***** New ! The Flying Lure Picture Book ***** Click photos to enlarge

New Flying Lure Worm and Flying Lure Snake. The snake has a slow side to side motion with a large tail. The Worm has a tight curly tail action. Both are able to get into places where normal worms just cannot go.

TIP:Largemouth Bass strikes a 4 inch Crawtail in the lily pads. Throw your Flying Lure on top of lily pads and let it swim into pockets where the fish are hiding...UNDER the pads, where other lures cannot go.

WORM FISHING TIP:Lunker Bass inhales a 6 in, red Flying Lure worm. Cast your Flying Lure Worm near cover and let it swim underneath. Then, Jig it 6 - 12 inches and let it go back into a fish's face. You can trigger strikes from inactive fish that would let an ordinary worm move out of the strike zone.

A lunker largemouth rushes an original pearl colored Flying Lure. This footage was in our first TV show and amazed people with how aggressive a fish will be with a Flying Lure swimming on its own, naturally.

The proper way to rig a Flying Lure weedless is to impale the center tail strand on the hook. In most cases this isn't necessary since when retrieved, the Flying Lures form their own weedguard naturally by folding back and protecting the hook.

Guido and Dion Hibdon, the world's only father and son team to win the BASS Master's Classic give a seminar on the Flying Lure.

The graphic from the original Flying Lure show that demonstrated why the Flying Lure is different from all others...because it swims into a fish's hiding place...unlike all others.

Flying Lure worm swims into a tree root in an undercut bank in a river.

Our 10th Anniversary logo...Can you believe we've been on TV for a decade, spreading the message of a brand new way to fish...and setting records? MORE TO COME...STAY TUNED.