October 8, 2011

Skirts Plus Standard Banded Replacement Skirts for Fishing Lures

Give all your jigs, spinnerbaits and buzzbaits a fresh, exciting new look with these premium lure skirts!


Manufactured by Skirts Plus Corporation using their premium BIO-FLEX silicone material. This is some of the best skirt material in the world. It is super soft for pulsating, breathing action. The way the strands are banded and tied together by Skirts Plus is with their standard latex rubber collar.

These are your tried and true type of silicone skirts with rubber band collars to hold the skirts together.

If you look at the photos, you will be able to see whether or not the collar comes with molded-in holes to accept rattle pods or not. Rattles not included.

Approximately 5-1/4" total length. All standard skirts have 44 to 50 backward- and forward-facing silicone rubber strands, making 88 to 100 individual loose ends. That's a lot of skirt.

The retainer band is put off-center to create one short side and one long side. Usually, the long side is put on facing forward, but you have a choice how you want to put it on, and it is fun to experiment.

People ask me why I offer some skirt colors as standard band skirts instead of offering them as the advanced Pro-Tie, Hole-In-One or other newer skirt styles?

There are two very good reasons to use standard banded skirts:

  1. First, for some of the simple, single color or very basic two-color skirts, you simply don't need anything more than a standard band, and it is the most economical band style.
  2. Second reason is, on some of the multi-color skirts, when you have a standard band, some of the strands will wriggle around slightly, may shift and combine positions under the band, and when you have two or three closely-matching colors, that blending can be a good thing for the strands and colors to move around and commingle. It causes a well-blended color pattern which may often be a desirable effect to harmonize the colors instead of staying separate. On Pro-Tie, Hole-In-One or other newer skirt styles, the strands are locked and fixed in place so the colors can't move, merge and blend like they can on a standard banded skirt. So I still prefer to offer the standard band for those particular color combos that work better when they're able to merge and present the colors blended together.

NOTE: All colors are NOT always in stock. Colors are constantly in the process of selling out and being restocked all the time.

For pricing and current availability, please visit http://www.BassdozerStore.com.

Black Blue Flash. A flashier variety of black blue. Each strand is heavily foiled in a non-descript, irregular pattern on both sides with lustrous metallic blue foil flash. The blue foil is laminated in an irregular swirling pattern. The blue foil constantly glistens in a fluid manner as the skirt strands ripple whenever moved. The blue flash flutters in a shimmering illusion.

Great to use at night. It also excels at dawn, dusk, on dark mornings, overcast days or when the wind smurs the surface so much it reduces light penetration below, or when the wind creates a mudline - throw them the black blue flash!

Black Blue. One of BassdozerStore.com's most popular and productive skirts! The number one color in flipping jigs and often used on spinnerbaits. Some soft bait companies say black blue is their top-selling soft plastic color too. Black blue can catch as many bass by day as by night, and in clear, stained or dark water.

This is no ordinary black blue skirt. This black blue beauty has the perfect blend of reflective blue foil to add a lifelike shimmering flash. Royal blue tips add the perfect contrasting kick of blue tip color.

Try Yamamoto's various black with blue (color #'s 021, 520, 523, 904) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt. There are some times I desire to throw black blue jigs in clear water (such as pre-spawn through post-spawn) and I tend to use Yamamoto's color #214 (smoke with black, blue and gold flake) as a black blue jig trailer color under clearer water conditions.


From top down: Comparison of our black blue, black blue red and black red colors.

Black Blue Red. Bass love black blue lures as much as they love black red. So we've united those two great colors into one. Shown in close-up photo at right: Black Blue (top) plus Black Red (bottom) are combined into a single supercharged Black Blue Red (center) skirt color! Photos tend to exaggerate the red more - but in reality, there's the same amount of blue and red metal flake, blue and red metallic foil print and blue and red tail tips. Both blue and red are equal in the skirt, but you may influence the overall lure color balance by choosing either a black blue or black red soft plastic trailer, and you may pluck out a few of the black blue or a few of the black red strands to modify the skirt to your particular liking.

Black Brown Craw. Friends and customers often ask me, "What's the best jig skirt color?" This is it! It perfectly mottles and blends the two best jig colors in history - black and brown - frosted with a fine green shimmer. The result is a black brown jig skirt that excels with any or all of the most productive jig trailer colors - black, brown, green pumpkin, watermelon and junebug trailers all match perfectly. Don't forget chartreuse trailers for the smallies. They're all options trailed behind the mottled black brown craw skirt. It is one heck of a productive jig skirt. Note: These skirts now come with black ear band NOT red ear band as shown.

Black Neon. In the late 1990s, jig flipping legend Denny Brauer rose to the top of the bass fishing world and dominated top pro tournaments by adding a black neon (black with red flake) flipping tube to his flipping jig regimen. Still to this day, black neon is the number one flipping tube color. Yet a black neon flipping jig skirt has never become popular. If you think that flipping a black neon tube works swell, wait until you try this black neon skirt - for jigs, spinnerbaits and buzzbaits.

Black Red Flash. A favorite with bass anglers across Europe or anywhere there's a delta, brackish water or estuarine bass fishery in the USA. To see this in person, the metallic red foil is far more reflective and flashier than the picture shows it.

Black red skirts like this tend to be favored by anglers who fish delta, bayou, swampy or brackish estuaries/rivers along the Atlantic, Gulf or California coastline. European bass anglers also heavily use black red skirts. Otherwise, the average angler hardly uses black red skirts today - but it wasn't always so. As little as fifteen years ago, it was even money whether an angler would claim a black blue or a black red jig worked best. There were many anglers who favored one versus the other. Then somehow the black red jig all but disappeared. Who knows why? Black blue has become the most popular jig color in the USA today - but fish still love black red - on spinnerbaits, buzzbaits and jig. Rediscover why many old timers favored the black red skirt over black blue!

Black Red. Always has been, always will be a most reliable color. Use it on jigs, spinnerbaits and buzzbaits too. Black red can catch as many bass by day as by night, and in clear, stained or dark water. Try it any time anywhere. If you do that, you will have some memorable moments with this color.

Bleeding Ghost Shad. This skirt color appeals to all bass species, largemouth, spotted bass and smallmouth hit it hard! It's based on the clown color so effective as a hard plastic jerkbait color. The skirt is mainly strands of pearl blue with silver flake plus a swatch of chartreuse with silver flake and red tail tip. You can position the chartreuse red swatch on top or bottom to see if it makes a difference in how often or how solidly fish strike it. What fish could resist?

Brown Pumpkin. A rich, earthy brown ideal for deep smallie lakes or tannic-stained waters.

Brown Purple. Winning Western pros have thrown brown purple jig 'n pigs forever. Always have. Always will. Now here's a great nondescript, natural-looking skirt that Western jig wizards will love.

Half purplish brown on the back and half brownish purple on the belly. If you're not getting solid strikes that way, rotate the skirt so the purple's on the back, the brown on the belly, and see if that turns the trick.

Super drab. No flash, no fancy, no dinks, just kickers. It's a mighty handsome brown purple skirt.

This dark, nondescript skirt can be dressed with any black, brown, purple or watermelon trailer, either pork or plastic. To narrow down a few favorite trailers for this skirt are: 1) brown pork under any conditions 2) a dark smoke pepper in clear to stained water or 3) a dark green pumpkin pepper under dark conditions soft plastic trailer.

Out of stock. Bubblegum. Chances are you've never seen a skirt quite like this. It's half pale pink with sparse purple flake, plus half pale orange. Every strand is infused with pale green flakes. Give it a try. You will not be sorry.

Chartreuse White. Who knows why chartreuse white works so well on spinnerbaits, but it does. Several of the sport's top celebrity anglers have made their legendary careers by throwing chartreuse white spinnerbaits. The color does not truly resemble any natural bait, but if you had to limit yourself to only one spinnerbait skirt color to throw, this is "the" number one most popular and productive spinnerbait skirt color in history. Works equally well in clear, stained and muddy water.

Chartreuse White Silver. Half chartreuse. Half white. All heavily-glittered with a glimmering silver scale sheen effect. The soft, seductive shimmer of the silver sparkle doesn't come through on the computer screen, but it's a very soft, almost liquid-like silver shimmer all throughout the skirt, Much more subtle and life-like than a harsh flash, it's just a glimmer. The black rubber band on this skirt mimics the black spot that shad show on their shoulders behind their gill plates.

Out of stock. Copper Rain Frog. The strands are a nice weedy green color, heavily infused with pearlescent micro-particles that give a ruddy reddish, pinkish, orangey or lustrous coppery sheen to the skirt, depending on the amount and angle of ambient light. The sheen tends to bend the green into a brownish. The sheen tends to come and go, and each strand emits a bit different sheen from the others, causing a constantly changing or shimmering effect. Looks like warm summer rain drops rolling off a green frog's back. That's why it is called "rain frog" and there's really nothing else quite like it. But that's not all! There's a thinj swatch of twisted metallic copper Mylar on the belly. The camera makes it look like there's more Mylar than is really there. Even still, you can thin out some of the copper Mylar. It will still be a full size skirt.

Dark Green Perch. Popular in northern states. Matches a yellow perch or a Great Lakes goby. This is a little darker twist on the Green Perch color skirt. It's only half green perch strands, and the other half is dark green pumpkin. Both halves have black pepper flake in them. The pattern is finished with a swatch of neon gold-glittered black fish scale strands for perch-like flash The green perch and dark green perch are seldom-seen jig colors, but perch-eating bass in North America and Europe just love them. You will too! Works great on spinnerbaits also.

Delta Craw. A vibrant red and orange with mottled black "craw" markings, Delta Craw mimics one of the most fundamental forage foods in the bass diet - crawfish. The top half is red with black mottled markings. The orange appears to overpower the red in the photo, but in terms of strand count, the skirt is approximately half black with red. The sides are pumpkin orange with orange flake plus a more vibrant orange with black mottled markings on the belly. Delta Craw is destined to be a real killer color anywhere you have dark conditions.

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Ghost Herring. Imitates blueback herring, alewife or sawbelly, and Sacramento hitch (an important bait species for big bass in California's Clear Lake and Sacramento watershed fisheries). The back has a pale green chartreuse with black scales. The sides and belly of the skirt are milky white with pale blue glimmers. The black band represents the black gill spot on herring.

Gold Shiner. An absolute must-have for clear water conditions! Smallmouth, especially in clear water, go nuts over this skirt color. This skirt has highly-reflective gold and pale green crystals that light up and shine in clear water. Plus a golden black fish scale accent. Try Gary Yamamoto's clear w/gold & silver (color #168) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt.

If you fish clear water, you owe it to yourself to try this skirt. It's that good.

Green Brown Craw. The black cross-hatching helps give this skirt a crawdad look. The ample green flakes and green glitter glisten and flicker under water.

Half black-barred brownish green-flaked strands on top. Half unbarred brownish green-glittered strands on the sides. The camera makes the orange belly strands appear out of proportion. Only 10 (out of a total 50) strands are black-barred orange. You can easily pluck a few of the orange strands out of the skirt when you use it, if you so desire.

Try Gary Yamamoto's smoke root beer w/green & copper (color #236) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt, but you can use any basic black, brown, green pumpkin or watermelon trailer with this skirt.

Green Perch. Popular in northern states. Matches a yellow perch or a Great Lakes goby. Exceptional producer on smallmouth! Most people who see this color may never try it. Pity the fools. It's their mistake. The khaki olive green color is kind of a cross between watermelon pepper and chartreuse pepper - and it catches a ton of fish. It has a golden black fish scale accent. Some people favor the gold black swatch on top, others like it on the belly. Fish will hit the skirt either way.

Try Gary Yamamoto's clear w/gold & silver (color #168) or translucent hot pink merthiolate (#320) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt. There's something about combinations of green and pink that bass like. It is why lures in rainbow trout colors work so well. It has nothing to do with rainbow trout. It's due to the contrast between green and pink combined in a bait.

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Green Pumpkin. One of our most popular and productive skirts! We don't need to say too much about green pumpkin. It's many anglers' favorite soft bait color. Now it's a "must-have" jig skirt color too!

Nice dark green for duty in low light, at daybreak, in the evening (ideal for those weekday after work tournaments), and at night. Great for dirty water - or clear.

Two irregular print patterns - both black bars and spots - are imprinted onto this skirt. It really gives a broken-up and non-descript looking pattern. It gives a great mottled crawfish, baitfish or panfish look to this skirt.

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Green Pumpkin Blend. It was tough to decide which green pumpkin color we liked better, and the fish seemed to like them both very much. So we blended them into one awesome skirt. The contrast is hard to see in the photo, a little easier to see in your hand, and is heightened under water. The two tones add dimension, texture, and set each other off - all good, fish eye-attracting qualities to have in this handsome and productive skirt.

Out of stock. Green Pumpkin Gold Flash. This is dark green pumpkin mottled with black bars and spots, plus a swatch of neon gold-glittered black fish scale strands for flash. The camera really highlights the gold, but note there are only 5 strands of gold among 44 strands of dark green pumpkin. That little extra flash and contrast can be the perfect touch to spark more and harder strikes at times. Give it a try. Has rattle ear band.

Out of stock. Green Pumpkin Olive. One half dark green pumpkin. One half dark olive green. Both halves heavily peppered with mottled black bars and spots. This is just a great natural color.

Green Pumpkin Red. The number one color worldwide in soft plastic bass lures (green pumpkin with black) plus a swatch of dark red and black on the belly. There's not really much more I feel I need to say about this skirt except to recommend you try it soon on jigs especially, but also spinnerbaits and buzzbaits too.

Green Sunfish. One of our most productive blends in shallow, grassy natural lakes. This is about as good as a skirt gets. Heavily barred, mottled and spotted like sunfish often are, this stunning skirt has a dark green pumpkin pepper back, watermelon pepper sides and orange pumpkin pepper belly. It's doubtful you may find another green sunfish skirt as nice as this.

Two irregular print patterns - both black bars and spots - are imprinted onto this skirt. It really gives a broken-up and non-descript looking pattern. It gives a great mottled crawfish, baitfish or panfish look to this skirt.

Try Gary Yamamoto's smoke root beer w/green & copper (color #236) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt.

June Bug Bluegill. Great for muddy lakes and rivers. This color resembles a bluegill sunfish. It has a multi-color black and purple appearance with superfine red neon and plenty of shiny blue foil and purple foil for flash. Goes great in dark stained to muddy water environments - or anywhere that bluegill exhibit that dark purplish appearance.

Many anglers mistakenly feel flash doesn't matter in dark water, low light or at night. Nothing could be further from the truth. Flash is often attractive in the right proportion, even in the darkest conditions. That's why this skirt is so heavily sparkled with blue and purple glitter. Try anything black or try Gary Yamamoto's cinnamon w/purple (color #221) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt.

Out of stock. Olive Brown Craw. One half dark olive pumpkin. One half brown crawdad color. Both halves heavily black peppered with mottled black bars and spots. A truly great natural color skirt.

With the two tone skirts, there's no strict rule or requirement to have one or the other half as the back or belly color. True, it seems more natural to present a dark top, light belly. Yet there are days when twisting the skirt around 180 degrees caused fish to hit harder. Who knows why, but if you are getting weak hits or half-hearted bumps on a multi-colored skirted lure, try to turn the skirt colors upside down and see if it doesn't make a difference. It may not look "right" to you, but there are days when this simple trick convinces fish to strike more solidly.

Out of stock. Olive Cinnamon. One half olive green. One half light cinnamon brown. Both halves heavily peppered with mottled black bars and spots. A honey of a clear water color.

Out of stock. Olive Pumpkin. Dark green olive pumpkin heavily black peppered with mottled black bars and spots.

PBJ Flash. Peanut Butter Jelly ("PBJ") first became popular as a laminate color in soft plastic lures in Southern California many years ago. The color had practically been forgotten until a resurgence the last few years. PBJ has recently been rediscovered as a "new" jig color. PBJ jigs have spread smoothly across the Southeast and Northeast USA. But PBJ never looked anywhere near this good until now! This new PBJ Flash skirt sticks to the roof of bass mouths. The photo here hardly does this color justice. The brown skirts are HEAVILY foiled on both sides with lustrous purple foil. The purple foil is laminated in an irregular swirling pattern. The purple foil constantly glistens in a fluid manner as the skirt strands ripple whenever moved. The purple flash flutters and practically drips off each strand in a liquid-like shimmering illusion. The photo hardly shows this metallic sheen. Try Gary Yamamoto's cinnamon w/purple (color #221) or smoke pepper (#150) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt.

Peanut Butter Jelly. Try it and it you'll stick with it! PBJ first became popular in soft plastic lures in Southern California many years ago. It has recently been rediscovered as a jig color in the Southeast and Northeast USA. But PBJ never looked anywhere near this good until now! Two different shades of brown strands sandwiched with purple with superfine red neon. Goes great as a spinnerbait skirt too. Try Gary Yamamoto's cinnamon w/purple (color #221) or smoke pepper (#150) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt. Note: These skirts now come with black ear band NOT red ear band as shown.

Pearl Blue Silver. The blue blush infusion in this pearl white skirt does not always come across in photos, but the blue blush shows up underwater, as does the silver sparkle you can see. This pearl blue silver is arguably one of the best "white bait" soft bait colors on the planet (such as Gary Yamamoto's color #031 for example) and is now available in a beautiful spinnerbait, buzzbait and jig skirt.

Pearl Blue White. Half snow white with silver flake. Half pearl blue with silver flake makes a great skirt for any occasion.

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Pumpkinseed Sunfish. Half brown pumpkin with green metal flake. Half dark orange pumpkin with green metal flake. Wholly good! Sunfish are present everywhere bass are, and they are a staple food in bass diets. You read and hear a whole lot more about shad, shiners, minnows and such, but don't let that fool you. Bass eat sunfish all the time everywhere. Top this skirt off with a watermelon pepper soft plastic trailer to complete the sunfish illusion.

Out of stock. Rain Frog. This color looks like warm summer rain drops rolling off a green frog's back. That's why it is called "rain frog" and there's really nothing else quite like it. The strands are a nice weedy green color, heavily infused with pearlescent micro-particles that give a ruddy reddish, pinkish, orangey or lustrous coppery sheen to the skirt, depending on the amount and angle of ambient light. The sheen tends to bend the green into a brownish. The sheen tends to come and go, and each strand emits a bit different sheen from the others, causing a constantly changing or shimmering effect. Fantastic for clear to stained water.

Rusty Green Craw. A matching blend of three colors. All three are heavily mottled with black bars and spots which mesh the pattern together. Half mottled green pumpkin on top. Half mottled rusty brown. Plus a swatch of mottled fire red on the belly. This is a real crawdad-looking skirt color for jigs. It works equally well on spinnerbaits.

Rusty Red Craw. Some years ago, whether it was seven, eight, ten years back, ripping red lipless rattling crankbaits through grass in springtime was "discovered" in Texas. It was big news. The average angler was unfamiliar with the whole concept of red crankbaits. Even to this day, many anglers in other states still have not tried it. They still consider red baits to be a Texas phenomenon. Truth is, any angler anywhere in the world who has the gumption to try it, he or she will see that red crankbaits work at any latitude or longitude, especially from late winter through late spring, but also year-round.

Now the red craw phenomena applies to jig and spinnerbait skirts too, thanks to this custom-crafted blend of mottled red and black craw pattern with hints of rusty brown in it. You can't go wrong using a black pork or black with red flake soft plastic trailer with this skirt.

Overall, it is a great color for night, dirty water or dark conditions year-round.

However, it's not just for dirty water only. From pre- to post-spawn, even in the clearest water, bass can't stand to see red jigs or red spinnerbaits. They almost can't help but smash them!

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Shad-A-Delic. The perfect shad match. Oh yeah, baby! This shad pattern skirt in a special blend of three groovy Shad-A-Delic colors. It's half fine glittering silver. The other half metallic pearl white. These two halves together make the perfect shad sandwich! Topped off with strands of black fish scale accent. Only 10 (out of a total 50) strands are black fish scale. So if at times you may prefer a plain silvery white skirt, you can pluck the black fish scale strands out of this skirt, and it is still a full size skirt. In that way, it's kind of like getting two skirt color choices in one. That's Shad-A-Delic!

Smallie Special. Smallies go ape for it! Bold attractor color. Yes, largemouth, smallmouth and spotted bass do have differences in behavior and habitat. Especially when two or more of these species coexist in the same body of water, the differences between them become more obvious. When only one species of bass is present, it tends to overflow and command all possible bass niches, but where two or more bass coexist, their particular preferred behavior and habitat emerges, and they tend not to overlap each other. When it comes to lures and tactics, it's not as markedly different as habitat, meaning the many ways and baits to catch one kind of bass (size being equal) tend to catch all three bass types fairly well. Yet there are triggers and hot buttons that each bass species has, and one of them is color. This Smallie Special skirt infuriates smallmouth. It will have no trouble catching largemouth and spotted bass either, but the Smallie Special skirt gives ape fits to smallmouth. The color pattern is deceptive, since the hot chartreuse and blazing orange are so overpowering. Although it looks like more, there are only ten orange and chartreuse strands. There are forty snow white strands. So it is 80% white and 20% chartreuse/orange. That equals 100% dynamite on smallmouth bass.

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Spot Special. This translucent skirt has a lot of glimmer to it, multi-color crystal flakes, and that see-through bubblegum color that spotted bass find so special. But don't stop there, smallmouth and largemouth go after this skirt like kids in a candy store.

Super Silver Shad. Super shiny just like a shad! Shad are among the shiniest meals a bass is ever likely to eat - and so are these dazzlingly brilliant skirts! Half silver foil fish scale imprint. Half bright silver hologram. These skirts are so shiny and flashy, the bass may need to wear sunglasses.

Triple Chartreuse. Not one, not two but three blended tones of chartreuse abound in this skirt. It's impossible to tell the three apart from the poor photo quality, but you'll smile in appreciation when you see the rich triple chartreuse skirt tones "turn on the electricity" under water. First, there's chartreuse with an elusive milky blue sheen. Second, bright pearlescent chartreuse. Third, a swatch of black-peppered chartreuse with orange fire tips to incite bass to bite. Many anglers sagely opt for chartreuse in dark, dingy or shadowy water or in dim daylight conditions. Chartreuse also excels anywhere thick grass or thick cover of any kind obscures full view of a lure. A brief and partial glimpse of bright chartreuse gets noticed by fish in such sight-blocking situations. And then of course there are the hard-fighting smallmouth. For some unknown reason, smallies relish chartreuse better than other lure colors.

Triple June Bug. An earthy blend of three different deep and vibrant purple colors with complex black and brown tones with emerald and blue glitter.

Warmouth Sunfish. Matches a green or brown sunfish or crawfish. Whether you call them warmouth, goggle-eye or red-eyed bream, this small member of the sunfish family is an aggressive feeder. It likes to lurk around brush, rubble and weedy areas in which it can hide, waiting to ambush any prey that comes past. In turn, the warmouth is hunted and preyed upon itself by bass. Bass eat many more sunfish than most anglers realize.

A warmouth's markings are generally blotched and mottled, with a brassy brownish green back, yellowish olive sides and belly, just like this imitative skirt. Warmouth are widely-found across the country, and this skirt imitates not just warmouth but many sunfish species, crayfish and plenty of other critters bass eagerly eat. So don't be afraid to toss a warmouth skirt at any bass anywhere. It's a winner!

Try Gary Yamamoto's smoke root beer w/green & copper (color #236) soft plastic baits as trailers with this skirt.

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Watermelon. Looking for a plain watermelon pepper skirt? Here it is. One of the top-selling soft plastic lure color in the world is now a great color for jig skirts. Sometimes plain and simple really may be better, especially if it's this nice watermelon skirt color.

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Watermelon Blend. We weren't quite sure which watermelon color that we (or the fish) liked the very best. They both worked so well, it was really kind of hard to tell, so we blended them both into this one outstanding skirt. A number of tournaments have been won with this skirt on jigs, so give it a try. It's our best (actually, two of out best) watermelon colors.

Out of stock. Watermelon Candy. In soft plastic lures, watermelon candy has been a wicked clear-to-stained water color in the southeast USA and south central states for many years. Now for the first time, watermelon candy is available in a skirt. Just like the tried and true soft plastic bait color, this skirt has the desirable translucence so you can see through the watermelon color, and glistens with ample purple and metallic green flake. It's an instant classic skirt color!

Out of stock. Watermelon Candy #2. Bright green watermelon strands heavily infused with tons of metallic pale purple micro-glitter. The purple glitter is shinier and permeates the skirt far more than photo can show. This bright green, sparking purple skirt attracts more attention than drab watermelon skirts. Because of its higher visibility, this bright watermelon candy excels in thick grass.

Out of stock. Watermelon Candy Stripe. Alternating stripes of pale watermelon and dark watermelon, all with copious green and purple metal flakes.

Watermelon Candy Sunfish. Craw or sunfish, you've got it on with this watermelon candy blend. This skirt color homogenizes the four primary colors of most all jigs: 1) black, 2) brown, 3) purple and 4) green in a single skirt. In this way, no matter what jig color a fish may have a hankering for, it's in here. It's not one or the other jig color, but all four of them at once! Best of all, the four colors are commingled so closely that they appear as "one cohesive color" instead of four separate ones. This is achieved by very close matching of the green, brown and purple tones in order to infuse into each other like the colors of a watercolor painting bleed into one another. The pervasive black barred and spotted mottling is the "icing on the cake" that binds and meshes the pattern into a cohesive singular theme. So it's not black, brown, green and purple any more. It's the power of all four in one.

Out of stock. Watermelon Chartreuse. Watermelon pepper is the top soft plastic lure color in the world, and a lot of anglers go through the effort to dye the tips of watermelon soft baits with bright chartreuse dye, thereby adding a shot of contrasting color. Now here's the same great color for jig skirts. This skirt combines a full 44 strands of mottled watermelon pepper (actually, 22 strands each of our two best watermelon colors) with a swatch of chartreuse pepper strands to add that desirable accent color and vivid contrast.

Watermelon Red Flake. This is a hot, hot color in soft plastic baits. It ranks among the top-selling soft plastic colors worldwide. Watermelon red works equally well as a jig skirt - and even on a spinnerbait! By all means try a matching dark green pumpkin or watermelon red soft plastic trailer - and it's dynamite with a basic black plastic or pork trailer.

Two irregular print patterns - both black bars and spots - are imprinted onto this skirt. It really gives a broken-up and non-descript looking pattern. It gives a great mottled crawfish, baitfish or panfish look to this skirt.

Watermelon Red Belly. This is a hot, hot color in soft plastic baits. It ranks among the top-selling soft plastic colors worldwide. Watermelon red works equally well as a jig skirt - and even on a spinnerbait! This skirt is mainly watermelon with black and red glitter plus a thin swatch of red and black barred belly strands. Try a matching dark green pumpkin or watermelon red soft plastic trailer - and it's dynamite with a basic black plastic or pork trailer.

Two irregular print patterns - both black bars and spots - are imprinted onto this skirt. It really gives a broken-up and non-descript looking pattern. It gives a great mottled crawfish, baitfish or panfish look to this skirt.

Currently comes in a Hole-In-One version only. Watermelon Two-Tone. One of the top-selling soft plastic lure color in the world is now a great color for skirts. This two-tone skirt combines half dark green watermelon pepper plus half pale green watermelon pepper. So now you can use two tones of one of the world's best soft plastic colors at the same time in a jig skirt - and on a spinnerbait too! Believe it or not, watermelon is an incredible spinnerbait color - but 99 out of 100 anglers may never try a watermelon spinnerbait. Will you?

Two irregular print patterns - both black bars and spots - are imprinted onto this skirt. It really gives a broken-up and non-descript looking pattern. It gives a great mottled crawfish, baitfish or panfish look to this skirt.

White Bone. Bass bang it! Bright white with blaze orange attractor flag. Take your classic 100% pure snow white skirt. Then splash the tail tips with a fish-attracting rusty orange dye that incites more strikes. The concept being used to deliver strike color accents or 'flags' of color intended to incite strikes. It is not unlike a matador going into the bull ring carrying a red cape he flags to entice the bull to charge. That's a similar premise behind the flags of color carried on this skirt. Throw the white bone to bag the big dawgs.

White Pearl. One hundred percent pure white pearl skirt with a highly reflective metallic pearl sheen. Good in clear, stained or dirty water and at night too.

Out of stock. White Shad. The belly half is light, almost white silver pearl. The top half is a little darker (but still light) white silver pearl. The strand colors appear a little flat in the photo or in the hand, but when immersed in water, they glisten with a lustrous sheen.

For pricing and current availability, please visit http://www.BassdozerStore.com.

Thank you for your business. May your next fishing trip be your best ever!

Regards,

Russ