Intelligent Head Jig Information
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When Head Jig arrived, I opened the package and was impressed with the solid packaging which insured Head Jig didn’t arrive damaged in any way, shape, or form.
Overall, my experience was amazing. I hope this helps you make a solid buying decision.
What is the best way to poke Head Jig a hole in the loop of a new Jig-Head?
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December 26th, 2010 at 3:46 am
The whole is there, just covered with paint. Poke it through with the end of another hook.
December 26th, 2010 at 3:09 pm
I almost never use the same color head as my tube, curly tail, marabou jigs. Color combinations can be the answer sometimes. I generally only use unpainted, chartreuse, white, or black jig heads. I don’t really want them to blend. Since I’m not a fish, I don’t know exactly how they are perceiving the color. I just want to make sure that something gives them interest.
December 27th, 2010 at 3:29 am
those were made for the one inch grubs. hook is just fine. a big crappie can take a 3/0 hook. a crappie has the largest mouth of all the popular panfish.
December 27th, 2010 at 3:19 pm
In my opinion, 1/8 OZ is perfect for most applications. You should spend your money on 1/8-1/4 OZ jigs; those are the best weights.I’m always looking for ways to get primo tackle on the cheap. Check this out- http://cgi.ebay.com/50-1-8-oz-Round-Head-jigs-Matzuo-2-0-Bronze-sickle-hook_W0QQitemZ330232893852QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?_trksid=p3286.m20.l1116EBay has some amazing deals, if you look in the right way. Hope this helps ya? Good fishing.
December 28th, 2010 at 2:55 am
I usually fish real clear water up in MI so I like to use greens, pumpkins, watermelons, browns, etc. Anything natural looking. As far as what type of plastic, I like to use Zoom Trick and Finesse worms, Strike King 3X finesse worms, and Reaction Innovations Sweet Beaver. The key thing for a shakey head to me is that the bait is buoyant enough to not just lay on the bottom. Hopefully this helps a bit. Good luck!
December 28th, 2010 at 3:17 pm
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 29th, 2010 at 3:24 am
I tried the Football heads and found they catch more weeds than the regular Round heads or Arkie-style heads. However, the Footballs excel in rocky, light weed, situations- like places you usually find Smallmouth. My “go to” jig in thick, weedy, cover is “The Fang” (without the plastic thing-a-ma-bob) – http://www.lake-link.com/store/item.cfm?ProductID=122The hook on the Fang is already at a 45 degree angle so you don’t really need the “plastic locker” thingy. I usually use this as a trailer on the Fang, (which works well with the stand-up hook design)- http://www.basspro.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product_10151_-1_10001_90490____SearchResultsThe only problem with the Fang, (and many Jigs), is you have to replace the skirt with a70- 80 strand skirt- I pay a guy to make me skirts.
December 29th, 2010 at 2:59 pm
Some bass techniques will work on trout, others won’t. I think what you have to consider when using crossover techniques is the differences in behavior in the two fish. Bass are warmwater fish. As such they are very aggressive attack hunters. They ambush prey from cover, but also run down prey over long distances. They’re opportunistic — if they spend half a day feeding on minnows, they can still be enticed with a crawdad. Best of all they are easily provoked with things like noise, motion, and color — we all know bass will hit a lure that looks almost nothing like natural forage as long as the lure displays a certain color or motion. Bass go after large prey. My assumption is that bass and sunfish will go after prey up to one half of their own total length — I’m sure you’ve hooked little 10- or 12-inch bass on a lure that 4 or 5 inches long.Trout are coldwater fish. They are not as aggressive as bass, do not strike as hard, will not chase down prey over long distances, and are more selective. They are less likely to be induced into striking a certain color or motion — they require accurate imitations of natural forage, including color, size, shape, etc. They are also inclined to feed single-mindedly, zeroing in on a single prey item to the exclusion of other forage. My rule with trout is that they will take prey up to one quarter of their total length and may even be spooked by large lures. Also trout (especially in rivers) often feed from “lies.” A lie is an optimum position in a stream where the trout has cover, food, and refuge from the current. It’s like a comfort zone. The trout takes up its lie and then moves very little, taking forage that washed down the current. So, with that in mind, big, noisy rigs will not work well on smaller trout (less than about 18 inches). Most trout that size are eating aquatic insects and similar forage, so a big swimming lizard, or 4-inch worm will interest them less. Because of a trout’s preference to feed from a lie, they are less inclined to chase fast and far-running lures. A trout won’t move too far from its lie. That’s how coldwater fish are — it’s all about energy conservation. Smaller and slower running lures can be effective, especially if you can fish it so that the trout doesn’t have to move much. There is a trout stream about an hour from where I live where smallmouth bass have been introduced, and at certain times of the year I can catch bass and trout in the same place with the same spinner. I like brass and red colored Mepps and Jake’s spinners and have caught lots of trout with them.I’m not sure about rubber worms. I haven’t fished for trout much with large rubber worms, and my gut says it’s not a great match. But trout love real worms, so a good worm imitation may catch you some trout. I think the difference will be presentation — a smaller, more subtle presentation is required for trout.I’ve had a lot of success taking trout on small jigs (1/32 oz. to 1/8 oz.) in rivers and streams. Brown trout will KILL minnow imitations at this time of year — not only to feed but because of territorial impulses (they spawn in late fall). You can also catch trout with jigs by overhanging banks — trout like to hide out under the overhangs and if you don’t scare them off with your approach, you can find some big trout hiding in very shallow water waiting to ambush minnows and fallen insects, both of which you can imitate with jigs.
December 30th, 2010 at 3:20 am
Various Jigs work very well for Striper. Here are some tips for Stripers:Where I come from, (Jacksonville, Fla), we use large 1/2-1 OZ wide-gap jigs with 5-6″ curly-tailed grubs, 1/2-1 OZ Spoons with a 6″ fresh strip-bait as a trailer and large swim-baits such as a 6″ Storm Wild-eye Swim Shad.In J-ville, cold, rainy, miserable weather with overcast skys and low light levels always seemed to be when Stripers decided to turn on.Try fishing very early moring and late evening into night.Colors that work well: Chartreuse, White, White/Red head, “Glow” greens and Reds.A good way to get Stripers “turned on” is with a large Spook Jr or Super Spook topwater lure retrieved in a “walk the dog” fashion. Topwater lures can sometimes “intrigue/inspire” Stripers to start on a feed.Cast a TW for 20-30 minutes and then switch over to your Jigs, Spoons & Swimbaits.Make sure to dowse all lures with a good fish attractant! Fish attractant removes the “human scent” which fish associate with danger. If Pogy’s or Shrimp are in your fishing waters use an aersol Pogy or Shrimp spray attractant. If your in inland sweet-waters use a good Bass attractant. It only helps, and in most cases, can make the difference between catching something & catching NOTHING!Hope this gives you some ideas? Good luck fishin’!
December 30th, 2010 at 2:51 pm
other ends of hooks works great but if you want there are tools that you can pick up for a few dollars that will clean it and i recently got a new pair of forceps that have a little built in eyelet cleaner.
December 31st, 2010 at 3:35 am
It doesn’t matter what the wig-jig is. That’s the point of the exercise.
December 31st, 2010 at 3:02 pm
IMHO Tail up allows better action plus it comes through cover with less likelihood of hanging up.
January 1st, 2011 at 3:22 am
Try something like a Gulp turtleback worm in a green pumpkin or a pumpkin seed color on a 3/16oz. texas rig . just try different retrieves and depths the fish will let you know how they want it.
January 1st, 2011 at 2:49 pm
A jig is used to weigh down what ever it is your fishing with. You can put just about anything on a jig. If the jig has a skirt, you don’t have to use a trailer, but I think it will work better with one. Try Booyah jigs. They have great colors, and I would suggest a 3/8 ounce size. Then get Yum crawfish chunks. Cast it out, let it sink, and then slowely tug on it so it looks like a crawfish swimming across the bottom. You can get different jig heads that do different things. Some glide through the water better, some cut through weeds better, etc…. Good luck.