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  1. #1
    Join Date
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    In the spring I use mostly a 1/32 oz. Roadrunner or regular tied jig and sometimes a 1/16 regular jig if I am trolling water over 6' deep and even more in 11'-13' deep water. If however the wind is blowing enough to give me trouble long line trolling and will go to a 1/8 and troll it right beside me. In the summer mostly 1/8 or 1/4 oz. jig is what I use.

    I really want to try some 1/64 oz. next spring trolling for that picky bite. I have them in #8 & #6 Sickle and #8 through #4 in regular bend so I will not have to give on the hook size to use this little jewel.

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  2. #2
    Cane Pole's Avatar
    Cane Pole is offline Crappie.com 2011 Man of the Year * Crappie.com Supporter
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    Stupid question, but, how do you get those real small jigs to sink? Seems to me with all that feathers and stuff it would reach zero buoyancy and it would take a long time to get to 10 foot depth.. I am not to savvy about small jigs or rather I should say I don't know crap about them.
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  3. #3
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    Default sometimes thats what you want

    Quote Originally Posted by Cane Pole View Post
    Stupid question, but, how do you get those real small jigs to sink? Seems to me with all that feathers and stuff it would reach zero buoyancy and it would take a long time to get to 10 foot depth.. I am not to savvy about small jigs or rather I should say I don't know crap about them.
    sometimes you want those jigs to almost hover...even a picky crappie finds a jig in the face hard to resist when it just sits there wiggling in the crappie's face looking all the world like a small minnow or bug that hasn't got the means or sense to move on. When I dock shoot I like a jig that has a very slow fall rate...that is just a killer pattern around here in the hot hot summer time. You can always put some split shot on your line to make them sink faster it is the small profile that helps on those occasions...try it you'll like it:D brim
    A man is not judged by what he has done for himself but by what he has done for others.

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