One lure to rule them all

A baited hook. Catching sturgeon on any type of lure would be extremely difficult and with a baited hook I can catch any fish that I fish for.

My Bride said - Jake’s. Silver with red dots for a lot of the same reason.

I would go with a jig. Marabou feathers. Dark. I really should use it more

The thing about the Jakes and the Kastmaster that makes them so great is the weight.  You can chuck them a mile, which really helps if you’re fishing from shore.

Black and silver Rapala CD 7 is my go to from trout to catfish and everything in between

Wooly Bugger…I like olive green and black with a bead head.

I’d take a bugger too. Stripers, trout, catfish, bluegill, lake, stream, beaver pond, ice fishing, trolling…it doesn’t matter with a bugger.

I didn’t know that woolly buggers qualified as a lure. :smiley:

Mine would be a bead head crystal buggers in black/orange/pearl or tan/olive/pearl for still water fishing and either a brown hare’s ear or Montana nymphs for the stream.

I’m on the wooly bugger train. They are deadly in all sizes. For ice fishing, maribou jig.

I never sneeze to be demazed at the number of anglers who fish the same lures, the same way, in the same waters all year long…just because they caught fish on them one time.  …or, that is the only lure they know how to fish.

Much better to accumulate a good mental database of info on the various waters you fish…for the species you target most…at different times of the year under different weather and water conditions.  And then go prepared with a range of lures that should produce under the prevailing conditions…and be prepared to go to plan B or C if plan A doesn’t work.

But whatever you do, have fun and enjoy the experience.  The success of a fishing trip is not always measured by the number of fish you catch.  At least it shouldn’t be.

Brown wooly bugger with black tail and hackle. I’ve caught more variety of fish on brown and black than I can believe. This would cover both colors in one lure. A fly is indeed a lure, as you’re trying to “lure” a fish into biting.