The Authority On Jigs Bass
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Overall, the Jigs Bass was great, and I have no problem recommending Jigs Bass for anyone wanting one. LOVE THIS Jigs Bass
how do you fish a jig when bass fishing?
what are the best Jigs Bass ways, times to fish them. and does a jig with a rattle really make a difference. lastly what trailers do you use.
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December 10th, 2010 at 3:51 pm
Downsize if you need to. The worm you’re using may not be what they want. Sometimes a change as subtle as dropping from a 7″ ribbon tail worm to a 4″ finesse worm can make all the difference. Color change may yield better results too. Try fishing a finesse worm on a shaky head. (style of jig head) Let the bait fall to the bottom, keep the rod tip high, line tight, and give the rod a little bit of a “shake” every now and then.(don’t be surprised if you get a hit on the initial fall!) You can raise and lower the rod tip to give a little hop but, reel slowly. This is a slow and methodical process that most people do incorrectly because they simply move too fast. Add your own variances and kind of mix things up a bit. Things work out that way sometimes. That’s just one way out of many to try to catch those fish when they don’t seem to want the more traditional offerings. Good luck.
December 11th, 2010 at 3:47 am
I gotta go with the frog on this one if you are limited to just those 3…..Ultimately I would like to have frogs in a few light and dark colors and in a few leg styles to give you a range of action from subtle to aggressive. I pick the frog depending on the water clarity, type of cover and how active the fish have been in the recent past. Go get em…
December 11th, 2010 at 3:23 pm
year round, soft plastics with a 6″ worm being tops. favorite colors will vary but as long as you have an assortment of shades, from light to dark, that is more important than the actual color. use lighter color worms in clearer water working through darker colors as water color gets darker due to mud, tannin, cloud cover, night time.my personal favorites are clear/salt&pepper flake, a light cinnamon color with a blue or green stripe inside that l pour myself, oxblood/red flake by roboworm and black. up to 10 inches long for night time.
December 12th, 2010 at 3:31 am
take the shimano citica and yes its a good rod for those lures
December 12th, 2010 at 3:10 pm
Buy leadheads, skirts, rattles separately at either BPS or Cabela’s and put them together yourself.There are also a few decently priced jigs to be found on ebay.
December 13th, 2010 at 3:38 am
Don’t mess with spawning bass. It’s not cool.
December 13th, 2010 at 3:39 pm
For the jigs, I like the Strike King brand. They’re reasonably price, and will do just as well as the more expensive jigs in most cases. You will want some trailers to match the jigs with as well. The craw style trailers are normally the best all around trailers. YUM has some nice ones. Keep the trailer as close to the jig color as possible.As for lures, I’m not sure what to recommend. There’s several factors to consider when choosing lures. However, some lures that are almost always productive are, Rattle Traps, Texas Rigged plastics, spinnerbaits, and top water lures if fish are actively feeding on top.
December 14th, 2010 at 3:55 am
white or white/chartreuse spinnerbaits with tandem gold blades1/2-ounce rattletraps in chrome and firetiger patternssuspending jerkbaits – blue/chrome/ orange and fire-tiger patternsif there is a big mayfly hatch going on (usually in july, but can come early) use buzzbaits and jitterbugs.
December 14th, 2010 at 3:54 pm
It’s a bass fisherman’s dream to catch the bass schooling on shad. Some times you can fill up the ice chest and they will hit every time they come to the top and start striking the shad. But for some reason there are times when they will hit absolutely nothing you throw at them, but yet create a storm on the water as they attack the shad. I suspect that you had one of those days when they would hit nothing you threw at them. But just keep trying, because the next time they start schooling up and you are lucky enough to be there, they may hit any lure you throw at them. Here is some advice.Bass will sometimes school in the same area most of the summer. Check out the area they were in every time you go fishing.It will pay off for you good luck!
December 15th, 2010 at 3:31 am
1/2 oz. black and blue jig with a zoom super chunk in blue sapphire as a trailer. Pitch it into weeds, laydowns, brushpiles, docks and rip rap.
December 15th, 2010 at 3:32 pm
It depends on what the fish are biting. Sometimes bass are looking for that big jig to come by nice and slow and they’ll jump on it. But sometimes the blades of the spinnerbait are enough to invoke a reaction strike from a lunker. Just find a pattern for that day (color and lure type) and use that. No one bait is necessarily better than other. People will tell you that they catch more on one lure type than any other, but then ask them how often they use that lure. The more often you use a specific type of lure, the more likely it is that you will catch more fish with it.
December 16th, 2010 at 3:48 am
It all depends on what type of structure your fishing.The type of structure or situation you would fish a cork and jig would be:a. Very cold water situations where the fish are suspended and you need a super-slow, suspended, retrieve. b. You want to suspend your jig over thick wood, shell, bottom/structure or weeds.However, most Jig situation in Bass fishing is one of 3 main presentations:1. “Flipping” to heavy structure and matted weed-beds and docks.2. “Pitching” to heavy structure, matted weed-beds, and docks 3. “Swimming” a Jig much like a crank-bait or an auger/swirl-tail worm. Examples:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLxd10P2IwU&feature=PlayList&p=1FBAA4F0B3735A2D&playnext=1&index=10http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faZef9ATICUHope this helps ya? Good fishing!
December 16th, 2010 at 3:54 pm
I like using #8 lb or #10 lb…Berkely Tri Line XT or XL for both panfish and gamefishYou also might use a small lod and reel with #4 lb or #6 lb line for panfish.Good Luck Fishing.
December 17th, 2010 at 3:27 am
Hey BASSMASTER,You might find this link to Denny Brauer’s website very informative. As you probably well know, he is “THE King” of jig fishing. It will have almost every answer to jig fishing and any conditions you will be fishing for bass.http://brauerbass.com/articles.htmRock on!A rattling jig is very good in heavy cover to help fish locate the bait. A trailer with built in or applied scent can make a big difference too. I like Kick’n Bass. I’m old school about jig trailers and still use a Gene Larew salt craw with excellent results in my home lake. There are times a Zoom Salt chunk will find it’s way onto my hook. In cold water I think pork frogs work best.I could write way too much information on how I fish jigs and all of them work under the right conditions. But to keep from boring you with all that read this:http://bassresource.com/fishing/jig_fishing.htmland this:http://bassresource.com/fishing/jig_bass_fishing.htmlhttp://bassresource.com/fishing/jig_uses.htmlhttp://bassresource.com/fishing/jig_bass_fishing_tips.htmlhttp://bassresource.com/fishing/deep_water_jig_fishing.htmlTHIS ONE IS VERY GOOD!http://bassresource.com/fishing/bass_fishing_jigs.htmlhttp://bassresource.com/fishing/jig_fishing_for_bass.html
December 17th, 2010 at 3:50 pm
These are my favorite tubes:Strike King Coffee tubes 4″ any colorYum Vibra King tubes 4″ green pumpkin Chompers Ultra tubes 3 1/2 ” pearl pepperZoom Big tubes 4″ watermelon crawfishI fish these weightless or weighted (texas rigged with various size bullet weights), depends on where I’m fishing and what I’m pitching or flipping into.
December 18th, 2010 at 3:48 am
the 300. it will handle 6, 8 or even 10 nicely. an excellent choice.l use mitchells for most of my spin fishing. the majority are 30 years old or more.
December 18th, 2010 at 3:10 pm
Yep! first bass i caught this year was on a black curly tail grub on a 1/8 oz jig head.