I use 4 lb test as there are lakes elsewhere with bigger fish that I visit more frequently, and take a small collection of Z rays (which are out of production), Tasmanian Devil (Wigson makes very effective lures), smaller Mepps spinners, a Panther Martin rooster tail, and smaller Kastmasters. There is to my knowledge no collection of those brands. If I had to narrow it down to a couple of lures I would take the Wigsons and a couple Panther Martins.
The smaller size of this kit is what you'd do best with in those particular lakes.
https://www.amazon.com/Panther-Martin-B ... oster+tailThe Tassies are sold on Amazon under many names, but this is the pattern that worked better for me. The little one, not the big one.
https://www.amazon.com/Tasmanian-Devil- ... evil+luresLine weight also makes it easier or harder to cast, particularly if there is wind. And the reel/rod is usually specific to the weight of the line. My Shakespeare pack rod is for 2-6 lb test, and my reel is rated the same. 2 lb would make it harder to recover lures from snags and harder to cast well.
I also use flies more than spinners in those lakes where there tend to be many tiny fish, as the hooks are smaller and it's easier to release tiny fish. I use the forceps and a file to take the barb off the hooks as well, so I'm not slaughtering the three inchers turning them loose. There are a lot of tinies in Twin Lakes. Bigger fish in George or Nellie.