Hot weather, hot water, small baits
The weather and water temps will drive sunfish and crappies into submerged wood where some depth and shade can afford a little relief for the fish. Dropping a jig in wood like this can often end up as a lost jig. Here's something to try. Tie a plain, un-cast, jig hook...about a size 8....on your line then pinch on a split-shop 6" to a foot above the hook. Thread a small plastic on the hook until the head end butts up to the dog-leg in the jig hook and put a dab of super glue there to keep the plastic from sliding. The key here is down-sizing the size of the bait. In the winter fish get shoved into similar funks when water temps dip into the polar ranges and these same fish will behave just like that when the water gets hot.
http://i574.photobucket.com/albums/s...IMG_0801-1.jpg
These are Bear's little Ice Minnows and are my choice of plastic weapon right now while the water temps are at such ridiculous levels. I can fish the rig just described using these baits either on a tight line or under a float. After giving the bait a short jump the drop on these is super slow. That thread-fine tails dances all over as the bait drops. When the bait comes to rest, that tail is still moving.
The two colors with the red eyes almost appear to be mad. I love it. With Ma away this weekend I have been able to sit back and get caught up on my box filling....I never seem to have trouble losing baits but re-filling the box with her around is becoming a real challenge. lol The mold for this bait is pretty small and getting two colors of plastic laid by hand befor shooting the center color on that fire-tiger was a serious test for these old eyes but I like the outcome. Now to try that fire-tiger on fish. I know the other two colors work great for this tactic and as long as I had heat those to do the re-fill number I thought what the heck and heated some orange to challenge myself. I don't think I want to do these multiple color numbers very often but they do look nice in the end.
These plastics tape out at only 1-3/8" and about 50% of that is tail.