Bait Jig Free helpful Guide


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spinners Bait Jig Free helpful Guide

Here are the top picks on Ebay for Bait Jig.

I’m also including a personal review of Bait Jig here.


What is the best bait for snapper and barracuda?
I am going to the Bait Jig bahamas soon and need some bait tips. What I want to know is what kind of bait, lures, and jigs snapper and barracuda like???
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15 Responses to “Bait Jig Free helpful Guide”

  1. BASSMASTA#10 Says:

    get a little fly and tie it on the end of your line no sinkers or bobber pull some slack out of the reel and flip it out and pull it in with short but fast movements you should see the fish take it and swim off –when they swim off set the hook.It works great for me.

  2. Malty21 Says:

    Worms and grubs are cool for that area. It will depend on color, location, and skill after that. spinners in shallow water will get you hung up especially on the river rock. I’d go with a good drop shot or Texas Rig and worms.

  3. BASS Fisherman Says:

    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.

  4. Cope Says:

    Roadrunners are what I’ve used with the best luck. Maribou jigs are also a cheap and effective lure to use.

  5. devyn Says:

    This is called a cockdropTake a Berkley power egg and put it on a small salmon egg hook, move it up the line a bit. http://www.lakemichiganangler.com/store/photos/berkley_power_eggs.jpgthen take a Berkley power bait micro trout worm. Break off about 1/4th of the worm and put the hook through the thick end as close to the end as you can comfortably.http://www.lakemichiganangler.com/store/photos/berkley_trout_worm_red.jpgthen place another power egg on the hook and move the first one down. this will make a little figurine that looks a lot like a penis with balls, but for some reason it never EVER fails me when I go trout fishing. Good luck out there.

  6. dumdum Says:

    That’s a little hard because they have a tendency to hit almost anything when they are schooling. But I would have to say the top 3 baits would be a tail spinner, a silver spoon and a crank bait

  7. preacher55 Says:

    Tip your jigs with minnows or maggots.

  8. do-anh Says:

    Chop an onion into very small pieces and put them in a small container, (something like a little pill bottle) tip the end of your hook with a small piece of onion after you hook your minnow thru both the lower and upper lip. You will be surprised how this helps you out attracting the crappie to your bait. Not to get off the subject if you are using jigs put them in the small container with the onions and shake it up, then use your jigs.These are the best crappie live bait Worms that I have used. I am not much for using worms to catch crappie, but one worm I have had good luck using has been “what is commonly called an “angle worm” You know those little critters that crawl all over your sidewalk when it rains.

  9. Injun Says:

    You really do not want to troll a crab it will cause you line to twist so use them free lined,jigged,under a cork or just set weighted on the bottom. Crabs can be fiddlers,blues, pass crabs or mole crab(sand flea)!Some larger ones of these are used for tarpon big reds grouper cobia snappers and others.Make sure have very sharp hooks so as not to do lots of damage to crabs if you want them to be worked live and stay that way.Hook them through the leg where it meets the body “the hole” and up through the shell or if using flea’s hook them through the lower bottom and up through the back.When using crab as bait they work well live dead or chunked!

  10. Matt B Says:

    Either use a slip float and set it at the desired depth or use a carolina rig with a small float between your hook and swivel on your leader. You could also try a 3-way rig.

  11. Doug R Says:

    Fish off any off the local beaches near you. They will produce fish. Ask someone at your local tackle shop and they will give you the info and resources you seek. But, if you can’t do these things just fish the beaches in your area.

  12. Alex Says:

    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.

  13. caunltd Says:

    There are actually a few options for light stuff when it comes to baitcasters. Three are available in the US, and the rest are only JDM (Japanese Domestic Market) models. Here’s the US options:BPS Prolite – surprisingly, this little reel can cast light stuff pretty well. However, it would struggle with 1/16oz anything. Shimano Chronarch 50/51 MG: This reel will handle almost any weight. It’s really versatile, and great for light presentations. Still, 1/16oz is on the light side for this reel too.Daiwa Sol: Great little reel that’s well suited for light baits. However, once again, it won’t be great with 1/16oz without modding it with upgraded spool bearings (hybrid ceramic ABEC7′s) and replacing the stock line guide with the low friction, Ti-Nitride Daiwa TD-Z guide. Even then it’s not perfect….but getting there.As for the REAL options for throwing 1/16oz stuff, there are only two reels that come to mind….both are JDM. Daiwa Pixy: upgraded pixys are great, and if you do it right, they’ll cast anything. The answer to your question is YES, and it’s called a Daiwa Presso. Straight out of the box this reel will out cast a Pixy. It’s all in the lighter spool – 11g compared to 14.2g. It makes a difference when it comes to retaining the energy from the start-up inertia delivered at casting. It seems small, but it makes a difference at that level….trust me, I know…. http://i172.photobucket.com/albums/w39/caunltd/reservoir_dogpresso_01.jpg

  14. Bass Catcher Says:

    How about using a jig while jigging.

  15. Mike Says:

    He was probably “snagging” the fish. Snagging is when you catch a fish by hooking it anywhere other than in the mouth without the fish trying to bite the bait. It is also ILLEGAL to snag most types of fish. Don’t do it.

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