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There we are! That was easy. Just a little grub on a jig head. Ooh, he wants to play
today. This is candy man, they just cannot resist this, cannot resist it. Come on, don't
go under the boat. It's light line, you gotta take your time getting them in. Look at this,
look at this. Here we go.
Fell victim to a grub here on a jig head. That's were talking about today. Today I'm
gonna show you how to rig it, what type of equipment to use. And then I'm gonna take
you on the water and show you what techniques you can use for fishing a grub on a jig head.
Hey folks, Glenn May, here with BassResource.com. Today I want to talk to you about fishing
grubs. Grubs on a jig head to be specific.
If you're not sure how to rig this, I’ve got a video on how to rig grubs, It's linked
underneath this video here, you can take a look at that later, but right now you talk
to you about the different equipment and terminal tackle to use and then I'm going to take you
out and show you how to fish it.
So first off, what I'm using here is a ball head jig and it's got a wire guard on there.
It's a real light wire hook. It's about a 1/0 hook, thin for finessing but the guard
on there keeps some of the weeds and gunk off of it and prevents it from getting hung
up and stuff.
Tied to it I'm using 6 pound fluorocarbon line. The fluorocarbon gives me gives me that
sensitivity I need to feel those light bites plus it's clearer in water and doesn't get
to be seen as much. It's a little more invisible, if you will. I fish in real clear water so
that's important.
Because we're using real light line we need to match it up with the right rod. So a medium,
light action rod. . . that's the kind that you want, because if you have anything heavier
than that you risk breaking the line or straightening out that hook during the fight and during
the hook set. So medium light action spinning outfit is what we are doing.
Let me tell you little bit about the weight here. This weight is just an eighth ounce
weight. That's a great starting point. Good all round size to use. A lot of the bites
come on the fall, so you want a nice slow fall. You can go up to a quarter ounce weight
if you want. If you're fishing really deep that's not a problem, but I wouldn't really
want to go any higher than that. So you don't need a whole bunch of jig heads. Just get
yourself an eighth ounce, quarter ounce, maybe a three eighth but no, that's even too much.
That's all you need. Simple set up. Now we're ready to go. Now you know the equipment. Now
you know the gear. Let's go out fishing.
All right, so what I'm fishing here is kind of a rocky point, some underwater boulders,
with no weeds, which is a great place to fish this rig. Even though I have a wire guard
here for weeds, I don't have to worry about it because I don't have any weeds.
Really all it takes is a nice light cast you don't want to throw it out really far. Just
throw it out, and then let it sink a little bit and then you're going to reel it back.
That's the first technique I'm going to show you here.
So you just cast that grub out there. Let it fall. I flip the bail, and then all we
are going to do is a steady retrieve. Point the rod tip down towards the water and slowly
bring it back. And try to follow the contour of the bottom. So you might want give it a
little pause, let it sink a little bit and then reel again. And that's all we are going
to do, is follow this point on out and see if there are any fish hanging out on the bottom.
Now the bite sometimes is real subtle, so you have to pay real close attention to feeling
that. So I like to put the rod at a little bit of an angle here. It's a little bit easier
to detect the bite.
Now to set the hook, because this wire, light wire hook it's exposed and you're only using
6 pound test, you don't have to set the hook really hard. Matter of fact if you really
pop it hard, you're just going to break the line or straighten out that hook. So instead
just reel a bit harder, just pull back on it and you will set the hook. It doesn't take
much effort to get that light wire hook to go past the barb in the fish's mouth and then
you have them.
So let me show you one other way I like to fish this. And that is, you throw it out there
and let it fall. In this case you are going to let fall way to the bottom, so when you
do pay real close attention to that line. If there are any fish that hits it while it’s
falling the line will pop, twitch, jump, jerk, do something like that. If that happens you
want to set the hook.
Now it's at the bottom, all you're going to do it point the rod tip down towards the water
and now lift it up to about the 11 o'clock position and then let it fall. And all I'm
doing is I'm letting, I'm following the drop with the rod tip and I'm reeling up the slack
as I do it. I'm not moving the bait ahead with the reel, I'm doing that with the rod.
So just lift up, slowly, and just let it fall, flutter right back down. A lot of times those
bites occur right as the bait is falling.
And that's really all there is to it to fishing grubs, it’s very simple, straightforward.
The thing about though, here's a little tip, if you're catching fish on crankbaits, matter
of fact this is a really good place to . . . anywhere you throw crank baits, that's where you want
to throw this, but if you are catching fish on crankbaits and the bite dies off. Pick
up a grub and go back through those areas and you will start catching fish again. So
you can cover a lot of water doing it this way, too. Great way to catch a lot of fish.
Now, I'll fish a little bit differently in the summer than I do in say the spring. In
the summer I'm fishing a little bit deeper. I'm fishing main lake points, I might fish
humps, that sort of thing. Whereas in the spring I will go shallow, I will go back to
coves, flats, secondary points, those are the things I will be targeting. Great bait
to use during those times of the year especially when the fish are active and feeding on bait
fish.
For more tips and tricks like this visit BassResource.com.