwing smaller baits helps any angler to stay in the game longer by decreasing angler fatigue and maintaining the focus and concentration it takes to convert on any given cast. Those critical benefits aside, smaller baits are also better options for the precision target casting that's often required on small waters."

The angler's dilemma is that small baits don't automatically equate to small fish, so rods that make presenting downsized baits more efficient must still be capable of hooking, fighting and landing monster muskies. St. Croix's new Legend Tournament Musky "Downsizers" consist of three unique freshwater musky casting models, purpose-built for fishing smaller bucktails, topwaters, crankbaits, jerkbaits, jigs and gliders with maximum efficiency.

New St. Croix Legend Tournament Musky Downsizer freshwater casting rods are available through established St. Croix retailers at a retail price of $350-$370. Learn more at www.stcroixrods.com.