
Originally Posted by
TimY
Different day yesterday. Fish were buried in the brush after the front came through. Had to anchor and drop shot double minnow rigs into the brush for the bigger fish. Didn't catch a lot of big fish but the ones we had were good ones. Best jig color we found the last few days spider rigging or with drop shots was electric chicken and black chart. tipped with shiners. Little bit of advise for you guys that have never spider rigged and are thinking about trying it. #1 in most lakes around Oklahoma, you don't need 14 to 16 ft rods. We have used 12 footers for years in Oklahoma and Arkansas with good success. They use the longer poles for the shallow water lakes where the average water is 2 to 8 ft deep. The longer the pole, the bigger the challenge. You can always go longer later. #2 start out with 3 to 4 poles until you get the hang of it. Weight varies with the depth you fish but 1 ounce does well in most cases. Get a rod rack for your boat so you can pre-rig them before you go to the lake. Saves a bunch of time and they are not expensive. A lot of people have went to single rod holders for spider rigging. We still use the singles with 5 rod holders. There are a lot of good rod holders out there today. Run different jig colors on every rod until you see what they want. You don't need expensive rods / reels to spider rig but a soft tip seems to work better for the light bites plus they tend to hang on longer since there is lighter resistance. Spider rigging is deadly when the fish are scattered on flats and over brush. It is a lot of fun once you get going.