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jed with a spring Big Mack

Topic: Slow Pitch jigging.... Bit the bullet on a specialty rod  (Read 2857 times)

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BasinYakGuy

  • Rockfish
  • ****
  • Location: Klamath Falls, OR
  • Date Registered: Mar 2016
  • Posts: 116
So i finally decided to go for a slow pitch specific rod. the Grappler Slow pitch rod by shimano paired up with the new Penn low profile Squall (not enough coin for an accurate reel yet). Has anybody out there spent some time with a slow pitch rod from the kayak? I am trying to work the kinks out of this technique before I go to a more southern place where this type of jigging will be very effective.
1st Place at your moms house 2022
3rd place to your sisters prom 2019

Plastic Pirate


skayaker2

  • Rockfish
  • ****
  • Since 2010. Formerly known as "skayaker"
  • TAFKAS (The Angler Formerly Known As Skayaker)
  • Location: Seattle
  • Date Registered: May 2018
  • Posts: 109
I have been using this technique for a few years now targeting coho and chinook salmon in the sound, I don't use specialty rods for this but mainly two setups, both using vintage, medium-light, thin moderate parabolic action daiwa rods:

1) Casting style setup: 8 ft long daiwa rod (may be an old Graphite Standard Procaster, can't tell, bought it used and writing is faded) with Abu Garcia 5500LC Ambassadeur Line Counter Reel.

2) Spinning setup: 7 ft long daiwa 1113 rod (fiberglass) with a Cabelas salt striker reel.

I prefer to use setup #1, specially for chinook, only reason I use #2 is early season coho and blackmouth, plus when I take only one rod and want to have a spinning setup to mix bombing a P-line jig out there with jigging a slow jig depending on conditions.
Personally, the type of jig and technique you use while slow jigging are the most important factors, with the Shimano butterfly scoring the most chinook so far for me. Let us know how that rod works for you!
 
 
« Last Edit: October 30, 2020, 07:07:33 PM by skayaker2 »


BasinYakGuy

  • Rockfish
  • ****
  • Location: Klamath Falls, OR
  • Date Registered: Mar 2016
  • Posts: 116
The butterfly jig also catches a good amount of Mackinaw for me been jigging for mackinaw this way for 4 years.
1st Place at your moms house 2022
3rd place to your sisters prom 2019

Plastic Pirate


BiggyZee

  • Krill
  • *
  • Location: Seattle
  • Date Registered: Feb 2021
  • Posts: 18
Complete noob here on slow jigging. I usually chuck out buzzbombs and crippled herrings.
What are size jig weight do you use targeting salmon and which color works best for you? Have you caught a lingcod with them?