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NINE TECHNIQUE SPECIFIC JIGS EVERY SERIOUS BASS FISHERMAN NEEDS

Started by fishermensheaven, March 29, 2018, 07:20:48 AM

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fishermensheaven

In our first lure-centric article of 2018, we will probably ruffle some feathers as we explore a topic that ranks near the top of asked questions of our Fishermen’s Heaven customer service staff, especially from those anglers looking to take their bass fishing to the next level. That question; “Why are there so many %$#@!%^&*@#, (you fill in the blank) different types of jigs and do I really need all of them in every weight and color?” As a fishing tackle retailer, we would love to tell you a simple, YES, but as fishermen also, we know better. What we can tell you is the one mistake we do consistently see with all fishermen, from weekend novices to touring pros, when thinking of fishing with a jig, is the misnomer that just one style can cover all their needs. With today’s myriad of jig style options available, and seemingly just as diverse an array of structure and cover options to fish them in and around, you as a fisherman no longer need to be “lost” when trying to pick.

HERE IS AN EASY TO UNDERSTAND PRIMER ON NINE STYLES OF TECHNIQUE-SPECIFIC JIGS EVERY SERIOUS BASS FISHERMAN NEEDS TO HAVE IN THEIR TACKLE BOX:
1. JIGS FOR WOOD

Jigs designed for fishing wood; i.e, logs, laydowns, standing timber, sunken brushpiles as well as beaver huts, need a compact head shape with a recessed line tie that allows it to come through branches without getting hung up, and they should always have a stiff fiber brush guard with a heavy gauge 60-degree hook. Rattles should be removeable to give you the option depending on water clarity and density of cover.

Since flipping or short underhand casts are how you will fish jigs in wood, look to make as silent an entry as possible, letting the jig fall vertically, with just a hop or two, before pitching to your next targeted portion of the wood cover. The speed at which a jig falls through wood is critical so vary weights accordingly, remembering that the more compact the whole jig setup, including skirt and trailer, the faster it will sink. Typical wood jigs vary in size from 1/4oz up to 3/4oz. We think the best ones for this specific fishing technique are either the All-Terrain Rattling A.T. Wood Jig or Strike Kings Hack Attack Cover Jig.

2. JIGS FOR SKIPPING DOCKS
Different from those designed for wood, this style of jig has a head shape with a flatter underside built to skim across the water’s surface with far greater efficiency, allowing you to better skip under docks, overhanging limbs and into pontoon boat float chutes. They also have a different eye placement that allows for better load in the skip casting process. In addition, most of the better jigs built for skipping have hand tied skirts as well as trailer locking screws so they stay in place from all the wear and tear of this style of repetitive skip impacted casting.Two tips here to make your jig dock skipping better, use heavier line which the water lake surface doesn’t “grab” as easy on the skipping action, and use a more flat-bottomed trailer with less appendages like the Missile D-Bomb or Strike King Rage Tail Chunk. Typical dock skipping jigs vary in size from 1/8oz up to 3/8oz. We think the best ones for this specific fishing technique are the Tour Grade Dock Skipping Jig by Strike King or the All-Terrain Tackle Skip-n-Jig.



3. JIGS FOR GRASS


These jigs should have a unique cone shaped head with an embedded line tie eye to ensure that they penetrate the weeds better without grass getting stuck on the jig.Grass jigs are ideally meant to fish through hydrilla, milfoil, cabbage, pepper and eel grass as well as lily pads, cattails and tule bulrushes, so solid fiber multi strand weed guards that help repel weeds are a must. Typically, fishing jigs in the “salad” means you’re going to catch bigger fish so you need a grass jig with a stouter gauge wire hook. Your strikes are more reaction based than related to feeding, so rattles built into the jig help the bass home in for the attack. Grass jig soft plastic trailers should be compact and not have appendages, which would snag on vegetation. By far, the very best jig out there for this type of fishing is the All-Terrain Tackle Grassmaster Weed jig, available in sizes ranging from 1/4oz up to 1.5oz.

4. JIGS FOR ROCK
The last subset of cover related technique specific jigs are ones meant to be fished in and over rock, and for this nothing beats a correctly built football jig. Since it is most likely a bait presentation where you are drag crawling it over anything from pea gravel flats to pebble or boulder strewn points, it is critical that the hook be a 60 degree with a horizontal eye, not vertical, which would cause it to rollover and snag. If you are dealing with stumps or brush, go with a version that has a brushguard, like the Strike King Tour Grade Football jig, otherwise opt for one without, since bass will be attacking this style jig offering downwards, pinning it, and you want as much hook exposed for a good hookset. For soft plastic trailers, opt for ones that best mimic the crawdads in your area. You can’t beat a Strike King RGCRW Rage Tail or a Gary Yamamoto 3FS-07 Fat Baby Craw for this. As a collective staff, we have probably caught more quality fish and won more money on the simple combination of an All-Terrain Tackle non-skirted Football Rock jig with a weedless texposed Gary Yamamoto 97-10 Hula Grub than any other lure combination ever.

djkimmel

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Unless clearly stated as such, opinions expressed by Dan Kimmel on this forum are not the opinions or policies of The Bass Federation of Michigan.

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