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Thread: Help with Lure Selection

  1. #21
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    This was a fresh jig head, the paint has been chewed off from the fish biting it today. That's after the big fish ate the other jig and broke off
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  2. #22
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    I just wanted to add to this thread, that when direct tying the line to your jig, you must adjust the knot after each fish caught. So make sure to pull the knot back so that the jig swims horizontally. Otherwise, it will swim at a 45 degree angle and the bites will diminish
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  3. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Happyfisherman View Post
    I just wanted to add to this thread, that when direct tying the line to your jig, you must adjust the knot after each fish caught. So make sure to pull the knot back so that the jig swims horizontally. Otherwise, it will swim at a 45 degree angle and the bites will diminish
    But, baitfish don't change depth "horizontally". When they dive or swim up & away from a predator, they swim at an angle. Now, when you're vertical jigging, Vertical Casting, or holding a jig in place ... that probably makes a difference. But, personally I don't hold a lot of credence to a loop knot being better than a direct tie when casting or flippin' a jig at a distance ... since many of my bites occur on the fall or rise ... and most of the time my jigs are tied direct. (the only time one is not tied direct, and is on a loop knot, is the top jig of a double jig rig when I'm flippin that rig while Livescoping)

  4. #24
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    Eagle 1 is offline Crappie.com Legend and Mississippi Moderator
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    If four large crappie came up to strike the flicker shad , I am no longer looking .

  5. #25
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    They do swim at an angle up and down, but not when swimming straight. I don't raise my rod tip up or down when retrieving, just a slow steady retrieve. If you don't adjust the knot to a little back of the center of the eye, it will loook unnatural on the retrieve. I've had a rosy red I kept in my aquarium I've been watching for months, and I can see why the straight tails work so well

    Minnows seem to dart around and swim at various angles, but mostly horizontal

    https://youtu.be/gunuGn1pjB0?si=LbSJgQDFIPl9uup7
    Last edited by Happyfisherman; 05-07-2025 at 11:33 AM.

  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by Happyfisherman View Post
    They do swim at an angle up and down, but not when swimming straight. I don't raise my rod tip up or down when retrieving, just a slow steady retrieve. If you don't adjust the knot to a little back of the center of the eye, it will loook unnatural on the retrieve. I've had a rosy red I kept in my aquarium I've been watching for months, and I can see why the straight tails work so well

    Minnows seem to dart around and swim at various angles, but mostly horizontal

    https://youtu.be/gunuGn1pjB0?si=LbSJgQDFIPl9uup7
    Okay, but I would think you'd want to have the knot well to the front of the jig eye on a steady slow retrieve. If it's towards the back half of the jig eye isn't it going to turn the jighead to a downward position on retrieve ?? That is IF it even stays in that position on the jig eye after a hard cast.

    I'm just basing my comments on my experiences (of the past) when I was casting a jig, holding the rod tip at the 11 o:clock position, allowing the line to keep a slight bow in it by my slow retrieve speed while watching the line for any movement not created by me. My knot was always TDC on the jig eye (unless it got pulled to the front of the jig eye from landing the fish, and was never corrected). I never intentionally pulled the knot towards the back half of the jig eye. Even if it did end up in that position, it would most likely have ended up back at TDC on the next cast.

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    Caucht a bunch again today on the Gulp minnows, gotta decent eater around 12". Was hoping to catch another nice one but after that one the bite just seemed to die. What do you guys do when that happens? I switched colors and caught a couple more, but it's like they just turned off. Turtles started biting off the tails. You can also cut off the used portion of Gulp minnow and trim it and still use it
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  8. #28
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    If the knot is to the front of the eye, once the jig "planes out" on the retrieve, it will be swimming in a tail downward position. If vertical jigging, which I haven't really messed with yet, but I need to, you certainly need to adjust the knot so the jig is level in the water. This is one advantage to the loop knot, you don't have to adjust the knot. So even if a bluegill nips the lure when direct tied, and causes the knot to slide to the front, the rest of the retrieve it will not be level in the water

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    Here's one of the gulp minnows I trimmed down after getting ripped up. They don't seem to care which side up it's rigged, so just flip over when one side gets ripped up
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  10. #30
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    Thats what is so cool about fishing from a boat on a lake. If youre in fish that simply wont bite then you can MOVE! After doing everything that you know and still no bites then it's time to move on and find other fish....maybe the ones that will bite! All too many times I see the same fellas, fishing the same creeks, doing the same things over and over and over again, and then saying the fish wasnt biting that day. All I coulda tole them was they werent biting where they were fishing.
    Thanks Happyfisherman thanked you for this post

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