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Mepps Aglia Longue Heavy Spinner black/red dots
Mepps Aglia Longue Heavy Spinner black/red dots
Mepps Aglia Longue Heavy Spinner black/red dots
   

Mepps Aglia Longue Heavy Spinner black/red dots

P-18715.2

Size: Please select

€5.50 *

Prices incl. VAT plus shipping costs

Mepps Aglia Longue Heavy Spinner black/red dots

The Aglia Longue is one of many catchy variations of the successful classic from Mepps. The spinner blade has been cut a little more elongated and narrower, and resembles a willow leaf in its shape. This gives the lure a more streamlined appearance and makes it lie more sleekly in the water. The spinner is available not only in a wide range of sizes, but in a happy palette of appealing colors, so that not only just about any target fish is covered, but actually every possible situation and condition. The more elongated shape makes the lure particularly suitable for trolling and fishing in stronger currents.

The Aglia Longue Heavy is designed to fly particularly far and fish deeper due to its more compact weight. This makes this heavier variant ideal not only for our local predators but also for coastal and sea fishing for sea trout, sea bass and co. The Longue Heavy is also an absolutely deadly weapon in rivers with strong currents for migrating salmonids.

It is therefore the perfect addition to the already wide range of colors and sizes of the Aglia Longues.

Details:

  • Spinner with narrow, elongated spinner blade: Willow Blade
  • Very good for trolling
  • Extra heavy, perfect for long casts and deep zones
  • Very suitable for the coast
  • Heavy, two-tone spinner blade
  • Razor sharp treble
  • Color: black with red dots

 

Size:11+23
Weight: 8,0 g 12,0 g 16,0 g 24,0 g
About Mepps:

Every angler is likely to stumble across this name rather sooner than later. No wonder, because the traditional lures do not only have a long history of success behind them, they are still incredibly effective and fill countless tackle boxes today. As early as 1938, French engineer Andre Meulnard invented the first spinner, which utilized a small metal blade rotating around its own axis. The lure was deadly effective, but he could not yet foresee how much this small lure would revolutionize the fishing industry. It wasn't until after World War II that American Todd Sheldon got his hands on the lure in 1951. A soldier brought the spinner from Europe back to Wisconsin in his home country, where it quickly became a huge success. Today, the small metal lures hang in fishing stores around the world in all shapes, sizes and colors, true to the original principle.