The Lost Baby Print E-mail
Written by Contributing Writter   
Monday, 04 April 2005 21:06
Once upon a time in the south, from somewhere in the hills, came a short, fat little baby that would totally change the way southern bass fishermen thought about crankbaits, only to be forgotten about over time by all but a loyal few.


No, I’m not talking about the infant Bill Dance.  I’m referring to the Mann’s bait company and the Baby 1 minus. This radical innovation in shallow water cranking was such a simple trick, but one that was desperately needed by fishermen in shallow southern waters that sometimes were only 3 feet deep, or were so congested with vegetation growing just under the surface, or tangled masses of lay down wood and cypress stumps that using a crankbait was considered foolish.

Tom Mann heard and understood the cries of fellow fishermen.  He had built his company on the Mann’s Jelly Worm.  A plastic worm with scent built right in.  Now he went to work on a crankbait someone could fish where they would have never even thought of throwing one and where fish would not expect to see one.


The plastic diving bill on crankbaits were pretty much the same then.  A cup in the surface of the bill made the hunk of plastic dive when pulled through the water.  So how do you get the bait to only go, say, a foot under the water and STAY there no matter how hard it is pulled?  The trick was to turn the bill around!  By doing this at the proper angle, the fat little bait would dive only about 12 inches or less, and run right there.  Thus was born the 1 minus.  The fat body offered plenty of lift, and the outward curved bill produced a wild side to side wobble. Put in a few rattles, and you have something that will send out vibrations a country mile!


Over time, smaller sizes would make their debut.  First the baby 1 minus, then the tiny 1 minus.  I remember the first time I ever heard of this new design.  I was reading Bassmaster magazine, and read an article about this new bait being fished by pro fisherman Paul Elias.  I went to the tackle store and saw one.  This little fat baby, chrome with a black back.  Alright, I was young and impressionable (as opposed to being old and foolish now) and it looked like a little fish, so I bought it.  You can stop laughing now and try to tell me you have never bought a bait for that same reason.


If you have never fished one, and shame on you if you haven’t, it is basically a shallow running rat-l-trap.  Pretty much an idiot bait.  Throw it out, reel it in.  This thing has so much built in action there really isn’t a lot you can or should do.  If you stop it, it will pop to the surface like a cork.  If you slow it down too much it will not dive and you kill the action.


Some tricks I have learned over years of using this bait.  If you hold your rod tip up, it will boil just beneath the surface.  Rod tip down next to the water surface will get it to the 1 foot mark.  Run it in to stumps or concrete bridge pilings and it gets totally nuts, swimming sideways in the water, which can draw vicious strikes.


I never fish it on anything heavier than 12 pound mono, as it kills the side to side action.  I never actually "set" the hooks on fish, as more times than not, you will rip it away from the fish.  A gentle tug is all that is needed, and sometimes not that, as most hits on these baits are aggressive.  I can’t tell you if it is a true feeding response, or if you have just driven the fish completely mad!  All I can tell you is, THEY EAT IT!


Ronnie Broussard
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