![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
There's a contest running over on the YumaBassman.com
(http://yumabassman.com) forum, where members post tips about jig use, and the winner will receive an assortment of jigs by Siebler Custom Baits. Probably the most useful jig tips will involve ways and places to use these multipurpose lures. Below is a commentary that I posted on that forum; maybe some of you won't have a chance to read it there but would be interested. (If you have prize-winning tips you are willing to post there, there's a very good chance that you could walk away with the gift pack in plenty of time to use them this season. And you might pick up an idea or two that will improve your jig-fishing productivity.) Here's what I wrote: B52 survival kits issued to pilots in WWII contained, among other essentials, a bucktail jig made with whitetail deer fur. I have been told they made the list because they were so versatile, compact, inexpensive, and productive. Old Bomber lures (with hooks removed) were crib toys for me. I used them to represent boats, rockets, fish, or cars as a toddler. Jigs, however, were never considered playthings; they were clearly fishing lures. tools, not toys. There were always several bucktail jigs with sharp hooks on Dad's workbench and tied on his fishing poles in the closet. They made dandy (and inexpensive) stocking stuffers for the young'uns. My uncles poured and tied their own ball-head jigs using hair and fur from a variety of sources, and they kept us well-supplied. Uncle Al, who lived a mile or so from us, taught me to build my own jigs using his lead smelter, molds, thread, fur, and model paint. (This was before EPA, too, and I don't recall a whole lot of ventilation in the basement room where we melted and poured our lead. might explain a lot to those of you who know me well.) In my teen years, my own homemade survival kit in a little, tin Band-aid box accompanied me whenever I went afield hunting or backpacking the remote trails of the Appalachians or Cumberland Plateau. That kit included one of Uncle Ed's bucktail jigs, along with two tiny few doll-eye jigs for trout and panfish. Without weedguards, our homemade jigs were prone to hanging up around brush. But with only the cost of hooks and a little time invested in them (deer and dog hair were in plentiful supply, and salvaged lead from used tire weights), we were willing to sacrifice a few jigs in order to probe the thickest weed beds and buckbrush or brush piles that we though might hold lurking bass. I learned to fish them with a deft touch on the gravel beds and rocky-bottom lakes and streams of East Tennessee to keep them shuffling along the bottom without falling down into crevasses. Usually we fished them bare, but we occasionally threaded on a six-inch, black plastic worm to increase their bulk and appeal. This was long before I'd ever heard the term "Texas-rig," and unless worms were used as jig trailers, we retrieved worms weightless, rigged with two hooks behind a string of beads and a propeller. (I remember fishing such rigs in the Everglades canals below Okeechobee on trips to visit grandparents.) Partnering worms with jigs turned them into an entirely different class of baits, and we learned to fish them differently, too. Sauger fishing below Douglass Dam; smallmouth-holding gravels beds on Watts Bar; Ft. Loudon Lake riprap banks and laydowns for largemouth bass and sunnies; Melton Hill Lake bluffs, the Holston River below dams at Rogersville and Jefferson City; mangrove islands and oyster bars for snook, sea trout and redfish near Matlacha Pass in Florida; streams that ran out of the Smokey Mountains. jigs produced in every type of water and under all conditions. You just had to learn to vary your presentation and technique to match the conditions. Today, the variety of styles, shapes, sizes, and weights available to jig fishermen open up all kinds of alternatives. I'm looking forward to reading how other forum members rig and retrieve their jigs. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Joe Haubenreich" (removethis)swljoe-at-secretweaponlures.com wrote in
message ... There's a contest running over on the YumaBassman.com (http://yumabassman.com) forum, where members post tips about jig use, and the winner will receive an assortment of jigs by Siebler Custom Baits. Probably the most useful jig tips will involve ways and places to use these multipurpose lures. Below is a commentary that I posted on that forum; maybe some of you won't have a chance to read it there but would be interested. (If you have prize-winning tips you are willing to post there, there's a very good chance that you could walk away with the gift pack in plenty of time to use them this season. And you might pick up an idea or two that will improve your jig-fishing productivity.) Here's what I wrote: B52 survival kits issued to pilots in WWII contained, among other essentials, a bucktail jig made with whitetail deer fur. I have been told they made the list because they were so versatile, compact, inexpensive, and productive. Old Bomber lures (with hooks removed) were crib toys for me. I used them to represent boats, rockets, fish, or cars as a toddler. Jigs, however, were never considered playthings; they were clearly fishing lures. tools, not toys. There were always several bucktail jigs with sharp hooks on Dad's workbench and tied on his fishing poles in the closet. They made dandy (and inexpensive) stocking stuffers for the young'uns. My uncles poured and tied their own ball-head jigs using hair and fur from a variety of sources, and they kept us well-supplied. Uncle Al, who lived a mile or so from us, taught me to build my own jigs using his lead smelter, molds, thread, fur, and model paint. (This was before EPA, too, and I don't recall a whole lot of ventilation in the basement room where we melted and poured our lead. might explain a lot to those of you who know me well.) In my teen years, my own homemade survival kit in a little, tin Band-aid box accompanied me whenever I went afield hunting or backpacking the remote trails of the Appalachians or Cumberland Plateau. That kit included one of Uncle Ed's bucktail jigs, along with two tiny few doll-eye jigs for trout and panfish. Without weedguards, our homemade jigs were prone to hanging up around brush. But with only the cost of hooks and a little time invested in them (deer and dog hair were in plentiful supply, and salvaged lead from used tire weights), we were willing to sacrifice a few jigs in order to probe the thickest weed beds and buckbrush or brush piles that we though might hold lurking bass. I learned to fish them with a deft touch on the gravel beds and rocky-bottom lakes and streams of East Tennessee to keep them shuffling along the bottom without falling down into crevasses. Usually we fished them bare, but we occasionally threaded on a six-inch, black plastic worm to increase their bulk and appeal. This was long before I'd ever heard the term "Texas-rig," and unless worms were used as jig trailers, we retrieved worms weightless, rigged with two hooks behind a string of beads and a propeller. (I remember fishing such rigs in the Everglades canals below Okeechobee on trips to visit grandparents.) Partnering worms with jigs turned them into an entirely different class of baits, and we learned to fish them differently, too. Sauger fishing below Douglass Dam; smallmouth-holding gravels beds on Watts Bar; Ft. Loudon Lake riprap banks and laydowns for largemouth bass and sunnies; Melton Hill Lake bluffs, the Holston River below dams at Rogersville and Jefferson City; mangrove islands and oyster bars for snook, sea trout and redfish near Matlacha Pass in Florida; streams that ran out of the Smokey Mountains. jigs produced in every type of water and under all conditions. You just had to learn to vary your presentation and technique to match the conditions. Today, the variety of styles, shapes, sizes, and weights available to jig fishermen open up all kinds of alternatives. I'm looking forward to reading how other forum members rig and retrieve their jigs. Thanks, for posting that Joe. For anybody who is interested, the direct link is: http://www.yumabassman.com/cgi-bin/y...m=1122935 515 or http://tinyurl.com/98jwe Actually, there will be three prize packs awarded. The big pack will go to the contest winner, and two smaller packs will be awarded to participants in the contest selected at random. -- Bob La Londe Win a Tackle Pack Jig Fishing - Tips and Techniques Contest Courtesy of Siebler Custom Baits http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
New to Fishing? | [email protected] | Fly Fishing | 0 | December 2nd, 2004 11:24 AM |
new to carp fishing - need tips. | SS | UK Coarse Fishing | 9 | May 25th, 2004 12:08 AM |
RECIPROCAL FISHING GOES INTO EFFECT ON LAKE CHAMPLAIN | Outdoors Magazine | Fly Fishing | 0 | December 29th, 2003 03:19 PM |