Muad Dib Posted May 5, 2009 Posted May 5, 2009 i always hear to fish a green jig in grass. why would you do that. is it cause the crayfish match their environment? or is it just preference of the fisherman. i bought a bunch of texas craw and green pumpkin and forest jigs. just lookin for the best "environments" to fish them t Quote
DINK WHISPERER Posted May 5, 2009 Posted May 5, 2009 It is the belief that they match/blend into their environment. I have proved to myself that those colors work anywhere though. I use black/blue jigs in grass to be honest. I like the pumpkin for docks and rocks myself. Quote
Super User Hammer 4 Posted May 5, 2009 Super User Posted May 5, 2009 Another take on it...we fish 5" pumpkin Senco's in weed lines and in the toolies, what's wierd is that's the one color they seem to prefer...I wish I knew why. Quote
Super User Tin Posted May 5, 2009 Super User Posted May 5, 2009 It's a reaction bite. They will usually always hit it on the drop. Quote
Chris Posted May 7, 2009 Posted May 7, 2009 because it is a lighter shade than black but dark enough to show a contrast to the grass but not dark enough to stick out like it don't belong there, plus bluegills have the same hue when around grass. Quote
Pitchinkid Posted May 7, 2009 Posted May 7, 2009 Its just a great color overall. Matches everything. Crayfish,bluegill, baitfish etc. Matches water color i think more than anything. Hard for a fish to distinguish that its not real. Maybe its just magic. One of things that cant be explained. Aint that right dick. Quote
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