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Little Cleo

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The Little Cleo

TheLittle Cleois a smallspoon luremade by the Acme Tackle Company which comes in nine sizes from116oz to 1 14oz, and in different color combinations. Created in 1953 by theNew York Citysongwriter C.V. "Charlie" Clark, Little Cleo according toOutdoor Lifeis one of the most popular lures in use today and is one of the 50 greatest lures of all time according toField & Stream.

History

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C.V. "Charlie" Clark, a songwriter and music publisher based inNew York City,founded Seneca Tackle Co. in 1951.[1][2]Clark observed Little Cleo doing ahoochie coochiedance in the 1930s.[3]In 1953, he created aspoon lurethat had a swaying motion, naming it Little Cleo after the dancer he had seen.[3]His rationale was that the fish would be entranced by the bait similar to how he was captivated by Little Cleo the dancer.[1]

Acme Tackle Company, which is based inRhode Island,purchased Seneca Tackle in 1980.[1]Between 1953 and 1996, the rear of Little Cleo was illustrated with anexotic dancerwho was scantily dressed.[1]After a woman who worked at an influential retailer became upset by the image in 1996, the retailer demanded the elimination of the illustration.[1][4]Acme Tackle stopped printing the illustration on Little Cleo that year to allay the retailer's concerns and maintain them as a buyer.[1]According toField & Stream's John Merwin, the removal was "for the sake of newfound political correctness".[3]Little Cleos adorned with the exotic dancer were sold as "collector's edition kit[s]".[2]The lures each have "a bucktail-dressed, single O'Shaugnessy hook" and are produced in the colors of gold; chrome; chrome and neon blue; and chrome and neon green.[5]

Little Cleo comes in nine sizes, ranging between116oz and 1 14oz.[3][6]Because of Little Cleo's thick metal and narrow width, the lure goes deep under the surface of the water.[3]As a result, they are commonly used to fish for trout though can also be used for ensnaringpanfish,striped bass,andsand bass.[1][3]Little Cleo spoons were not built for use insaltwater.[2]A saltwater edition was released in 2000.[5]

Reception

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John Merwin ofField & Streamlisted the Little Cleo among the "50 best fishing lures of all time".[1][7]He called it "a great all-around spoon" that is "a deadly secret for deep-dwelling brook trout in early summer".[7]In theOutdoor Life,James Hall called Little Cleo "one of the most popular choices" and said, "Although the paint will become chipped and the hook will need to be replaced from time to time, this bait is basically indestructible."[8]

The author Steven A. Griffin wrote, "Acme's Little Cleo quickly became a favorite when salmon fishing ignited in the Great Lakes almost 30 years ago, and it remains a favorite of many trout and salmon fans there. Its hump-back shape makes it wiggle through the water like a fat bait fish—a meal big fish just can't resist."[9]Rich Giessuebel said in the bookGreat Fishing in Lake Ontario & Tributariesthat the Little Cleo was among the "most popular" lures in the region, writing, "As for the Little Cleos, you will see them fished where anglers have a large concentration of salmon swimming around in a pocket of water in a non-snatching section (such as beneath the power plant in the Oswego River). Here, fishermen cast Cleos with rather low expectations of a salmon actually chasing and striking the lure."[10]

References

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  1. ^abcdefghGodfrey, Ed (2018-05-19)."My Little Cleos: How a wiggling spoon became my favorite lure".The Oklahoman.Archived fromthe originalon 2021-12-19.Retrieved2021-12-18.
  2. ^abcGodfrey, Ed (2005-01-16)."Little Cleo: A spoon with sex appeal".The Oklahoman.Archived fromthe originalon 2021-12-19.Retrieved2021-12-18.
  3. ^abcdefMerwin, John (2003-04-16)."Classic Lures: Put 764 years of successful angling in your tackle box".Field & Stream.Archived fromthe originalon 2021-12-19.Retrieved2021-12-18.
  4. ^Frazee, Brent (2019-10-06)."Brent Frazee: Lures designed to get the fisherman first".The Joplin Globe.Archived fromthe originalon 2021-12-19.Retrieved2021-12-18.
  5. ^abTaylor, Mark (2000-06-30)."Saltwater Cleo set to splash in mid-Atlantic".The Roanoke Times.Archived fromthe originalon 2021-12-19.Retrieved2021-12-18.
  6. ^"Little Cleo Fishing Lure".Acme Tackle. 2011. Archived fromthe originalon 2012-03-13.Retrieved2021-12-18.
  7. ^abMerwin, John (2006-04-01)."John Merwin Picks the 50 Best Lures of All Time".Field & Stream.Archived fromthe originalon 2021-12-19.Retrieved2021-12-18.
  8. ^Hall, James (February 2014). "The Super Six".Outdoor Life.Vol. 221, no. 2. p. 42.
  9. ^Griffin, Steven A. (1996).The Fishing Sourcebook: Your One-Stop Resource for Everything You Need to Feed Your Fishing Habit.Old Saybrook, Connecticut:Globe Pequot Press.p. 50.ISBN1-56440-752-7.Retrieved2021-12-18– viaInternet Archive.
  10. ^Giessuebel, Rich (1989) [1986].Great Fishing in Lake Ontario & Tributaries.Harrisburg, Pennsylvania:Stackpole Books.pp.198,200.ISBN0-942990-08-0.Retrieved2021-12-18– viaInternet Archive.
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