Three flavors

There is something out there about the Fall damsel migration. Hit it big once, and on Monday after several slow, though beauiful hours in fallvember, sank a balanced damsel 17' under indicator in 18'. Game on. 10 takedowns in short order. Gad it is fun when it all works. Worth a cigar......
 

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looks like I need to up my game and add jig fishing to my arsenal.
question: when I buy the jig hooks, will they have the bead/weight already, or do I buy separate?

thx
 
looks like I need to up my game and add jig fishing to my arsenal.
question: when I buy the jig hooks, will they have the bead/weight already, or do I buy separate?

thx
Paul has given you a good idea on jig tying - do you remember the MYTH that tying your own would save you money? ;-) Good luck with your adventure into jig pattern tying. A few forum members have suggested jig patterns are just a trend or fad; I don't know about that but I will say they've accounted for a lot of fish to hand for this old guy.
 
I'll start rounding up the supplies I need - mainly the hooks and nails.
thanks for all the feedback - great Forum!
 
I'll start rounding up the supplies I need - mainly the hooks and nails.
thanks for all the feedback - great Forum!
If you’re going to tie balanced leeches, straight pins with the metal ends work well. Slide a standard tungsten bead onto the pin and trim it down to fit the hook. The examples in this thread are #12 jig hooks with 2.8 mm tungsten beads on a pin. Phil Rowley has some good demos on YT.

Slotted beads work with Jig-style hooks, no pin required!
 
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