but the real question is; is there a difference between a fish's eye and a humans? Dogs are color blind, right? and cats can see very well in the dark. I would imagine through genetic adaptation that a fish would have very different vision qualities than a human.
Yeah, it seems to depend a little on where you are fishing and what species you target. I have a preference for natural colors at any time, I like to "match the hatch" with local baitfish when I can. But bright reds, hot pink and fluoro green work great in clear shallow water at one of my favorite fishing spots. In clear, shallow water the fish can see most colors, so it comes down to their preference on the day.
Absolutely brilliant information for amateur and experienced anglers alike.
jehangir666 1 month ago
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but the real question is; is there a difference between a fish's eye and a humans? Dogs are color blind, right? and cats can see very well in the dark. I would imagine through genetic adaptation that a fish would have very different vision qualities than a human.
327caveman 2 months ago
match the hatch
t78830 3 months ago
i cant believe these bisseness people ripped almost everyone off like that
TheLovetocatchbass 4 months ago
good to know, but do fish see color like we do? or do they see it better in water then we do? is this video showing what they see or what we see?
Snbkr 4 months ago 4
Very helpful.
TheRugbyplayer24 4 months ago
more (natural) colors for shallow water fishing i would think.
optical76 5 months ago
Yeah, it seems to depend a little on where you are fishing and what species you target. I have a preference for natural colors at any time, I like to "match the hatch" with local baitfish when I can. But bright reds, hot pink and fluoro green work great in clear shallow water at one of my favorite fishing spots. In clear, shallow water the fish can see most colors, so it comes down to their preference on the day.
Makelures 5 months ago