Product Details
Fat Albert Grub 3" Salt & Pepper Soft Baits (011-008) by Zoom®. The Zoom Fat Albert Grub offers a chunky profile and high action tail, which make it a great choice as a beefed-up trailer for your jigs, buzzbaits or spinnerbaits. The curly tail generates a bass-calling, fluttering action as soon as it hits the water, and the Fat Albert Grub's ribbed body offers an increased profile and texture bass love.
Specifications:
Length: 3" |
Color: Salt & Pepper |
Type: Grub |
Features:
- Single tail grub
- Beefy body with wildly flapping curl tail
- Salt-impregnated
- The Fat Albert Grub is deadly on the back of a moving bait or crawled along the bottom by itself and you can even swim it for suspended fish
- Designed and manufactured using innovative technologies
- Rigorous quality you can trust
- Expertly made from sturdy materials
Includes:
- 10 Soft Baits
The Zoom® Bait Company is a true American success story, rising from one man’s vision and elbow grease to become the worldwide leader in soft plastic lures. Ed Chambers proved that necessity truly is the mother of invention in the fishing industry – when he couldn’t find the worm styles that he needed, the Georgia gaming machine salesman used a trolling motor in a 55 gallon drum to mix up the plastic to mold lures that would do a better job. That was 1977. In the nearly four decades since that relatively inauspicious beginning, Zoom’s attention to detail and innovative nature has allowed the company to grow. Now, there’s a 40,000 square foot facility with state-of-the-art equipment making countless styles of lures in over 400 distinct color patterns. That growth has been fueled by a commitment to quality and listening to what anglers want. The Zoom Lizard had become the standard-bearer for the industry, the best of its kind and used anywhere that bass swim. Zoom has worked to develop new shapes and techniques, such as the Super Fluke and Brush Hog. Zoom has been a leader in developing new colors, too, with now-standards like Pumpkin coming from the fertile mind of Ed Chambers, who truly “thinks like a fish.”