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What made you want to try Jig/Pig/trailer

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  • Super User

During the early 70s on Toledo Bend the Hydrilla started really getting thick and numerous anglers (me included) were basically fishing the matted grass with weightless Texas Rigs & Johnson Weed less spoons, there wasn't many other baits that would work in this thick stuff. At the time I belonged to the Hemphill Bass Club out of the Harbor Light Marina and one of our members started wining back to back tournaments, not just ours but every ones. He was killing us with 15 fish stringers averaging 3 1/2 to 4 lbs. a fish. No one could figure out how he was doing it, we had all seen him on the main lake flats fishing the grass flats like us or so we thought. Finally at a club meeting he revealed what he was doing. Being a diver he had went out to the grass flats & dove under to see what was there, what he found was tunnels, caverns, & caves under the surface matted grass. In of these areas he could see crawfish clinging to the grass stems, they were also filled with schools of bass, mostly large bass. The next question was what bait could get to the bass, the answer was provided by Lonnie Stanley with a ¾ oz. Jig! Who is this angler that jigged his was too many a tournament win as well to the top of B.A.S.S.? Texas Bass Fishing Legend Tommy Martin!

  • Super User
During the early 70s on Toledo Bend the Hydrilla started really getting thick and numerous anglers (me included) were basically fishing the matted grass with weightless Texas Rigs & Johnson Weed less spoons, there wasn't many other baits that would work in this thick stuff. At the time I belonged to the Hemphill Bass Club out of the Harbor Light Marina and one of our members started wining back to back tournaments, not just ours but every ones. He was killing us with 15 fish stringers averaging 3 1/2 to 4 lbs. a fish. No one could figure out how he was doing it, we had all seen him on the main lake flats fishing the grass flats like us or so we thought. Finally at a club meeting he revealed what he was doing. Being a diver he had went out to the grass flats & dove under to see what was there, what he found was tunnels, caverns, & caves under the surface matted grass. In of these areas he could see crawfish clinging to the grass stems, they were also filled with schools of bass, mostly large bass. The next question was what bait could get to the bass, the answer was provided by Lonnie Stanley with a ¾ oz. Jig! Who is this angler that jigged his was too many a tournament win as well to the top of B.A.S.S.? Texas Bass Fishing Legend Tommy Martin!

Now where have I heard this before? ;) Cool story, Catt!

During the early 70s on Toledo Bend the Hydrilla started really getting thick and numerous anglers (me included) were basically fishing the matted grass with weightless Texas Rigs & Johnson Weed less spoons, there wasn't many other baits that would work in this thick stuff. At the time I belonged to the Hemphill Bass Club out of the Harbor Light Marina and one of our members started wining back to back tournaments, not just ours but every ones. He was killing us with 15 fish stringers averaging 3 1/2 to 4 lbs. a fish. No one could figure out how he was doing it, we had all seen him on the main lake flats fishing the grass flats like us or so we thought. Finally at a club meeting he revealed what he was doing. Being a diver he had went out to the grass flats & dove under to see what was there, what he found was tunnels, caverns, & caves under the surface matted grass. In of these areas he could see crawfish clinging to the grass stems, they were also filled with schools of bass, mostly large bass. The next question was what bait could get to the bass, the answer was provided by Lonnie Stanley with a ¾ oz. Jig! Who is this angler that jigged his was too many a tournament win as well to the top of B.A.S.S.? Texas Bass Fishing Legend Tommy Martin!

Awesome!

I first starting using jigs because i heard of big fish being caught on them.  After fishing jigs successfully, I fell in love with the constant contact feeling, it's ability to transmit information regarding structure location and type, and more than anything else "The Tap".  To me, the tap of a jig is very similar to a texas rigged worm, which I also love to fish.  Maybe it's the anticipation of the tap that gets me, I dont know.  What I do know is that I love the jig, and there is always one tied onto one of my rods no matter where I am fishing.

i had never heard of a jig when my friend tied one on for me in highschool. i was a crankbait/inline spinner guy. double tail hula grub on arkie jighead. jigs have been my go-to bait since that day.

I started several years ago, the main reason I waited in the first place was just because I didn't know how to do a pitch cast.  I just rigged up a 1/4 oz. jig on a rod and kept it out on my back deck for a few weeks and took a few minutes here and there to start pitching it at targets in the yard.  It didn't take long to get decent at it and now I almost never go fishing without one on the deck, even if it isn't your main pattern on a given day you can almost always pick off a few bonus fish when you see a good laydown or something that "needs to be flipped"  ;)

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