the invention is in the field of fishing lures that hold bait.
The use of whole small fish for bait “bait fish” is one of the many ways to use bait and is broken into two groups 1, Live fish or 2, Dead and often frozen, then thawed for use. Whole dead bait fish are used differently from live fish. Two methods of trolling them behind watercraft are to make them spin or move erratically through the water imitating a wounded fish, and another method is to pull the dead bait fish imitating live straight swimming fish. In the sport fishing of various predator fish such as mackerel, wahoo, swordfish and the like, it is the practice to present the dead bait fish as a live swimming fish. This is achieved by inserting a hook into the body then secured to the eye of the hook or tying the hook to the head. This is laborious and takes great skill and expertise to provide the desired movement of the bait fish and accordingly provide the greatest enticement for the predator fish. Moreover, such mountings are highly prone to unnatural inversion during trolling.
There are several patented inventions with hoods or mechanism for using bait fish:
U.S. Pat. No. 8,024,887 B2 Sep. 27, 2011, Milanowski, U.S. Pat. No. 7,257,923 B1, Aug. 21, 2007, Urbano Jr. Has a hood with attachments that rotate the bait fish and cause it to dive, a pin that secures the bait fish, hook, and an eye to attach the line. Rotating the bait fish is not always preferred.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,708,442 B2, Mar. 23, 2004, Kress et al. The hood has metallic covering with eyes and a weight to cause it to submerge. This holds the head of the bait fish and except for the added decoration there is not much advantage.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,658,785 B1, Dec. 9, 2003, Faulkner et al. is minus the hood but has the idea of pulling the bait fish in a straight manor. The apparatus over complicates the process.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,893,232, Apr. 13, 1999, Horton et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 4,067,135, Jan. 10, 1978, to Martin, have hoods, spoonbills, and mechanism to pin the baitfish to the hood, and an eye for line. Design will not keep the bait fish swimming straight.
An invention, the Pirate Plug commercial available designed without a hood and only for ballyhoo.
this present invention allows bait fish to be easily attached to the device and pulled through the water in a straight manor. The device having a weighted spoonbill at the front, that stabilizes and keeps the bait fish upright, attached to a longneck hallow cone shaped body through which the line can pass. The smaller end, the front, houses the shank of a hook followed by a cone shaped body which houses the bend of the hook and the head of bait fish. The barb of the hook extends through a rectangle slot in the top of the cone shaped hood, a slot that runs the long direction of the hood. The bait fish in ideally mounted with a hook through its head with the hook inserted through the lower jaw and out between the eyes. The line that is attached to the hook is passed through the hood from the rear to the front; the head of the bait fish drawn into the hood with the barb of the hook topside. The barb slides into the slot at the top holding the bait fish in place. The line with the hook inside the hood is continues toward the tail of the bait fish with another hook attached. Because the hooks and line are separate if they become damaged they are easily replaced.
According, it is an object to provide a fishing lure that secures the bait fish and keeps it in an upright stable manor when pulled and is easy to use.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of present invention will be better understood with regard to following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings.
Referring to the drawings for the purposes of illustrating a preferred embodiment only and not for limiting same.
The slot 6 in the top 7 allows the barb of the hook through the top hood and enables the cone shaped body 7 to more closely fit the head of the bait fish when employing a lager hook.
having described the present invention with preferred versions thereof, other versions are possible. The disclosures and description herein are intended to be illustrative and are not in any sense limiting of the invention.