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Drift jigging in open water is a fishing
technique being used by an ever increasing number of anglers as they
discover its effectiveness and ease of application.
It's a technique tailor-made for open water, fresh or salt, where fish
are oriented either to bottom structure or temperature layers. With the aid
of a depth sounder, drift jigging allows pinpoint presentation of a spoon or
jig within inches of a fish, providing you with a distinct advantage not
easily obtainable with other fishing methods.
By using wind or current to change your boat position, in open water
drift jigging you will be prospecting different areas until a concentration
of fish is located. Then, either by using a motor or oars to hold your
position, or by motoring back and repeating the drift, you will be able to
stay over them.
Once fish are located, free-spool the jig or spoon to the desired depth
and then begin a series of varied jigging motions which impart erratic
actions to the lure.
The jigging technique consists of raising your rod anywhere from six
inches to six feet, throwing some slack in the line as the rod tip is
lowered toward the water, pausing and then raising the rod upward again. A
two second pause is recommended after the lure has been allowed to fall.
It's best to vary the distance of the upward rod motion with each sweep so
the spoon or jig produces the most erratic and varied actions possible.
Strikes which come when working a jig or jigging spoon almost always
occur as the lure is falling. Hesitation in the descent of a lure, a twitch
of the line, a "tap" or any other unusual motion or happening as the lure is
falling should be immediate reason for setting the hook.
Many times you will not be able to detect the "strike" but will feel
resistance as you begin to raise the rod. This too signals "set the hook".
An aid in detecting strikes when a lure is falling is the use of a
premium-quality high-visibility line such as Berkley Trilene XT, which also
has high knot strength and thin diameter in relation to pound test. By
carefully watching the line as the jig or spoon is falling, you will be able
to detect slight twitches in the line as the strike occurs.
If you have developed any strikes in a particular column of water, change
the location of your boat slightly, either by drifting or motoring so you
will constantly be covering new water. It is important to keep moving until
fish are located.
DEPTH SOUNDERS
There is no substitute for a good quality depth sounder, such as those made
by Lowrance. In drift jigging open water where fish can be just about
anywhere . . . it will take the guesswork out of otherwise countless hours
of blindly prospecting for them. A flasher unit will pinpoint the depth at
which fish are suspended and, to the knowledgeable eye, reveal structure and
fish close to structure. A flasher unit also will enable you to spot
underwater contour changes such as ledges, dropoffs and islands that
otherwise can't be located or fished over with any degree of consistency.
A paper chart recorder such as Lowrance's X-15 will provide you with all
of the above advantages plus give you a permanent record that you can refer
back to. You will be able to chart specific areas, bottom contours and the
like, and actually see your lure and fish that are closeby. Schools of
baitfish (and sometimes the thermocline layer of water) which are only
momentary blips on a flasher unit can be charted.
The beauty of a depth sounder in drift jigging lies in its ability to
tell you exactly at what depth the fish are, how many of them there are,
whether they are near structure on the bottom or suspended and, above all,
it allows you to move with them once they're found and keep your lures
within inches of them.
JIGGING LURES
Regardless of whether you're fishing salt or fresh water, you should try
to match the size of the jig or jigging spoon as closely as you can to the
prevalent baitfish in the area as well as to your tackle. If using
lightweight lures, you'll need lighter tackle -- heavier tackle for jigs and
spoons from three to seven ounces. The desired depth also has a great deal
to do with your selection of a spoon or jig. For example, you will need a
heavier lure for fishing in 100 feet of water than needed for fishing
20-foot depths.
THE IMPORTANCE OF COLOR
A wide variety of painted finishes and color combinations are available on
Luhr Jensen jigging spoons and jigs. Color becomes very important related to
the depth you'll be fishing, with colors changing depending upon how deep
they go. Red filters out of the color spectrum first at about 30 feet and
yellow and chartreuse at about 60 feet with blues, greens and darker colors
the last ones to turn gray. White and/or pearl turn gray at about 60 feet
and black is always black, regardless of depth. This means a fish in deep
water will see blacks, grays, blues and greens in terms of day-to-day food
while a shallow water fish would be tuned in to all colors.
The special glo finishes are designed specifically for deep water
jigging. They contain phosphor pigments that absorb light on the surface and
then give it off down deep. Note: Phosphorescent finishes contain
light-sensitive pigments which can be burned and turn gray if exposed to
strong, direct sunlight.
PROSPECTING OPEN WATER
Fresh and salt water gamefish all relate, in one form or another, to either
structure (bottom contours) currents or temperature zones. Here are some
tips to make your search pay off in the shortest amount of time when coupled
with the use of a depth sounder.
TEMPERATURE / OXYGEN (Fresh Water)
In large fresh water lakes and reservoirs, the critical factor in finding
fish is the location of the preferred temperature level, as it relates to
different species, and the thermocline. With the onset of warm spring
weather, lakes stratify into three distinct layers and remain that way until
fall. The middle layer of water, where there is a large concentration of
dissolved oxygen, baitfish and therefore predator fish is called the
thermocline and can generally be found from 10 to 80 feet down. This not
only is an oxygen-rich layer but also a temperature layer as well and fish
relate to it, both as a comfort zone and an area where their body metabolism
functions efficiently.
The peak feeding and optimum temperature for Coho and Chinook Salmon is
55° with an active range from 44° to 58°. For lake Trout, peak feeding and
optimum temperature is 50° with activity from 43° to 53°. For Steelhead,
optimum temperature is between 50° and 55° with activity from 40° to 75°.
Brown and rainbow Trout, as well as bass, have an optimum temperature
preference between 55° and 60° with activity from 44° to 75°.
Fish rarely venture out of these preferred temperature zones, except to
catch a meal, and then will return quickly. One thing to remember when
fishing temperature layers such as the thermocline is that they can change
from day to day because of wind and/or wave action and you'll have to
relocate them each time out.
TIDE/CURRENTS (Salt Water)
Just as knowledge of temperature layers is critical for fresh water fishing,
a knowledge of tides and currents is essential for salt water drift jigging
success. Feeding activity of Salmon and other salt water gamefish is at its
maximum during the period from one hour before, through and one hour after a
tide change. A tide cycle has two highs and two lows so there are at least
two daylight tide change periods to fish each day which provide optimum
conditions. Charting one tide period, we would have low slack (the time of
change), ebb (run out) and back to low slack. If the tide fluctuation is
minimal between high and low, say 3 to 8 feet, fish will be active
throughout the tide cycle along rips, in eddies and many times in open
water. But the period before slack tide, during the slack and just after
will still provide you with top angling as Salmon and bottomfish will feed
most actively when they don't have to battle currents. You'll have about
three hours of prime fishing time around each tide change and it's extremely
important to fish these periods intensely. Purchase a tide book for your
area and become familiar with it and schedule your trips, if possible, to
coincide with the change periods.
If the tides are moving fast, salt water species such as Salmon, which
are ordinarily open-water feeders, will seek shelter around structure such
as points of land, underwater islands and other areas where they won't have
to battle current. These will be the places to seek them out with your
jigging lures. Bottomfish, on the other hand aren't influenced by the tides
and always are close to rocks, pinnacles and dropoffs so your search for
these should be concentrated near structure.
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