- Great castability
- Very inexpensive
- Single treble is easy to unhook
- Wide array of color patterns and sizes
Sometimes nothing beats a classic Mepp’s spinner. This is one of the oldest tricks in the book, and for good reason – trout have been smashing these simple, single treble-hooked lures for as long as they’ve been around. They take up very little space in a tackle box, cast well, only involve one treble hook and best of all, they’re dirt cheap!
I love tossing a Mepp’s for almost any trout fishing context. You can really control how you fish this lure allowing you to target fish in both deep and shallow still water. A faster, jerky retrieve keeps the spinner on top and can excite more aggressive fish to strike. A long pause after casting allows the spinner to get down in the water column to then be retrieved fast, or slowly.
This lure is furthermore quite dense and therefore casts well. A larger sized Mepp’s can be absolutely heaved into the hot-zone if you’re a wade or shore fisherman trying to reach the fish.
I’ve had great success swinging spinners in moving water as well. The same rules apply more or less – faster retrieves to skirt across the stream surface and tease fish out of hiding, or a pause after casting and slower retrieve in order to ‘tumble’ the spinner along the stream bed and potentially bring it right past a big trout snout.
This is a great go-to lure to defer to when the fishing is slow, as with many things in the angling world, simple is often better.
There’s a wide array of color options and sizes available – try fishing with a variety of spinners and see what patterns yield the most bites in your home water. Sometimes when the trout are picky as all hell, it’s worth tossing the smallest, least intimidating item in your tackle box. A 1/8 ounce or 1/12 ounce Mepp’s is a deadly tool in this context.