Jcj90 Posted April 17, 2021 Posted April 17, 2021 Do you guys keep the swimbait hook flush with the bait or do you put it in the plastic a bit Quote
evilcatfish Posted April 17, 2021 Posted April 17, 2021 I try to keep it flush but will skin hook if I’m in grass or other cover Quote
Super User MN Fisher Posted April 17, 2021 Super User Posted April 17, 2021 I'll assume this is for swimbait hooks or T-Rigs...as trailers on chatter/spinnerbaits the hook point is very exposed. Ya, I tex-pose the hook - just skin the point under the plastic. Quote
BBuck Posted April 17, 2021 Posted April 17, 2021 Depends on where I'm fishing it. If in heavier cover where I think it could snag on something I might put the hook tip just under the plastic, or use something else if it becomes a bother. otherwise, I'd leave the hook resting just on the outside of the swimbait. I do the same thing for flukes. Quote
michaelb Posted April 17, 2021 Posted April 17, 2021 It is heavy and the plastic is thick, you need a good hookset, and so I would rig it with the hook point flush (and maybe work it around a bit to make sure it can move). Is this a belly weighted swimbait hook? that will keep it vertical and the point out of the weeds for the most part. This isn't your question, but I have switched to swimbait jig heads for skinny dippers for most of the time; they work well, are pretty weedless for the most part, and the hookset is instant and hard to miss. https://www.tacklewarehouse.com/VMC_Ike_Approved_Swimbait_Jig_Heads/descpage-MVCSBHD.html?from=BASRES Quote
Super User Deleted account Posted April 17, 2021 Super User Posted April 17, 2021 It has a bit of a slot, and if rigged properly with the right hook, the point will sit flush in it, If it's snagging, I'm going to something else fully t-rigged. Skinny Dipper is one of my favorite swimbaits. 1 Quote
Super User Fishes in trees Posted April 17, 2021 Super User Posted April 17, 2021 A number of years ago I bought 6 or 8 bags of this bait, but for whatever reasons I never fished them and they ended up in the great pile of unused/forgotten baits. Well, this winter, I found them, 6 bags, various colors, all stored together in a quart zip lock bag. I took that as a sign and so now I put together a kit of a dozen or so similar soft plastics, swim jigs, swim bait heads and so forth and I have a dedicated swim jig rig now, so I'm going to put this style of bait in the regular rotation. When I finally get on the water this year, and who knows when that will be, a skinny dipper will be tied on, ready to go. OIb yeah, the rig - gonna start out with an older 7' olive green Kistler small swim bait rod and a Shimano Calais with 17 lb mono and go from there. 1 Quote
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