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I've been tinkering with grub rigging lately.....here's the best I've come up with so far....... I know this type of rigging is called a Bubby Rig and I've seen it used on tubes before, but not on grubs....
I start with a 3 or 4 inch grub and a 2/0 wide gap hook. I pinch a fair sized splitshot on the hookshank under the grub toward the rear. You may want to tinker with the size and placement of the weight. By placing the grub on the hook with a little downbend of the grub face, I'm getting a nice side to side movement of the grubhead as the tail works in the rear. Also getting a nice underbelly swinging of the weight itself from side to side as the grub snakes through the water. In short, getting a total action from the lure, as well as a flat fall on the drop. It's not necessary to remove the sinker in order to texpose the hook, simply take the eye of the hook and run it through the grub's chin and out the nose area, then hook the point as usual. I've been painting the sinkers with red nail polish to not only color the lead, but also to put a little on the hookshaft fore and aft to keep it from sliding; should it loosen. As is also true with tubes, the weight on the bottom catches from time to time and releases, thus imparting a rocking action to the lure and shaking the tail as well. Tried them out last week and in a half hour or so, caught 5 largemouth......will be trying on smallmouth soon. Was fishing near log rafts and brush...after an hour or so, only got hung twice. Around here, that's pretty good. Good fishing, Mac p.s. my order of Jack's Worms just arrived in the mail yesterday....was just thinking they'd be great on a bubby rig with the tapered tail flitting about when the weight caught on bottom and released. |
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