Bass Fishing Apr 2018 | Page 23

APRIL 2018 I FLWFISHING.COM 43 muskies on it in the first 30 days he fished it,” says Dahlberg. “I showed everybody how to make it on my TV show [The Hunt for Big Fish] and how-to videos, and it ended up going into pro- duction with River2Sea. We caught all kinds of big bass – largemouths and smallmouths – on them, too. Then Simon [Chan] took a gamble and made a few smaller sizes for the bass market, and the rest is history.” Incidentally, Dahlberg’s original name for the lure was retained by River2Sea. Considering its unique “plopping” sound to be its most distinctive feature, he called it the Whopper Plopper. COURTESY going to sell itself. Otherwise, he might have to offer it to a lure company based on a persuasive sales pitch. If he’s lucky, he’ll also present his idea to a marketing guru with the instincts to know some- thing good when he sees it. Larry Dahlberg’s latest, greatest lure design is an example. Though the Minnesota angler is an icon in the fly- fishing world – having created the famous Dahlberg Diver among other patterns – his fishing expertise covers everything from saltwater big game fish to walleyes. Decades ago, Dahlberg started work- ing on a lure reminiscent of the old top- water tail-spinner musky plugs made by companies such as C.C. Robert’s Bait Company. His alterations to a proven design had far-reaching implications for the bass-fishing world. “In a nutshell, its development actu- ally began when I was about 12 years old and a company in Wisconsin didn’t respond to my letter requesting spare tails for their tail-spinner lure I was using to catch muskies,” says Dahlberg. “I had no option but to repair the broken ones, and in the process I realized the tail could be improved. Almost 50 years later I was inspired by a young musky fishing friend to go with an idea I had been toying with in my head since dis- covering 80 durometer urethane rub- ber. I increased the tail size about six times and the bend in it, plus I radically changed the balance and buoyancy to get that super loud hollow plopping sound rather than a sloshing noise.” Once his handiwork was finished, Dahlberg knew he had something that musky fishermen would buy, so he approached a friend who ran a California lure company and for whom he had designed other baits. River2Sea President Simon Chan also saw the promise in Dahlberg’s lure, and the pair made a deal. Along the way, Chan’s design engineers went to work refining the topwater bait so it could be mass-produced for the bass- fishing market. Eventually, when all the bugs were worked out and a few down- sized versions were put in circulation among River2Sea’s pro-staff, the lure became the subject of hushed conver- sations among bass tournament anglers who would rather have kept it a secret. It wasn’t long before the bait was making headlines. “The first one was the big musky size – 7 1/2 inches. One of my pals caught Larry Dahlberg's fondness for a venerated type of topwater musky plug led him to design a lure that has been a hit in the bass fishing world as well. WWW.BAGLEYBAIT.COM THE ORIGINAL SQUARE LIP KISS OF DEATH. Some things are the opposite of fl ash in the pan: relent- less, visionary, enduring. In the end, that’s what you build on. 60 years ago, 60 years from now , Bagley delivers. 21