Bearking Kanata 160mm Minnow Jerkbait
The Kanata is a slender 160mm minnow bait built to imitate a fleeing baitfish with a tight, rolling wobble. The tiger-stripe finish and reflective sides throw flash on the retrieve, making it easy for bass to track in stained or open water. The diving bill gets it down quickly and keeps it running true at any retrieve speed.
This is a search bait for covering water along flats, drop-offs, and creek channels where largemouth and smallmouth suspend or chase baitfish. Twitch it, pause it, or burn it straight back and it holds its swimming line without rolling over, giving you a reliable option when fish are keying on shad or shiners.
Specifications
| Type | Diving minnow jerkbait |
| Length | 160 mm (6.3 in) |
| Weight | 30 g (1.06 oz) |
| Depth | Shallow to mid-depth diving |
| Action | Tight wobble with side-to-side roll |
| Hooks | Front and rear treble hooks |
| Best for | Largemouth and smallmouth bass, also pike and stripers |
How to fish it
- Cast past the target area and let the bait settle for a second before starting your retrieve.
- Use a steady retrieve for a tight swimming action, or add sharp twitches with pauses to trigger reaction strikes.
- Work it along drop-offs, flats, and creek channels where baitfish schools hold.
- Slow the retrieve in cold water and speed it up once bass turn aggressive in warmer conditions.
Frequently asked
It runs on the larger side, which makes it best suited to targeting bigger largemouth and smallmouth, or times when bass are keyed on larger baitfish. It also draws attention from pike and stripers in mixed waters.
Bright, high-contrast patterns like this work well in stained or slightly murky water where fish need extra visual cues, and also on overcast days when flash and silhouette matter more than subtle color.
A medium to medium-heavy casting rod with 12 to 17 lb fluorocarbon or braid to fluorocarbon leader handles the weight and hook set well without sacrificing lure action.
It performs well in open water during spring and fall when bass are actively chasing baitfish, and can also be effective in summer around schooling activity on points and flats.