Great Jig Heads Sources
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I’ve been a bit slow on posting reviews of the last couple of Jig Heads, but it’s time to catch up. Overall, the Jig Heads was great, and I have no problem recommending Jig Heads for anyone wanting one.
I LOVE THIS Jig Heads
How do you paint jig heads with Jig Heads color and the eyes on the sides?
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December 10th, 2010 at 11:25 pm
The rattle eye jig head…I would say…since I make and use my own…I call mine…The shaky head jigs and shakes all the way… works every time…
December 11th, 2010 at 11:51 am
It is supposed to resemble a crawdad or similar creature. you can add trailers or just keep the skirt it comes with. scent attractant is a good idea as well.Like a crawdad it skitters back in a halting/hopping kind of pattern. some bass will take the lure on the intial decent, or wait for it to be motionless for a few seconds before mouthing it. It can also be “swum” . The jig head shape is actually important depending on your cover…if your going to have a flat surface situation a flat bottomed jig stands the hook up improving hook ups.
December 11th, 2010 at 11:41 pm
l have best results with (weedless) football head jigs in the winter. fished very slow.l use 1/2 and 3/4 ounce jigs, usually painted brown, with a skirt in colors to resemble a crayfish. l prefer one with rattles. then l add a soft plastic or pork trailer that has “claws” to complete the resemblance. a chigger craw by berkley of the appropriate size is great. the built-in scent is very good (to a bass) but a bit(?) offensive to human noses. stick with shades of red, orange, green and brown to resemble them craws.besides working for flipping, pitching and as a punch bait (other jig styles are actually better for those but football heads WILL work), they are one of the best baits for winter bass. any of them.simple to fish. cast, take out your slack, let sit for a bit then just move it in slowly by lifting your rod tip. the colder the water, the slower you fish it. as water warms in the spring through the summer, work it faster, with short hops and jumps between pauses. just like a fleeing crayfish.watch your line when you cast as it sinks. fish will hit these many times as it sinks to the bottom. a bushy skirt and large trailer will slow it’s sink rate giving fish a better chance to see and hit it as it sinks.IMHO, brand makes little difference. l buy packs of 3 bare jigs, packs of skirts and rattles from bass pro shop and put mine together in color combos l want at better prices than completed models.one more tip…many of the 99C stores sell bundles of small zip ties. the smallest size makes a great replacement for the rubber band usually holding on the skirt. they rot and the skirt falls apart. just put one of these ties right over or next to the original band. tighten it and clip close.there ya go.
December 12th, 2010 at 11:19 am
I use 4 pound on one rod and 6 pound on another. Both are Maxima monofilament lines.The rod I use the 4 pound on I used to have 2 pound Maxima on it. It’s nothing special, just a 2-piece 8 1/2 foot Eagle Claw 5/6 weight fly rod matched to a small Shakespeare triggerspin reel. I could easily toss a 1/32 ounce crappie jig a country mile with it. A casting bubble filled half way with water helped with distance. I’ve also used it for bass, using live shad for bait. There’s nothing like fighting and landing bass 2 and 3 times the weight of your line. But I’ve since gone to 4 pound.I dunno why, but I try to stay away from curly tail grubs. I prefer crappie and marabou jigs. Dry and wet flies too. What I like to do is a form of the “Float-’N-Fly” technique. I take my main line and clip off 4 or 5 feet of it and sit it aside. I run a casting bubble onto my line and tie on a barrel swivel just big enough to keep the float from sliding over it. Then I tie the main line leader material to the other end of the swivel and then tie on my crappie jig or wet fly.With my crappie jigs, I like a sliver of Chamois about an inch or 1 1/2″ long. It drives bluegill, redears, and crappie nuts. Not to mention the sliver lasts a long time.
December 12th, 2010 at 11:43 pm
What ya’ can do is cast it out n’ let it drop below the surface a’ bit (depends on depth of waters) then retrieve it slowly pausin’ at intervals ta’ let her “DeadFall”. A’ deadfall is when your retrievin’ and at the pause she drops ta’ get the blade in a flutterin’ spin ~ ya’ know like the pray is injured. Our you can just drop her off the dock and work her like any other jig by either liftin’ the rod and lettin’ it drop or short quick jerks. I prefer the lifts because it gives the best flutter/slow spin movement of the blade (this be me fishin’ from a’ boat but, there ain’t no reason why she won’t work on them boat docks/bearths). Heck, that’s what them crappie like ain’t it ie., all that cover, not even mentioning the goodies/edibles that some boaters toss like worms, nightcrawlers etc., that’s a’ hassle for them to take home with em’<);-3Note: Those Blakemore’s a’ lot of ppl under estimate, meanin’ they don’t realize it can catch a variety of species and not just crappie ~ trust me…
December 13th, 2010 at 12:03 pm
trim off the weed guards and use them with small root beer colored curly tail grubs for surf perch and corbina.or you can use them with a live minnow or leech for walleye and smallmouth.also good for ice fishing.
December 13th, 2010 at 11:47 pm
I use epoxy paints and I use a piece of re-bar across the garbage can top and hang the lead heads hooking the re-bar. By spraying in a trash can it keeps all the over spray inside the trash can it also allows me to pick up the rebar and come at the lead heads from all angles. I always paint the backs of the weights with bright red so when you put the swim bait on the lead head the backs of the balls stick out on the sides a little and it looks like flared gills. I will try to match color combinations in the spray cans lids and brush it on but for the most part I spray straight epoxy (appliance) paints. Then coat them with clear because I hit a dock or piling here and there.