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NJFishing.com Salt Water Fishing Use this board to post all general salt water fishing information. Please use the appropriate boards below for all other information. General information about sailing times, charter availability and open boats trips can be found and should be posted in the open boat forum. |
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#1
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Jigging Seabass
With all the great sponsor reports, anyone getting results jigging for seabass as opposed to hi-lo/clam? Took a trip out of RI years ago and jigs were definitely culling out the larger humpbacks.
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#2
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Re: Jigging Seabass
ijigged some seabass today at seagirt,with a 4oz diamond jig
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#3
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Re: Jigging Seabass
My mate and I tried it Saturday for 10 or so minutes each respectively and we each had just 1 bite. With the seabass spitting up sandeels they should be hitting the jigs but that wasn't the case for us.
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#4
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Re: Jigging Seabass
ours were spitting up crabs and lobsters
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#5
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Re: Jigging Seabass
A lot of it has to do with the size of the Jig & the type of teaser. I know you all may have heard this before match the hatch. A 4oz to 6oz jig may work sometimes but it's too big to match the size of the sandeels in the water. The size & colors of the teasers as well just talk to surf fisherman they will agree with me as well. I like using anything in the silver to light blue in the teaser dept & a a17 Jig or a light weighted stingo jig in the 1oz. to 2 oz. range.
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If it eats Green Crabs it's a Blackfish. If it hates Blackfisherman it's the NMFS. |
#6
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Re: Jigging Seabass
its not always the metal jigs, sometimes buctails w/ strip of squid will produce better! last year up north off Nantucket all my big ones caught this method, metal jigs work but that day not as well!
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#7
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Re: Jigging Seabass
If the fish are thick as they probably were in RI jigging can get the bigger fish but here lately it's a matter of the boat stops and you get most of what is
down there as soon as you drop down, so I wouldn't waste time jigging. |
#8
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Re: Jigging Seabass
I tried yesterday during a great clam bite hoping to get away from the smaller fish.
I used a 2oz T-Hex with a buck tail and after 10 mins switched back to the clam. Not a touch.
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Howie |
#9
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Re: Jigging Seabass
Quote:
That is exactly correct - you may have to play around with different jigs and teasers I have done really well culling smaller fish using a 6" gotcha curly tail on a few trips (same set up I use for cod btw) - other times a tint Clark spoon as a teaser killed 'em. All depends on conditions and scenario. Try various jig styles and sizes - if deep and lots of current I will run the jig as a teaser off the required weight to get the correct presentation |
#10
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Re: Jigging Seabass
on my saturday trip, i got tired of the clam snot and tried a 3 oz diamond jig with a gulp teaser. the set up worked well. most of the fish ate the teaser but couple came on the jig. wouldn't say that it outproduced clam but seemed to produce equally well and my hands werent clammy all the time.
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