SPRO Bronzeye Frog Review
The SPRO Bronzeye Frog is one of the most sought out frog lure on the market today. Designed by Dean Rojas, this frog has it all. I tested the bronzeye SPRO for most of 2009 bass season in NY, on Oneida Lake. As soon as I saw these, I had to try them out.
Out of the package the frog has a nice feel to it, the body is very soft and collapsible which is essential for catching fish. The legs are longer than other brand frogs and the reason being, is so you can cut the legs to the length you desire. I choose to cut off 1″, by doing this, “walking the dog” is easy to do and seems to keep the frog at a perfect angle for when bass strike.
The Spro Poppin frog seems to “walk the dog” the best, moving more water on every side-to-side motion, a good way to trigger more bass. Spro Bronzeye was also designed to skip under docks and cover. A great advantage over the competition, because you will find yourself in situations where it’s almost impossible to cast to a specific spot using conventional techniques. By skipping these frogs in those tough to reach spots, you increase your chances of catching more fish.
Compared to competitor top water frogs, the Spro Bronzeye will skip better than any. I like this frog alot, it has given me many heart stopping strikes, along with many big bass. I own about 6 different colors, Bronzeye65, Jr. and the Poppin frog. I highly recommend the Spro Bronzeye to anyone interested in topwater fishing. If your looking to just purchase 1 bronzeye, I’ll recommend the Green Tree colored frog. It’s the most versatile color, and it will catch you fish. The quality in this frog shows and it’s more than worth the higher price tag.
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about 2 years ago
I like the spro frog but I cant seem to get a good hook set. Is there anything I can do to improve my hook set?
about 2 years ago
Hey Jim, Some people like to bend their hooks up ever so slightly. I find the most important thing though is to have a little extra patience. Most anglers try to set the hook on these too soon, a generally rule of thumb is to give the fish two to three seconds after seeing the strike or until you feel the fish. Setting the hook too soon will result in pulling it right out of the fishes mouth. It’s hard but try to delay your reaction by a couple of seconds and you should see a big improvement. Good Luck!
about 2 years ago
I have waited up to 5 seconds and missed 15 fish in two days on the popper and regular and yesterday i took a banjo minnow nosehook and weedguard and rigged the frog to that set-up and havn’t had problems yet so we will see.!!
about 2 years ago
First strike on that set-up and landed a 6 pounder. but missed many bigger fish before i changed to the different rigging.
about 2 years ago
That’s very interesting, post a photo, I would love to see what that looks like.
about 11 months ago
Spro frogs are the top of the line as far as frogs right now and they can be very hard to master if you do not have the right equiptment. I use a 7.6 heavy action rod with 65 pound braid. When a fish hits your spro reel slowly and if you rod loads up set the hook you wount miss near the fish if you do it tha was hope this helps.
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