Jig fishing bass fishing baits

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By dete49

Bass fishing jigs in order to lure the big bass to your line and provided you know about the proper technique of using these bass fishing jigs as well as the right color, you can make a good catch without much fuss or bother.

For most fishing, you will work the jig along the bottom. When casting for walleyes, bass, or other fish near bottom, employ your own variations of the "lift and drop" retrieve. Begin by allowing the jig to settle to the bottom. Then lift your rod tip to pull the jig off bottom. As you wind in, alternately pull the jig off bottom and drop it back. Sometimes long sweeping strokes of the rod produce best. But more often, shorter jerks and small twitches entice the most fish. When this jigging action fails, try a straight retrieve.

There is no wrong season to use a bass jig. It can be worked in the variety of places bass are holding, in cold water drop-offs or around weed beds in late summer. Jigs are just a great bait a lot of fishermen don't use because they've never taken a little time to learn to use one.

Jigging lends itself well to slow drifting and trolling. Let out enough line so that the jig regularly hits bottom. To check for bottom, watch for slack line to develop when you quickly drop your rod tip toward the jig. The amount of line you pay out is determined by depth of the water, weight of the jig, and the speed of your boat. Work the jig as you would when casting, but without winding in.

Why Use A Trailer

Of course, you will need to decide whether the bass fishing jigs should have a trailer put on them or not though before making this decision, you need to understand just what the trailer is used for. The fact is that with a bass trailer you get two advantages when you use it along with bass fishing jigs and the first advantage is it provides more body to the bass fishing jigs while the second is that it gives more life to the jig.

Bass fish are very susceptible to striking at prey without giving the prey any warning and when you add the bass trailer to bass fishing jigs, you are making the jig appear to be a crawfish and as everyone knows, crawfish is the favorite food of bass fish. Thus, the bass is most likely to nibble at your lure when it appears to be a crawfish.

Another aspect that you need to consider with regard to bass fishing jigs is the shape of the jigs and here you will have a number of shapes to choose from. There are bass fishing jigs that look like footballs and those that appear to be like pointed noses, and there are many more shapes as well. Of course, the most common type of bass fishing jigs used is those that look like footballs and so you too can opt for it also and get good results as a consequence.

Keeping in mind these simple tips regarding correct use of bass fishing jigs, you can then make the correct decision and so, land some very big bass fish.

The head of a jig can consist of many different shapes and colors along with different features. The most common is the round head, but others include fish head shaped, coned shaped, or anything someone can think up. These heads come in many different weights usually ranging from 1/80th of an ounce to nearly a pound for large saltwater bottomfish like Pacific halibut. They can also be found in a wide array of colors and patterns. The hooks also vary. These variances can be on the hook type, color, angle of the hook or the material of the hook. Some jig heads even offer a weed guard.

There is a wide array of bodies for jigs. The most common is made out of rubber or silicone. These come in many shapes and can resemble a grub, frog shaped, fish shaped, paddle tail, lizards, or different insects. The colors of these can range from bright yellow to a transparent brown with silver and red flakes. Also during summer months look at colors for the heat such as browns, or blue with black hair. Many others catch fish like smallmouth bass and largemouth bass. Here's a quick rundown of the kinds of bass fishing lures are available: first of all, the spinner bait's are one of the most popular, can easily adapt to a just about any water you put them in. These are extremely effective in either fast or slow water, clear or murky water, and regardless of which depth you decide to fish in.

Crank baits are another very popular type of fishing where, and they these common all different kinds of shapes and sizes. Artificial worms and minnows are also very common, and can just about always be counted on to produce good results. Even when the other ones fail, depending on what water you fish in, you can usually always fall back on these when all else fails.

If you fish a crank bait enough, you will discover that these diving plugs are among the best possible tools for covering a lot of water and finding fish. If you are on a good pattern and know the color of the lure to use and the right cover to fish, you can cover more water with a crank bait than you can even with a spinnerbait. Crank baits are high saturation lures. If the bass are feeding for only 20 minutes in the morning, you can make more casts and show the bait to more fish in that 20 minutes with a crank bait than any other lure. That is one of its biggest advantages.

fishing larger crank baits, although there is plenty to be said for the small diving lures like the Deep Wee-R and the small Rapalas, which catch a lot of small fish. But I seem to lose more fish on the little crank baits, which can be attributed to using lighter line and the small hooks on the lures. But you will hardly miss a bass when using 1/2- and 5/8-ounce Hellbenders or Fat Raps, which have bigger hooks.

1. Take a look at all of your lures. There are likely a few you never tied on. Here's an idea: Get some lure paint from a fishing craft store such as Jann's Netcraft and change the color of the lure to match up closer to ones that produce. If you don't want to do that, just give them to a kid to use or another fishing buddy.

2. Next, examine the hooks on your crankbaits and topwaters and replace them or sharpen. With spinnerbaits, sharpen hooks and take a look at the rubber skirts. Replace them if necessary. A tip: Tying some nylon thread above the rubber collar on the skirt will keep it in place.

Fishing techniques

 

The Flip-Cast; use your wrist, NOT your arm.

. Concentrate on the spot you want to hit, not on what you want to miss.

. Use plenty of scent when trying to penetrate thick cover - it acts as a lubricant.

. Stick to basic jig colors (black/blue, brown/brown, black/chartreuse).

. Use a plastic worm with a glass bead between the worm and the weight for inactive fish.

. If you think it's a strike, reel down until your rod is in a hookset position before you check.

. A strike is anything different (something you wouldn't feel in a bathtub!).

. Tighten your drag all the way down for better hooksets.

. Use 17 to 25 pound test line for bait casting gear, 10 to 14 pound test on spinning (for flipping finesse baits).

In order to establish a pattern it is essential you understand how a bass lives in its environment. Knowing where the bass can be found at any given time or place is something you must develop. Always go fishing with a plan in mind.

Remember that every fish you catch can reveal clues on how to catch another. After establishing a pattern, realize that when the action slows down in the area you were fishing, you can then search for more areas that would fill the same criteria. The Sidearm Cast

In this cast, you'll be once again facing your target area squarely. This time, though, hold your rod parallel to the water and at waist level. Move the rod sideways and behind you to your right, then whip it forward towards the water.

 

Comments

Jack 3 years ago

Good tips

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