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		| Boat Fishing & Boating A new forum at Striped-Bass.com for those fishing from boats and for boating in general |  
	
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		|  05-05-2004, 05:40 PM | #1 |  
	| No Shorts On 
				 
				Join Date: Sep 2000 Location: Bassachusetts 
					Posts: 1,109
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				Jigging question??
			 
 Greetings, gang!  Hope the new season is treating you boaters well.
 Question for the boat crew.  I've only fished stripers off the beaches.  Uncle Matt just got a boat so I'm hoping to bum rides off him.  I am tying up some parachute jigs on smilin' bill heads.  How heavy do you guys go for heads using wire-line setups for off shore?  Is 4 & 5 ounce good enough?  Should I tie more 5 than 4 or tie lotsa both of 'em??
 
 Any particular colors work better than others?
 
 Thanks for the help.  This boat thing is gonna be a new world for us!!
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Bob Thomas
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		|  05-05-2004, 07:13 PM | #2 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Nov 2003 Location: West Wareham 
					Posts: 1,189
				 | I would think 4-5 would be plenty, colors I usually put together on most of  my rigs are flourescent green/white and pink/white |  
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		|  05-06-2004, 05:04 AM | #3 |  
	| Southsider 
				 
				Join Date: Jul 2002 Location: Bass River, Mass. 
					Posts: 1,226
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				 Hi Bob 
 It's funny, sometimes the lighter jigs produce better than heavy ones, like 2 ounces or so. But I know a guy who loves those giant 10 ounce Andrus jigs. These are all fished on the bottom and some days the heavy does it and some day the lighter does it.
 Like you, I tend to stockpile the 4-5 ounce size as a catch all jig. When I fished as a mate on a charterboat in high school, we used 2 ounces jigs in the rips and they never touched the bottom, and we did really well.
 
 The leadhead jig is very versatile, isn't it!
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		|  05-06-2004, 06:36 AM | #4 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: weymouth 
					Posts: 1,360
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				jigging
			 
 Hey Hooper, when you fished those jigs on the charterboat would you troll them and pump the rods up and down, or would you drift? I know a lot of guyd over off of P-town troll and pump those unbrerlla rigs. Just wondering? I would think the best place to use a jig like this is over a bottom that has lots of structure or "dips" ^-^---^-----^^^ so the jig gets down there on those holding fish. |  
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thats why they call it fishing not catching
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		|  05-06-2004, 08:49 AM | #5 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: May 2003 Location: Portsmouth RI 
					Posts: 227
				 | I have been thinking about trolling the 9 inch strom jigs on the wireline. It would be great to see which produces more, the parachute or the strom. I'm going to experiment this year. |  
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		|  05-06-2004, 09:02 AM | #6 |  
	| No Shorts On 
				 
				Join Date: Sep 2000 Location: Bassachusetts 
					Posts: 1,109
				 | Thanks for the replies!  I think I'm pretty safe with the 4 & 5 ounce jobs.
 Teezer - that's a  heck of an idea!  I bet those would swim nice.  Gonna hafta try that!
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Bob Thomas
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		|  05-06-2004, 09:30 AM | #7 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Aug 2001 Location: Quincy 
					Posts: 451
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				 Jigs 
 Inshore I fish 2 oz White Jigs w/white porkrind. Offshore I'll go to a 4 -5 oz.  9 inch Storm Wildeyes are killer when trolled.  This is all with Monel wire. |  
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		|  05-06-2004, 11:31 AM | #8 |  
	| Southsider 
				 
				Join Date: Jul 2002 Location: Bass River, Mass. 
					Posts: 1,226
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				Re: jigging
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| Originally posted by quick decision Hey Hooper, when you fished those jigs on the charterboat would you troll them and pump the rods up and down, or would you drift?
 |  Hi Quick-
 
Yes, on the boat I worked for, the crew worked the rods, usually seated from a fishting chair. We used very light wire line, 30lb and two ounce jigs. Generally, we spooled with 150' of wire and came back 12-15 turns on the reels which usually put us in the right spot. Some other boat used strictly 100' of wire and left it there, then fished the rip that way.
 
I've seen Cape Cod Bay charters jig umbrellas sometimes, but it seems overkill to me. Maybe they're trying to kill the customers? If the fish are there they'll either hit the rigs or not regardless if they're being pulled on....right? Just my school of thought!
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		|  05-06-2004, 01:02 PM | #9 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Sep 2001 
					Posts: 7,649
				 | I have trolled those storms on wire...they work but a lot of the time you pull up half a storm.  Beware of choppers. |  
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		|  05-06-2004, 05:54 PM | #10 |  
	| Hardcore BFC Alum 
				 
				Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: Cape 
					Posts: 108
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				jig colors
			 
 Bob-
 One thing I thought I'd mention... For the most part, fishing off the southside of the Cape I've seen most people using the chartruese or white jigs. However, my buddy who charter fishes in Cape Cod bay says all he uses is red and purple. Also on the bay side, they don't pump the jigs but bounce them along the bottom. Therefore the tendency is to go with the standard smilin' bill style rather than the chute.
 
 On the southside of the Cape I fish the chutes and keep them about 3 or 4 feet off bottom. I pump them because it seems realistic to the way a squid pumps through the water. Althought, I have had hits on the chutes while the rods weren't being jigged. Fish chartruese in may and early june, than move to white as the water warms up... Not sure why, but that's been the most successful for me... My biggest fish last year came on Jigs in early June rather than bait in the fall. Don't listen to those who say only the bait will take the big girls. I've had 40 pounders on the jigs.
 
 Good luck.
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		|  05-06-2004, 08:09 PM | #11 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: weymouth 
					Posts: 1,360
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				good stuff
			 
 Wow, I am getting excited just reading this stuff. I need to get my boat in asap! Thanx guys. |  
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thats why they call it fishing not catching
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