
Today’s average troller is obsessed with dodgers. I’d bet at any given lake on any given day the number of dodgers being trolled outnumbers the number of flashers in the water by a ratio of 15 or 20:1.
Often times perception trumps performance and this is doubly true in the world of fishing tackle. Anglers want the latest and greatest. At times they will walk away from tried and true offerings in favor of something sexy and new, despite the fact that the tried and true stuff was still producing fish with consistency.
This seems to be what happened with flashers. The flashers of today are undoubtedly the most user friendly and effective ever invented, yet far fewer anglers are using them today than were using lake trolls 40 years ago.
That’s okay though. Let the dodger boys keep on doing what they’re doing. Less guys pulling flashers only means that our flashers will produce more fish, since flashers aren’t something the trout and salmon see as often as dodgers.
With a long list of different companies turning out dodgers, it would be natural to assume that the market is flooded with flashers, but that’s not the case. The three primary sources of flashers that I utilize are Vance’s Tackle, Sep’s Pro Fishing, and Luhr Jensen, but I’ve got to confess that my hands down favorite flashers are manufactured by Vance’s Tackle.
Vance’s offers both “Slim Willie” and “Lil Slim Willie Flashers”. The Lil Slim Willies (LSWs) have always been plenty large for me, so I’ve never bought a set of the larger Slim Willie blades.
I spend a lot of time every season dragging my willow leaf LSWs for trout and kokanee. They work great for top lining early in the season and later on I run them first off leadcore and then off a downrigger if necessary. When toplined