Super User Cgolf Posted March 27, 2016 Super User Posted March 27, 2016 I think in all my years of fishing I tossed this one day for an hour and blanked. But thinking back on some bites, season is closed not much else to do, I could see where a bait rigged that way could trigger neutral to negative bass especially on cold mornings. Plus Bassmaster had an article on making your own C rig shortcuts and I had some piano wire in the shop. The where? I have always heard deep weed lines, but I fish reeds a lot and those bass are finicky unless you show them something they don't see often. Thinking the C rig would would be a great presentation for those fish. Baits to use? If I fished in reeds, would use the normal baits like tubes, finesse worms, and swim senkos, probably missing some. What else do you all toss and does it depend on the structure and cover you are tossing it too. Quote
Super User eyedabassman Posted March 27, 2016 Super User Posted March 27, 2016 Brush Hogs,beavers,BIG worms,( any worm ), flukes,Baby paca craws, lizards,I think you get the picture! 1 Quote
strikefc34 Posted March 27, 2016 Posted March 27, 2016 You can C-rig just about any plastic bait made. I really like two...the lizard and a zoom centipede. I see your from central Wisconsin, the times I fished the Wisconsin River in the Point area I did well rigging centipedes on gravel flats. In lakes I like the C-rig and lizard for covering water as long its not overly weedy. Never used more than a 1/2 oz weight, and never fished it much deeper than 20'. 1 Quote
IndianaFinesse Posted March 27, 2016 Posted March 27, 2016 Just about any soft plastic will work. My favorites are a six inch lizard and just about all of z-mans plastics, because they are so buoyant they float off the bottom where the bass can see them. you can fish them in quite a few places, over short weeds, weedlines, almost anywhere. 1 Quote
Super User Sam Posted March 27, 2016 Super User Posted March 27, 2016 Fish the C-rig any where any time. Use lizards. Colors of your choice. Don' fall for any "special" set ups. Get yourself some 1/2 ouch weights; some strong swivels; some clear glass beads; a good heavy rod; and load up that baitcaster with 20 pound fluorocarbon line. Use Palomar knots to attach the lines to your swivels. Go out and throw that sucker all over the place. 6 Quote
Super User buzzed bait Posted March 27, 2016 Super User Posted March 27, 2016 get you some carolina keepers and do away with all that extra bling... makes it infinitely easier to rig. 2 Quote
Super User scaleface Posted March 27, 2016 Super User Posted March 27, 2016 I use carolina rigs as a search bait on offshore structure . Its a fast way to work around a point, flat... Zoom lizards are a classic C-rig bait . I also like plastic worms , tubes , grubs and others . 2 Quote
RyneB Posted March 27, 2016 Posted March 27, 2016 Baby brush hog for me, also like a smoking rooster and space monkey 1 Quote
Super User Cgolf Posted March 27, 2016 Author Super User Posted March 27, 2016 Like all the bait options, especially grubs which I have a ton of. Makes me realize it isn't just a finesse presentation. Also been building up my stock of Zman stuff, so that is an option. Will just have to keep myself from chopping all the baits in half to be Ned rigged. Wonder if a TRD or 1/2 Zinker on a short light wire hook would work? A C-Ned-rig? 1 Quote
Super User MIbassyaker Posted March 27, 2016 Super User Posted March 27, 2016 16 minutes ago, cgolf said: Like all the bait options, especially grubs which I have a ton of. Makes me realize it isn't just a finesse presentation. Also been building up my stock of Zman stuff, so that is an option. Will just have to keep myself from chopping all the baits in half to be Ned rigged. Wonder if a TRD or 1/2 Zinker on a short light wire hook would work? A C-Ned-rig? I never fish a classic c-rig with all the hardware and 1/2oz+ weights, but I'm a big fan of a "finesse c-rig" (or slip-shot, as WRB calls it, which is a perfect name for it) --8-10lb line with 1/8-1/4oz weight ahead of a bobber stop, 12"-16" ahead of a light-wire hook and worm or creature. I'll put a 3 or 4" stick worm or french fry bait on there some times; literally anything you can drag around will work. 1 Quote
papajoe222 Posted March 27, 2016 Posted March 27, 2016 When all the soft plastic choices, you'd think that they are the only way to go. I'll let you in on a little secret I learned years ago fishing central Wisconsin; Use a #7-#9 original floating Rapala on the business end ( or any other high floating/shallow running crank). It's something the fish rarely see and it mimics natural forage so well that it works as both a power and finesse presentation. The 'where' is a tough one to answer as there are likely more variables to consider than choices of plastics. Touted more as a search presentation vs. a target one, structural features ( points, drops, bottom transition areas) are prime locations to target. 2 Quote
Super User ww2farmer Posted March 27, 2016 Super User Posted March 27, 2016 I throw a Carolina rig when I have given up on catching bass by any other means for the day. 4 Quote
Super User Cgolf Posted March 27, 2016 Author Super User Posted March 27, 2016 8 minutes ago, ww2farmer said: I throw a Carolina rig when I have given up on catching bass by any other means for the day. I have been at this point many times, and while I have a presentation or two that I am guessing nobody or very few throw on these lakes at certain cover situations, I like to have options especially if I spend a few days on the same body of water. I have been known to try some off the wall stuff, most fail, but when it works it is a lot of fun. 2 Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted March 27, 2016 Global Moderator Posted March 27, 2016 First, lose the premade rig. Bass have to drag the sinker along behind them with that rig and it pulls and jerks on their mouth if it catches on anything which could make them drop it. You have to tie the same amount of knots anyways. Second, you can C rig about anything. My personal favorite is a full sized brush hog. As for where, I like points, ledges, and rockpiles. 1 Quote
SDoolittle Posted March 27, 2016 Posted March 27, 2016 14 minutes ago, Bluebasser86 said: First, lose the premade rig. Bass have to drag the sinker along behind them with that rig and it pulls and jerks on their mouth if it catches on anything which could make them drop it. You have to tie the same amount of knots anyways. Thank you! I have never understood why anyone would use those premade rigs. They defeat the whole purpose of using a slip sinker. Quote
billgator Posted March 27, 2016 Posted March 27, 2016 Would a C-rig be a good bet at the tail end of the spawn/early post spawn? I've got a big trip planned and im thinking it could be a good option for me. The lake im fishing has a creek channel just off of a good 45 degree spawning bank and some rock piles in 5 to 10 feet of water on the outside of a good shallow cove. What do you guys think? Quote
Super User Cgolf Posted March 27, 2016 Author Super User Posted March 27, 2016 So really the c rig is like a mojo of split shot, but has a bead for sound and a heavier sliding weight. I may still try the pre tied rig a few times, just because I have no idea if it would work and wouldn't want to sacrifice a rod choice just yet for this, and really I want to see if the fish will hit a bait presented like that more readily then my standard presentations, if they do I can dedicate a rod to it. I could rig it without the swivel too right? Was thinking I could use one of those rubber T stops on a bead to hold it in place and then I only have one tie on the rig. 5 hours ago, Bluebasser86 said: First, lose the premade rig. Bass have to drag the sinker along behind them with that rig and it pulls and jerks on their mouth if it catches on anything which could make them drop it. You have to tie the same amount of knots anyways. Second, you can C rig about anything. My personal favorite is a full sized brush hog. As for where, I like points, ledges, and rockpiles. Don't you hit it right away? I have always been in the camp of it hit when you feel it. I would rather miss a fish than gut hook it. I have never given a fish slack when I felt a bite, and it seems to work out pretty good for me. Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted March 27, 2016 Global Moderator Posted March 27, 2016 5 minutes ago, cgolf said: So really the c rig is like a mojo of split shot, but has a bead for sound and a heavier sliding weight. I may still try the pre tied rig a few times, just because I have no idea if it would work and wouldn't want to sacrifice a rod choice just yet for this, and really I want to see if the fish will hit a bait presented like that more readily then my standard presentations, if they do I can dedicate a rod to it. I could rig it without the swivel too right? Was thinking I could use one of those rubber T stops on a bead to hold it in place and then I only have one tie on the rig. Don't you hit it right away? I have always been in the camp of it hit when you feel it. I would rather miss a fish than gut hook it. I have never given a fish slack when I felt a bite, and it seems to work out pretty good for me. C rig is the only exception to that rule it seems. Even if you do try to get them right away, you've got a bunch of line out and it's down 10-30' the winds blowing and the fish are biting light. What do you think your odds are you get the fish before it swims a couple feet through the rocks you were dragging and your sinker sticks and makes the fish spit your bait? Not saying the pre-made rigs won't catch fish, but I don't trust them and wouldn't suggest them to anyone. 4 Quote
SDoolittle Posted March 27, 2016 Posted March 27, 2016 I'm not a fan of those Carolina keepers either. I like to run 15-17 lb fluorocarbon as a main line and 12lb mono as a leader. You can't do that with a Carolina keeper. If you want to make rigging easier, tie up a few leaders with a hook on one end and a swivel on the other before you leave the house. Then, all you have to do is slip on a weight and a bead and tie one knot. It may not be quite as simple as using a keeper, but it's far more effective. 2 Quote
Super User Catt Posted March 27, 2016 Super User Posted March 27, 2016 8 hours ago, S. Doolittle said: I'm not a fan of those Carolina keepers either. I like to run 15-17 lb fluorocarbon as a main line and 12lb mono as a leader. You can't do that with a Carolina keeper. If you want to make rigging easier, tie up a few leaders with a hook on one end and a swivel on the other before you leave the house. Then, all you have to do is slip on a weight and a bead and tie one knot. It may not be quite as simple as using a keeper, but it's far more effective. What ya need a leader for? 2 Quote
chadmack282 Posted March 28, 2016 Posted March 28, 2016 20 hours ago, Catt said: what is that Catt? Quote
lo n slo Posted March 28, 2016 Posted March 28, 2016 12 hours ago, Bluebasser86 said: C rig is the only exception to that rule it seems. Even if you do try to get them right away, you've got a bunch of line out and it's down 10-30' the winds blowing and the fish are biting light. What do you think your odds are you get the fish before it swims a couple feet through the rocks you were dragging and your sinker sticks and makes the fish spit your bait? Not saying the pre-made rigs won't catch fish, but I don't trust them and wouldn't suggest them to anyone. confessions of a life long t-rigger i am the worlds worst at setting the hook on a c-rig. 50% of the time i either hit them with too much slack out or they swallow it. 1 Quote
Super User Catt Posted March 28, 2016 Super User Posted March 28, 2016 3 hours ago, chadmack282 said: what is that Catt? Lake Fork Trophy Lure Ring Fry #720 Fork Secret! Carolina Rigged French Fry, Ring Fry, Centipede, & other similar baits are extremely deadly & highly over looked! Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.