#904555 - 08/31/14 05:46 AM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: Rossiman]
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Alevin
Registered: 04/13/13
Posts: 13
Loc: hobart indiana
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Ok not to try and hijack a thread here but what is twitching? I've not heard of this before. Thanks
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#904566 - 08/31/14 12:20 PM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: Arklier]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 11/07/99
Posts: 2689
Loc: Yelmish
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aka jigging,just like you'd do for bass or crappie.
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#904573 - 08/31/14 12:52 PM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: Cozmo]
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Dick Nipples
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 27839
Loc: Seattle, Washington USA
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I have tried all the colors, and they all work fine, and I have tied them in a variety of sizes and materials, and they all work fine...and now I have narrowed it down to purple in clear water and pink in colored water, and those two work just as well as all the other colors do.
I also stopped bothering with tying them as I have found that a pink or purple hootchie crammed on a leadhead works as well as any other material and takes about fifty cents and ten seconds to build up.
I still tie up a handful every year and fiddle around with colors and sizes, but 90% of the time I will have either a 2 1/2" or 4 1/2" hootchie, in either pink or purple, on my line.
Fish on...
Todd
_________________________
 Team Flying Super Ditch Pickle
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#904587 - 08/31/14 04:13 PM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: Todd]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 3426
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I also stopped bothering with tying them as I have found that a pink or purple hootchie crammed on a leadhead works as well as any other material and takes about fifty cents and ten seconds to build up. Clarification question Todd…….is that lead head the type with lead molded onto the head-end of the hook or just a bullet weight slid down the line to an independent hook? Seems both would work fine??
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#904588 - 08/31/14 04:34 PM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: Eric]
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Dick Nipples
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 27839
Loc: Seattle, Washington USA
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Either way for me, Eric...leadhead is just the easiest.
Fish on...
Todd
_________________________
 Team Flying Super Ditch Pickle
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#904660 - 09/01/14 08:50 PM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: ]
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Juvenile at Sea
Registered: 01/19/14
Posts: 177
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best colors are black/blue black/purple straight black and nightmare for maribou/bunny jigs. Other than that its like todd said, big or small hoochie in either pink or purple
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#904760 - 09/02/14 09:36 PM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: Arklier]
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Repeat Spawner
Registered: 08/24/10
Posts: 1335
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Todd do big coho bite jigs?
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#904783 - 09/03/14 09:48 AM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: GBL]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 04/25/00
Posts: 5014
Loc: East of Aberdeen, West of Mont...
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Why a video???????? Not tough to do....
1. Cast, let jig hit bottom.
2. Pick rod tip up, 1 - 4 feet.
3. Drop rod tip. Most fish are "legally caught" on the drop.
3.5....crank in a few feet.....repeat 2 and 3
4. repeat process........cast right or left, of last spot.
Duo-lock snap, allows me to change jigs, quickly. High Vis line allows me to see when jig "hits bottom". If you don't like losing jigs, then go to 40-50 pound braid.....can pull most jigs off snags.
3/8 oz. works best for me.......1/8 and 1/4, just take to long to get to bottom, for me.
I've caught fish in water 20 foot deep and all water in between. If you can see fish rolling. and don't get them to bite....CHANGE JIG COLOR, often that does the trick...
_________________________
"Worse day sport fishing, still better than the best day working"
"I thought growing older, would take longer"
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#904791 - 09/03/14 11:08 AM
Re: Coho twitching jig colors?
[Re: DrifterWA]
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Alevin
Registered: 02/14/14
Posts: 11
Loc: Washington
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Viper, twitchin' can be some of the most fun fishing you have ever done. Give it a try. The colors mentioned above are standard and will get you onto fish. FleaFlicker is right, the action of the floppy tail and the lead head drop is what triggers a strike. It is imperative to let the line go limp on the drop. Snap the rod tip up, then drop it and let it go limp. The fish will pick it on the drop, and you will feel it the next time you twitch it.
Arklier-It is not only used for slow water, if there are coho, or any other of the salmonids that we target for that matter, in runs or traveling water, "drift twitching" as I call it can produce very well. Basically just cast a bit up stream like the drift fisherman do, and twitch the rod normally like you would. The only difference is that with the retrieve you only reel in the slack so that it stays in the drift longer. Coho who are traveling or sitting in a run love this.
Drifter-I think it is helpful to clarify the "legally caught" comment. Greater than 90% of the fish that I catch twitching are honest biters with the jigs inside the mouth, and the hook usually in the top of the mouth as would be expected as the hook points up. Every now and then I will accidentally pull my jig into the belly of a fish, but this is certainly the exception not the rule. I just mention this to let those who haven't tried it know, twitched jigs drive predatory fish crazy and trigger strikes. Some of those who haven't tried it feel that this is modified snagging, which is absolutely not the case.
Also, I have twitched jigs in deep water to suspended fish. With that, I let the jig sink for as long as I think is appropriate and then start my twitching retrieve. You get used to the feel of the jig on the rod tip. If you don't feel the weight of the jig on the retrieve, reel down hard because the chances are you have a fish that is traveling towards you and he hasn't spit it out yet.
This is a lot of fun!
Edited by softhackle (09/03/14 11:12 AM)
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