Spotting Them in the Wild
- Size: Rice grain to jellybean
- Shape: Straight tube, tapered, or rounded
- Contents: 2–3 silver bearings that shift when tilted
- Packaging: Sold in small vials or blister packs (often labeled “fishing rattles” or “glass lure inserts”)
⚠️ Pro tip: Keep them in a pill bottle or mint tin. Drop one in grass? Good luck finding it. (Ask me how I know.)
How to Rig Them Like a Pro
✅ Soft Plastics (Worms, Lizards, Creatures):
Poke a narrow channel near the tail with a bait needle or thin nail. Insert rattle bearing-end first. Why the tail? More wiggle = more vibration. Too deep? It won’t rattle. Too shallow? It falls out.
Poke a narrow channel near the tail with a bait needle or thin nail. Insert rattle bearing-end first. Why the tail? More wiggle = more vibration. Too deep? It won’t rattle. Too shallow? It falls out.
✅ Tubes & Craws (Easiest Win):
Slide the rattle up through the hollow body from the bottom. When it bumps rocks or wood? Click-click-click. Pure magic.
Slide the rattle up through the hollow body from the bottom. When it bumps rocks or wood? Click-click-click. Pure magic.
✅ Hard Lures (Crankbaits, Jerkbaits):
If the lure has a hollow chamber, drop one in before sealing. No chamber? Avoid gluing to the outside—it looks messy and alters action. Better to modify an old bait you don’t mind sacrificing.
If the lure has a hollow chamber, drop one in before sealing. No chamber? Avoid gluing to the outside—it looks messy and alters action. Better to modify an old bait you don’t mind sacrificing.
⚠️ Safety note: I’ve stabbed my thumb more times than I’d like to admit. Work slowly. Use tools. Your fingers will thank you.