Striper Jig Resources
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What size jig should I use for striper?
I use 1/8 or 1/16 Striper Jig oz for crappie and panfish. I use 1/4 or 3/8 for smallies and largemouth. What size should I use for striper?
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December 14th, 2010 at 2:20 am
It depends on many things. Spoons are always productive. If you are fishing a spinning bait using plastic grubs then use a opaque grub on cloudy days and a sparkle grub on sunny days. Ditto for murky and clear water. On hot days you will need a bait that will dive deep. Choose the same color scheme. Remember you are trying to mimic actual bait fish. Bait fish will change color to camouflage themselves for protection. Therefore, on cloudy days lose they the shine to hide in the murky water. On sunny days the reverse is true.
December 14th, 2010 at 2:46 pm
This is what I use for lake Striper…. ..Heavy action Berkley Lightning rod……Abu Garcia 6500 C3 Series real60 Lb. Spiderwire Braid (has like a 12 Lb. Mono line diameter)…The biggest striper I’ve landed was 20 lbs, which isn’t bad for a lake striper. I’m sure it’d handle much bigger fish. Good luck…
December 15th, 2010 at 2:09 am
It sounds like you have the basics covered. I would suggest a leader, about 1.5′ of 40lb florocarbon should do it. The reason for that is SNOOK. Snook have very abrasive mouths that will wear through mono and braid easily, also you will be around mangrove roots and other structure. I’m not sure exactly where in the glades you will be but you will most likely be fishing the Chockoluski(sp) river or some type of creek, so depending on water temp down there the fish should be cruising all over not tucked up under the mangroves in the shade. Throw the plugs you have, and any small soft plastics.
December 15th, 2010 at 2:17 pm
ABU Garcia 6500 works fine for me but you will need more rod for the stripers than with spanish and blues.
December 16th, 2010 at 2:13 am
The best way is to troll using the combination of a fish-finder and a down rigger.OK, can’t troll. I fish the California Delta. Sometimes I just anchor, cast and wait. The important part is preparing the line. go here: http://www.stripers247.com/bait-chunking-stripers.php
December 16th, 2010 at 2:27 pm
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 17th, 2010 at 2:17 am
i have never fished canyon but a lot of people at tff have, go to: http://www.texasfishingforum.comall of the info you could ever hope for in there.
December 17th, 2010 at 1:57 pm
Jigs – size to match your spot (typically I used 2oz in the surf). I like white hairs wrapped with red thread. For evenings/night fishing, the glow jigs are great. I would tip jigs with some kind of cut bait to match the area you’re fishing (whatever the local bait fish is.) Topwater – cordel pencil poppers (red head/white body; blue back/silver body; rainbow trout) I also have some random make lures – like http://www.oceanlures.com/surfaceswimmingherring.htmlhttp://www.creekchub.com/ – i love these, but they aren’t that cheap. However, I find them at walmart in the 1/2 off clearance bins all the time!Lures – Bomber Long A – there are different versions out as of this past year. The saltwater grade lures typically have improved hooks, different finishes, and a slightly different “wiggle to them”. The tend to run a little tighter than the regular, non-saltwater, long-a’s. Bomber deepdiving HD’s are good too. Yozuri crystal minnows – red head is a great one. Berkeley powerbait eels. They make some in the 12in size. I use them in the rivers and they’re pretty good producers. Striper naturally feed on eels so it’s a good soft, natural presentation.
December 18th, 2010 at 2:48 am
Stick with the plastic soft baits that match the bunker and try it without the jig head, with a plain hook.
December 18th, 2010 at 2:47 pm
The wider and more stable the boat the better off you are.
December 19th, 2010 at 2:00 am
uh when your setting the hook you got to real in all the slack and pull HARD with a quick jerk or the fish will spit it out they have very strong skin of theyre mouth so sometimes its hard to get the hook through the skin
December 19th, 2010 at 2:00 pm
cut anchovies or mackerel, shad
December 20th, 2010 at 2:26 am
What you use for crappie and panfish sounds good to me. Are you talking about white bass? Or those hybrid stripers? A 1/4 oz sounds good for those too.