dave Posted September 7, 2013 Posted September 7, 2013 I found this thread and loved the information. I read an article YEARS ago in a magazine about a jig fishing expert that taught many a pro how to fish a jig by using the reel and not the rod. I could never find it again. Reading Tom's article, I realized that I have found it. I also think I figured out who the "fisherman in California" referenced in Bo's video is. 1 Quote
Super User deep Posted October 24, 2014 Super User Posted October 24, 2014 ttt for newer members. 1 Quote
Slade House Posted October 24, 2014 Posted October 24, 2014 so Tom still hoping you will come out and fish Casitas with me sometime soon? going out again tomorrow on my boat with Doug Carlson. let me know. Also Tom's illustration about how to effectively fish a point is spot on. Quote
BasshunterJGH Posted December 10, 2014 Posted December 10, 2014 This is an interesting topic. Thanks for all the helpful posts WRB. A couple questions: how do you make your jigs? Also, are there any other jigs besides the *** you would recommend from tackle warehouse? Quote
BasshunterJGH Posted December 10, 2014 Posted December 10, 2014 One more thing: do you know of any good pork trailers available? Where do you get yours from now? Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 11, 2014 Author Super User Posted December 11, 2014 I made my jig molds back in '71, a viper stand up head designed to go through rocky areas easier than a football head that puts the hook point further back from the head to improve hook sets when casting a jig. Regarding pork rind trailers; SuperPork went out of business last year, no replacement. Uncle Josh is the only pork rind lure company still making jig trailers to the best of my knowledge. PM and I can tell you how to make your own...it's time consuming, takes about 3 weeks and messy. Tom Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 11, 2014 Author Super User Posted December 11, 2014 so Tom still hoping you will come out and fish Casitas with me sometime soon? going out again tomorrow on my boat with Doug Carlson. let me know. Also Tom's illustration about how to effectively fish a point is spot on.I know you have a red boat and will talk to you at the ramp if you are there when I am.Tom Quote
Super User deep Posted December 11, 2014 Super User Posted December 11, 2014 Luckily there's at least one online vendor with some superpork available. Tom, could you tell us what to look for in pork trailers (size, floatation, action etc)? Should we shave a little fat off where the hook goes in, and also where the claws start? Quote
Weld's Largemouth Posted December 11, 2014 Posted December 11, 2014 Read everything in this thread, thank you Tom for providing guidance and sharing your experience with us all, it's a pleasure to have great anglers like you on BassResource! Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 11, 2014 Author Super User Posted December 11, 2014 Luckily there's at least one online vendor with some superpork available. Tom, could you tell us what to look for in pork trailers (size, floatation, action etc)? Should we shave a little fat off where the hook goes in, and also where the claws start? I can email some sketches.A good pork rind trailer should be like soft leather and float on top of the water, not sink on it's own. Bass do not like live crawdads with big claws, they prefer no claws or smaller claws if they have a choice. When I fished live crawdads we removed the claws to improve our catch rate. Soft plastic trailers use claws as flappers to give the illusion the plastic is alive and swimming, it's a unnatural movement for a crawdad. Pork rind trailers have a natural movement like a Senko, moves enough to look alive to the bass. My pork trailers are 3" and 4" long X 3/4 to 1" wide with a split tail 2 1/2"- 3" long, similar to a pork frog with thicker longer tails, very simple shape that swims very good. I have a sketch to show outline and how to trim a pork trailer. Dying pork colors is also easy if you start with natural cured white pork rind. Tom 1 Quote
Super User deep Posted December 11, 2014 Super User Posted December 11, 2014 .. Thanks Tom, on behalf of everyone. I believe I already have the sketch you're referring to. I'll be happy to post it here- with your permission- if anyone's interested. Quote
Super User deep Posted December 12, 2014 Super User Posted December 12, 2014 Tom's jigs: *close up photos of a few jigs and pork trailer. The pork trailer is a copy of the old Pedigo 4” lizard made for me by SuperPork*, now out of business. The jig is my own design that dates back to ’71; a stand up viper shape that goes through rocks extremely well, not good for brush. I use a Gamakatsu #114, 5/0 on the 7/16 oz jig. This jig is ideally suited for casting horizontal presentations in deep structured lakes..* 4 Quote
travis23 Posted December 12, 2014 Posted December 12, 2014 Tom, a few weeks ago we spoke briefly on hair jigs. I noticed when I put the pork trailer on the jig, the hair clumped together and had no movement. I was using Uncle Joshs #11 i believe. How do you keep the haiir flowing naturaly and not clumping. I imagine it has to do with the liquid in the pork bottle? Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 12, 2014 Author Super User Posted December 12, 2014 Tom, a few weeks ago we spoke briefly on hair jigs. I noticed when I put the pork trailer on the jig, the hair clumped together and had no movement. I was using Uncle Joshs #11 i believe. How do you keep the haiir flowing naturaly and not clumping. I imagine it has to do with the liquid in the pork bottle? When the hair gets coated with heavy oils or scent gels it tends to mat together under water. If the wet hair is clumped around the trailer out of the water, that is normal, in the water that could be a problem. Wash the hair jig in mild up scented soap like a Joy, rinse and blow dry. I thread on a 3/4" piece of soft plastic worm on the hook shank and slide it under the hair up to the jig collar to help flare out the hair and prevent the pork trailer from fowling the hook point. You nose hook a pork trailer, don't thread in on like a soft plastic trailer. The liquid in a pork jar should be heavy salt water, not oil. Tom 1 Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 12, 2014 Author Super User Posted December 12, 2014 Deep, thank you posting the photos. The jigs in the pictures were tied by the late Doug "Skinny" Harris, the detail is amazing. I don't add eyes other than red dots for crawdad color and yellow dots for shad color and use plain Testers enamel paint for jigs I normally fish with. Tom 1 Quote
BasshunterJGH Posted December 12, 2014 Posted December 12, 2014 Tom, do you make your own pork trailers? Do you just buy pork from the grocery store? Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 12, 2014 Author Super User Posted December 12, 2014 Tom, do you make your own pork trailers? Do you just buy pork from the grocery store?Since SuperPork went out of business I make my own pork trailers.I can post a how to when time permits. Tom 1 Quote
BasshunterJGH Posted December 12, 2014 Posted December 12, 2014 Since SuperPork went out of business I make my own pork trailers. I can post a how to when time permits. Tom Ok thanks I'd like to start using pork. What you said about the bass not wanting to eat the claws makes sense. Quote
travis23 Posted December 13, 2014 Posted December 13, 2014 Since SuperPork went out of business I make my own pork trailers. I can post a how to when time permits. Tom woulld love to hear it. Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 13, 2014 Author Super User Posted December 13, 2014 woulld love to hear it.Posted a how to in the tacklemaking forum.Pork trailers should be high floatation and soft, not stiff, for a natural life like motion underwater. Tom Quote
travis23 Posted December 13, 2014 Posted December 13, 2014 Posted a how to in the tacklemaking forum. Pork trailers should be high floatation and soft, not stiff, for a natural life like motion underwater. Tom Thanks! Quote
Super User deep Posted December 15, 2014 Super User Posted December 15, 2014 Tom's smallmouth hair jigs! 3 Quote
Super User WRB Posted December 15, 2014 Author Super User Posted December 15, 2014 The above 2 hair jigs have brighter colors than my largemouth hair jigs. The Shad color shown earlier is also good smallie color and the brown with green above is a good largemouth color in the spring, all colors will catch LMB, and smallmouth or spots at times. The brown Chartreuse with red is called Fritts after Dave Fritts brown/chartreuse crankbait. The light brown with green/ black is spring craw. I haven't shared these jig colors on a site like BR before so they should be new colors to most folks, hope you enjoy them. Tom 2 Quote
Super User WRB Posted February 13, 2019 Author Super User Posted February 13, 2019 I had forgotten the photos of my hair jigs and pork rind trailer were on this site...I didn't share that anywhere else! Tom Quote
FordsnFishin Posted February 13, 2019 Posted February 13, 2019 Thanks for the resurrection. Was a very good read and look forward to putting your advice into practice. Quote
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