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How to
Trim a Weedless Jig Many moons ago, I cut the fiberguards off jigs entirely.
I fished jigs with fully-exposed hooks in the heaviest cover imaginable. This
was in order to teach myself the hard way how to fish jigs in heavy cover. I
reasoned that if I could master how to get an exposed hook jig into thick
cover (the easy part) and out (not so easy), then it would be a cinch when I
resumed using a fiberguard. Without any fiberguard, you need to land your cast
precisely where you want it, often in the thickest part of the cover, or the
exact spot you want to work it. In dense weeds, you would need to land right
in a hat-sized hole in the weeds, for example. Once it hits the water, you
really cannot move it at all. Just let it sink and wait for what seems like
forever without moving it at all. Fish will often pick it up, even after a
long, long time without moving it. If that doesn't happen, just shake the
line, quivering the jig without moving it forward. After shaking and
quivering the line for about ten seconds, wait for another long, long time,
which is when the hit will come. I call this the "shake and bake"
tactic. Repeat shaking and baking about four or five times. All the while,
the jig hasn't moved an inch. You shake the line, not the jig. When you
finally do feel a need to move the jig forward, do it ever-so-slowly, hardly
moving at all, until it bumps some obstacle - a rock, wood, weed edge or
whatever. Now, just keep backing off and bumping the object, back off and
bump, back off and bump several times, then wait a long time without moving
the jig. I refer to this as "knocking on the door." Repeat knocking
on the door, but make sure to pause. The bumps calls fish over to see who's
at the door, and when you pause, they answer by hitting your jig. Even if the
jig snags onto an object, never mind. Just shake it patiently and
attractively while it's snagged. Always make painstakingly long pauses in
between the short bouts of shaking. When you pause, fish will pull the
snagged jig off whatever it's stuck on. It took me two seasons to get good at it, but that's how
I learned to fish jigs in heavy cover with fully-exposed hooks. The same
applies to jigs with fiberguards, except they snag less. In case you do not want to learn the way I did, I offer
you the tips below that tell you how to trim a fiberguard to best protect a
jig hook from snags. Why do you need to trim a fiberguard at all? Too full a
fiberguard may block the strike, impede the jig's way into the mouth, and
resist your hook set. So trimming the fiberguard (while still preventing
snags) reduces these potential problems.
In open water with no obstructions swimming a jig above
the bottom, there's no need for a fiberguard and it can be cut off entirely.
In light cover, often as few as 7 or 8 fibers are all you need. It goes
against logic to buy a jig with a bushy fiberguard and then cut off all or
most of it, but that can be your best option in open water or light cover. To begin with, it is better to cut off too few rather
than too many. You can always trim a couple more later. Especially if you are
not hooking a high percentage of fish, your fiberguard may still be a little
too thick. So you may want to trim a couple more fibers off. It's a trade-off
between better hooksets (fewer fibers) and better snag-resistance (more
fibers).
I've been trimming jigs this same way over twenty-five
years. It's not that I'm set in my ways. I have heard of and tried other ways
to trim jigs, but keep coming back to the steps above because they work for
me. Over time, what has changed is the availability of lighter and varying
size fiberguards. Years ago, there was really only one size fiberguard (or so
it seemed) - extra full and extra long with extra thick fibers. Today, there
are light (.018), medium (.021) and heavy (.024) action fibers, base sizes
(of the entire bundle) in 1/64" increments from 1/16" through
5/32" (which determines fiber count), and from 1-3/8" to
1-7/8" lengths available. So jigs today can come off the shelf with
fairly different fiberguards. Nevertheless, finding a jig that needs no
trimming is not common. It's like finding a pair of fine dress slacks that
fit perfectly off the rack without needing to be tailored. If the pants fit
you, they may not fit other customers as good. So, good pants are often made
long and unhemmed so everyone may tailor them. Likewise, good jigs are often
left a little too full and a little too long. It's intended that you tailor
them to fit your needs perfectly. The way I trim all jigs (if they need
trimming) is as above. The power jig is molded and painted with a metal pin
temporarily in place of the fiberguard. Then the pin is pulled and the
fiberguard is glued in. The finesse jig is molded and painted with the fiberguard
in place, which seats the fiberguard a little more securely. In either case,
however, you can expect a small percentage of fiberguards to pop out from
handling them, from fish or hard use. Sometimes a fiberguard will come lose
during the trimming process. This is not a mistake or badly-made fiberguard.
It's just their nature. Just like an egg is fragile, that doesn't mean it's a
defect if one's shell gets broken in the egg carton. It's just the way eggs
(and fiberguards) are made. Point is, fiberguards may loosen. Don't pull or
tug on the fiberguard more than you have to.
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