 Hey I'm here at the Nichols Lures booth at the FWC. This is the Nichols Bend Parker Magnum Flutterspoon that we came out with about a month and a half ago. So today I wanted to talk to you for just a second about how to use it, what equipment to use, and what it does in the water. So basically this is an eight inch flutter spoon just like our five and four inch flutter spoon. You're going to use it in the same way as for schooling fish. It's a tool that works magic on schooling. So what you want to do is you want to mark your fish, you want to cast this thing out there too and what it's going to do with the surface area that it has in a different cup it's a little flatter than most flutter spoons. So you're going to cast it out there let it cradle a little bit then you're going to notice it's going to dart. It's going to shoot and dart down to those schoolers and that's what's going to get them fired up. You know there was a there's an FLW event about a month and a half ago on Kentucky Lake. About a half of the top ten used. So let me show you the setup I've been using. I've been using a 7-Eleven rod. This is a double extra heavy but it's got enough tip to really handle it. You're going to want to use 20 to 25 pound four carbon. Some guys go a little bit lighter than that and that's what I prefer. The reel that I use, you want a fast reel it's got enough guts to handle a three and a half ounce of bait. A lot of fast reels aren't going to have the guts to handle it's going to tear your drag up. This is an 8-0 to 1 ratio so it takes up 35 inches of line per turn so that means when you're stroking this big thing you get bit at the top of your stroke you can catch up to that fish. You know it's it's just another tool to add to your arsenal for schooling fish and it's really going to fire up the school and get the bigger ones to buy.