The Senko, and the many stick-worm baits like it, may be the most consistently effective largemouth lure ever made. It looks like nothing, a plain soft-plastic stick, but rigged weightless it sinks with a subtle, quivering do-nothing wiggle that bass find irresistible. If you handed a beginner one lure and told them to catch a bass, this would be it.
Why it works
It comes down to the fall. The salt-impregnated soft plastic sinks slowly and horizontally, and both ends shimmy on their own with no input from the angler. That effortless, lifelike action, combined with a slow, natural descent, triggers largemouth of every size, and it works even on heavily pressured water.
How to rig and fish it
- Weightless Texas: hook it weedless for skipping under docks and fishing cover.
- Wacky: hook it through the middle for maximum end-shimmy, see the wacky rig.
- Fish it slow: cast, let it sink on a semi-slack line, watch the line, and give it the occasional twitch. Patience on the fall is everything.
Tip Do not overwork it. The number-one Senko mistake is too much action, cast it out and let it sink on its own, because the bait is designed to do the work. Most strikes come while it is just falling.
Gear
A spinning outfit with a smooth Daiwa reel and light line covers most Senko fishing, step up to baitcasting gear for heavier cover and bigger fish. Watch your line closely; the bites are subtle.