Yamamoto
Debuts New Flappin' Hog II
In this article, let's dive into using Yamamoto's new
Flappin' Hogs on weedless skirted jigs. Before we get started however, here's a
list of new Flappin' Hog colors and the Yamamoto 11-series skirt colors that
match swell with them. The color codes on this chart will be referenced
throughout the article.
|
Color |
Color Description |
Flappin' Hog |
Skirt |
|
#021 |
Black w/blue flake |
FH-07-021 |
11-20-021 |
|
#042 |
Watermelon w/no flake |
FH-07-042 |
|
|
#051 |
Black w/red flake |
FH-07-051 |
|
|
#176 |
Cinnamon w/black flake |
|
11-20-176 |
|
#194 |
Watermelon w/black flake |
FH-07-194 |
11-20-194 |
|
#196 |
Pumpkin w/black & green flake |
FH-07-196 |
11-20-196 |
|
#208 |
Watermelon w/black & red flake |
FH-07-208 |
11-20-208 |
|
#213 |
June bug purple w/emerald flake |
FH-07-213 |
|
|
#214 |
Bluegill smoke w/black, blue & gold flake |
FH-07-214 |
|
|
#221 |
Cinnamon w/black & purple flake |
|
11-20-221 |
|
#297 |
Green pumpkin w/black flake |
|
11-20-297 |
|
#301 |
Green pumpkin w/green & purple flake |
FH-07-301 |
|
|
#318 |
New! Green pumpkin w/red flake |
FH-07-318 |
|
|
#330 |
Green pumpkin w/purple & copper flake |
FH-07-330 |
|
|
#335 |
New! Blue w/blue flake |
FH-07-335 |
|

New color #318 ~ Green
pumpkin with red flake. The three most popular and productive Yamamoto colors
worldwide are: watermelon pepper #194 (left); green pumpkin pepper #297 (2nd
left); and watermelon pepper with red #208 (2nd from right). Now, green pumpkin
with red #335 (far right) has been added to the Yamamoto product line for the
first time as a new Flappin' Hog color.

New color #335 ~ Blue
with blue flake. The Flappin' Hog is partially submerged here. It's perched
on a brush limb like an emergent larval insect crawling out of the water.

New color #335
Flappin' Hog underwater. A silicone rubber
half-skirt (also called a "finesse" skirt) is shown here. You can see
how the skirt expands and flares out when paused.

Looking closely at this underwater shot shows how the strands on a Yamamoto
soft plastic skirt (color #221) flare straight out when paused under water.
Photo also demonstrates the many different "grab points" or multiple
handles by which bass can grab a piece of the Flappin' Hog. Those grab points
can often be a key to Flappin' Hog fishing success.

Color #208 (watermelon pepper with red) skirt and #208 trailer.

Color #208 skirt and #051 (black with red) trailer
The Flappin' Hog was originally designed for the Japanese
market. I'm not sure what action the Japanese designer was aiming to achieve
with all the many different appendages. Their are eight attachments to the main
body - two balls, two flat shovel scoop type arms, two bean-shaped ridged pods
and two flat, floppy treaded bunny ear-shaped tails.

Color #051 Flappin Hog and #208 skirt rest on lake bottom, looking like a plump
crawdad.

Underwater shot is a little hazy but clearly demonstrates how Yamamoto's
11-series skirt puffs out when paused.

This color #021 Flappin Hog with #021 skirt looks like a dark critter crawling
cautiously through flooded brush.

There are plenty of appendages for a bass to grab in order to yank this critter
around and injure it before eating it.

A silicone rubber half-skirt is shown above with color #330 Flappin' Hog. I
favor using Yamamoto's 11-series skirts or silicone rubber half-skirts
("finesse" skirts) rather than full-sized silicone skirts. Why?
Because the shorter skirts expose more of the grab handles.

Who knows what the Flappin' Hog imitates, but bass love to take a piece of it,
and that's their downfall. Once they get a small piece, they can't help but
come back for the rest of it. They can't eat just one piece and not want to eat
the whole thing. Color #221 skirt shown with #301 Flappin' Hog.

Flappin' Hog on a flipping jig head with an 11-series skirt as it swims through
shallow weedy brush cover.

Flappin' Hog perched quietly on a limb like some kind of aquatic critter barely
above water.

Yamamoto's 11-series
skirts. Yamamoto's
11-series skirts are long-lasting and durable. You can often expect the same
Yamamoto skirt to last a long time - all day or even all weekend. Occasionally,
a fish will tear a skirt apart, but that's unusual. A bag of 20 Yamamoto skirts
can last you a long, long time.

Flipping jig dressed with color #297 skirt and #213 Flappin Hog.

Flipping jig dressed with color #221 skirt and #194 Flappin Hog.
Early morning flipping bite. Early in the morning,
bigger bass can often be found up shallow on top of weedy brush points and
brush-lined rocky reefs. Flipping jigs with heavy gear (in this case,

On two consecutive casts, two decent bass each pulled a flapper off this
flipping jig in shallow weedy brush, then engulfed it entirely on the second
hit. The same flipping jig head and skirt lasted all weekend. However, the
Flappin' Hogs were torn to pieces one after one (more on that later) and a good
number of Flappin' Hog's were used. The way this translates is that the more
Flappin' Hogs that get torn up, the more bass you'll have caught.

Mid-morning deepwater jig
bite. As
the early flipping bite fizzles to an end, the deepwater jig bite turns on and
often peaks during mid-morning hours. Getting back to our "time
boxing" segments, depending on season, and for sake of illustration only,
let's say the mid-morning deepwater jig bite has maximum potential from 9
through 11 o'clock. This is the "time box" when you may do best
concentrating on a deepwater jig bite.

The jig shown above first caught a smallmouth which ripped off the upper
flapper and then came back for the rest of the jig. On the next cast, it caught
a largemouth which ripped off the upper "bunny ear" first, and then
came back for the rest of the jig. The Flappin' Hog trailer was gladly replaced
with a fresh one after it caught two bass on two casts. However, the same
weedless jig head and the same skirt were used an entire weekend with

Who knows what this jig concoction imitates? Bass often only need a vague
impression of something alive, not detailed realism. Shown above is #176 color
skirt and #214 Flappin' Hog on brown weedless Arkey jig head under water.

Aerial photo shows a series of rugged rocky brush-filled points. Early in the
morning, the flipping jig bite can be on in the shallow brush itself. As the
morning wears on, the better fish will often drop back over the ledges and deep
sides of the points where the mid-morning deep water jig bite will peak before
noon. For sake of illustration, the red and yellow x's are shown further apart
than the actual difference in location as bass move from shallow cover to
nearby drop-offs.

Picture above and below shows a few of the rocky brush-filled points marked by
x's on the aerial photo above.

Almost 200 largemouth and smallmouth were landed on skirted jigs with Flappin'
Hogs during two mornings of flipping these brush points from first light to
around 8 o'clock, after which the better bass moved deeper onto the outlying
ledges and drop-offs nearby. Deep water jig action peaked around 10:30 each
morning. The vast majority of the 200 fish were not hooked on their first
strike. Most tore one or more pieces off each attractant-soaked Flappin' Hog
first. They then struck repeatedly, ripping off parts until hooked solidly.
As the clock ticks past noon, and the mid-morning deep jig
bite ends, you'll need to add other different time box segments to your day -
such as fishing spinnerbaits if it is windy, fishing dropshot or shaking
finesse worms if it's calm, and so on. Each time box is a short session
intended to focus on and maximize your odds of scoring in a particular spot at
a particular time of day with a particular tactic.

Early afternoon jig bite. Hey! What's that swimbait
doing in a Flappin' Hog story? It's just to follow through on the time box
concept, because the third segment of the day switched to a different kind of
deepwater jig bite, using Yamamoto's swimbait on a 1/2 oz jig head on

X marks the spot! These are the kind of
steeper spots targeted during the early afternoon swimbait time box. Most shad
never make it past the hordes of bass that gang up waiting to eat them on these
outer points marked by x's. Consequently, the inner stretches of the cove at
top and the inner parts of the big lower bay hold few bass, except during the
spring spawning season. There's just not much food that makes it that far back
during the rest of the year.

On their way into this side cove, there isn't anywhere for bass to easily pen
incoming shad until they reach the steep points on the left side. Very few shad
ever make it into the very back of the left side. Although bass are up in the
shallow back of the left side to spawn in spring, most bass will tend to hang
off the steep points in summer. Very few shad ever make it to the right side of
the cove, and relatively few bass are caught on the right side of this cove.

If you're looking for a bait that will last long, this isn't it. Fish will make
fast work of a Flappin' Hog. If you're looking for a bait that has the ability
to catch fish and lots of them, look no further. One of the keys to success
with Yamamoto's Flappin' Hog is that especially smaller bass in the 1 to
It really doesn't matter to the next bass whether a few
parts have been pulled off already. The Flappin Hog has 8 expendable pieces.
It's like a piscatorial pizza pie with 8 slices. They'll all be pulled apart
and eaten one by one.

Color #221 skirt and #330 Flappin Hog swimming under water. (Same jig shown dry
in next photo.)

Color #221 skirts match swell with color #330 Flappin Hogs. It's hard to gauge
hook thickness from a photo, but both these hooks are heavy duty. It requires a
stout line and heavy action rod to set such heavy hooks.

This heavy jig is designed for deep water. Since the hook is heavy wire, a
heavy rod and line are required in order to set it. With a lighter rod or
lighter line, you will not be able to set a heavy hook - or you may fight fish
halfway back to the boat, and they'll just come off because the hook was never
set. Color #176 skirt and color #214 Flappin' Hog make a great pair!

Also a deepwater jig, but this one has a medium wire hook (hard to gauge hook
wire in photo) and more flexible fiberguard matches perfectly with medium/heavy
rod and 12 to

I like to keep Flappin' Hogs and skirts in their original bags. This way, it is
easy for me to add a pea-sized glob of MegaStrike gel or a few drops of
Yamamoto's liquid fish attractant or Kick'n Bass into each fresh bag of
Flappin' Hogs when first I open it. I do not add fish attractant to the skirts.
Enough attractant gets on the Flappin' Hog alone.
This hot time of year, the MegaStrike gel will liquefy. I
do not know whether you can see the liquefied MegaStrike remaining in this
half-used bag of Flappin' Hogs above. However, the attractant is in there. You
don't need to put in much at all. A pea-sized glob or just a few drops. It will
quickly work itself all over all the baits in a bag. It will give them a
lifelike sheen coating which will disperse, causing a visible oily and
olfactory-detectable "chum" slick in the water column and on the
surface above the bait. If any baits had gotten kinked or bent while stored in
the bag, the oil helps relax and unkink the baits. With heat from the sun
beating down on the bags on the boat deck, it won't be long before the oils and
sun's heat help restore all baits back to their originally-molded perfect
shapes without kinks and bends.

There's a lot of speculation whether fish attractants do or do not work as
advertised. They do. Especially with soft baits. I first began to use fish
attractants in the early eighties. Dr. Juice was the first attractant I tried,
soon to be followed by Fish Formula and a host of other attractants. After 25
years of experience, I can tell you they work, especially with soft baits. Some
of the best attractants today are Gary Yamamoto's own fish attractant, Kick'n
Bass and MegaStrike (shown above). I like the ease of MegaStrike's gel tube
because it can be applied and stored with less mess. Squeezable bottles of
non-gel liquid with spout type nozzles make more mess on you, the boat, and in
storage. With MegaStrike's gel tube, there is still a mess, just less. Why put
up with the mess? Because soft baits with attractant catch more bass than
without. Twenty-five years of fishing with and without attractant have proven this
to me beyond any doubt. If you don't want the mess (on you, your boat, your
lunch, your rods, reels, everything you touch, etc.), that's understandable.
Also understand that if you're not using an attractant with soft baits, you are
not catching all the bass you could.
Bass hit jigs different ways. Some say that bass engulf jigs in their entirety as the jig falls, and that may be true. Swimming jigs along steadily, however, many times bass will nip and tug at the tail tips to begin with, and when a jig is at rest laying on bottom, bass often grab the tip of a trailer and yank it rather than engulfing the entire jig. If a bass nips and tugs at a swimming jig or if it grabs and yanks on a resting jig, if there is no attractant or if there is no expendable part that comes off in the fish's mouth, then the chances the fish will wheel around and strike again are iffy at best. Most likely, you will not get a second strike. At least that's what my research proves. On the other hand, when an attractant-coated part of a Flappin' Hog gets sacrificed to a hungry fish, it convinces the fish it's good to eat and has just been injured. It's almost certain you'll be struck again as the fish comes back to finish the job. All you need to do at that point is get prepared to set the hook. And that's the beauty behind the new Flappin' Hog coated in attractant and fished on a jig dressed with a short skirt.