DonkeyHunter Posted September 11, 2008 Posted September 11, 2008 I am wondering if fishing a wacky rigged stickbait in very stained almost muddy water is a technique that will work? Will it produce enough water displacement or will I basically have to hit the fish on the head with it? I am thinking when it's twitched it would move enough water but I am not sure. I have a tournament on very stained water this weekend and think it would really produce around the abundance of shallow, visible cover in this pond, is this a good idea or not? Quote
Super User Wayne P. Posted September 12, 2008 Super User Posted September 12, 2008 I wacky rig a finesse and Trick worm in all water colors, works great. I don't do any twitching though, just a slow 1'-2' pull and give it slack to fall to the bottom. Quote
Super User Bassin_Fin@tic Posted September 12, 2008 Super User Posted September 12, 2008 I do just fine in the nasty stained water around here with senkos and trickworms rigged Wayne P. style. I weight mine most of the time and do a lot of crawling along the bottom like using a t-rig with twitches. It is my belief that a little weight will cause more vibrations from the bait. Clear water I would want a slow natural fall. Quote
Super User Sam Posted September 12, 2008 Super User Posted September 12, 2008 The wacky technique will work in stained or muddy water. The secret is the bait's color. Try pumpkinseed with black flake; pumpkinseed with a touch of chartreuse on the tail; and black; or black and grape. You will have to experiment with colors to see what will work on your wacky, Texas or Carolina rig plus pitching and flipping. Quote
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