Some of our Extended Glow Spoons for the new season!

The Top Five Lures for 2025 & Honorable Mention.
Thanks to the input from our valued customers, we have listed the five most productive lures for 2025.
Extended Glow Standard Red Coyote
Chameleon Standard Mickey Finn
Chameleon Standard 13 Fish
Chameleon Standard Kevorkian Gold Flash
Chameleon Slammer Vibrant Orange Tail
Honorable Mention
Extended Glow Standard Triceratops
Chameleon Slammer Lucky Me
Chameleon Little Guy Harness Junior Zipper
Small Spinner Squid Orange & White Glow
Large Spinner Squid Pink

November 30th we will be starting our 18th year as Skunked No More, Inc. (the Suppliers of Flintstone Products).
We owe the longevity to many different avenues, including; Family, Friends, Sales- People, Retail Outlets, Pro-Staff Members, Charter Captains and Last but not Least Our Loyal Customers.
We would like to thank everybody involved in our success over the last 17 years for making this all possible.
We hope to continue supplying our products for many more years.
AS ALWAYS, our goal is to provide to the consumer, AMERICAN Made Products, of the highest most durable quality, with the most reliable service, for a reasonable investment!
In Closing from all of us to all of you have a Safe and Joyous Thanksgiving!

Do Fish See Color?
“Yes they do! In many cases fish color vision is probably comparable to that of humans. Like those of humans, fish retinas possess both cones for color vision as well as rods for black and white vision. During daylight, fish use primarily cones for vision. At night the rods, which provide much higher light sensitivity and resolution, are used instead. The process of switching between using cones instead of rods (and then back again) may take two hours, and a predatory fish whose eyes adjust more quickly than those of forage fishes will have a visual advantage during dawn and dusk.”
A very important factor in fish color vision is water depth. Water completely absorbs or weakens different colors of light at different depths, affecting which colors are visible to a fish.
Water absorbs red light from the spectrum first, oranges and yellows next. Red, yellow & orange are best visible in the top 30 ft. of water.
The next colors to disappear in the water are greens and blues. Greens and blues are best visible down to about 60 ft.
At depths of 60 ft. and below purple, brown, black are most visible. At even greater depths, colors are no longer visible and fish probably see objects in varying shades of gray.
The distance from a fish to the lure under water also has the same effect on color visibility as water depth.

The New Enticers
Because Fish do see colors differently at certain depths we have designed three Enticers to cover those depths.
The first will be red, yellow & orange which are most visible as their original color in the top 30 ft. of water.
The second will be blue & green which hold their color down to 60ft. of water.
The third will be black & purple which hold their color 60 ft. and beyond.
They will all have a glow back for the very deep water and low light conditions.
