In order of left to right like you’re reading. 1. Ned rig 2. Genuinely have no clue what that is 3. Shakey heads 4. Swimbaits 5. Tubes 6. Small swimbaits (I’d prolly trash, no hook keeper and super heavy for the hook size) 7. Ned rigs 8. Pretty much anything you’re bottom crawling, usually a creature or craw 9. same as 6 10. Small jigs 11. Swimbait/straight tail (look up chatterbait trailers, my favorite are z-man chattershads) 12. Huge hook for how light it is but I’d imagine some sort of worm/creature 13. Swimbaits… but like the other guy said. Experiment, lot of stuff will work just as good or better on a style head it wasn’t designed for. #5 is the only one that really only has 1 use cuz it goes inside of a tube
fishing_6377 on
Top to bottom, left to right:
1. Jig worm- 4-6″ straight or ribbon tail worm
2.
3. Shakeyhead- 5-6″ straight or ribbon tail worm
4. Swim jig- fluke or paddletail
5.
6. Ball jig- curly tail grub, paddletail
7. Stand-up jig – short worm
8. Swing head jig- worm
9. Tube jig – small tube
Specialist_Morning38 on
Any the options is endless
Fishin4catfish on
Paddletail.
FatBoyStew on
1st page:
Top left is a nedrig jighead, but can be for any kind of smaller plastic you want to sit more vertically on the bottom and bounced around. Have also used as a swimbait head in a pinch.
Top middle no clue, never seen it before
top right is a shakeyhead so any thing you want to give a shakeyhead presentation to, ideally some kind of trick/finesse worm. I’ve also used them to drag swimbaits on bottom
Left middle looks like some form of an underspin head where you can put your own blade or even an extra hook or weight off the bottom. Paddletail, straight tail or a creature bait
Middle middle is for ~~swimbaits but can be used with a lot of plastics. Good for yo-yo retrieves (bottom or suspended).~~ I didn’t realize the line tie… Probably more of a tube head?
Middle right is a generic swimbait jighead. Paddletails, straight tails or anything you want to swim or bounce off bottom.
Bottom left is a damiki rig head so any kind of FFS style minnow plastic or straight tail. They actually make insanely good bottom bouncing jig heads in current because the bottom weight helps to keep it from rolling over in the current. — Could also be more of a standup jig/shakeyhead style head, can’t quite tell.
Bottom middle is a wobblehead. Basically a swinging jig without the skirt. Swimbait or creature bait for me. Fished like a swimjig or texas rig.
Bottom right is a darter head. Good for vertical jigging and yoyo retrieves. Lots of bait options.
2nd Page:
Top left is a standard ballhead jig. Swimbaits, straight tails or anythin you want to swim or bounce off bottom.
Top right is a chatterbait without the skirt. Paddletails, straight tails and creaturebaits.
Bottom left is another style of a darter head.
Bottom right is another style of swimbait jighead.
they’re all pretty versatile and can be used with most all types of plastics.
Ok_Feed2830 on
White curly tail
Better-Mouse8892 on
Twister tails, paddle tails, tubes (gitzit), plastic worm, fuzzy grub, power bait, powerbait worm, or just about anything you can think of. I myself like a nice 3″ twister tail in my preferred colors.
9 Comments
Experiment. There are no rules.
If it ain’t chartreuse its of no use
In order of left to right like you’re reading. 1. Ned rig 2. Genuinely have no clue what that is 3. Shakey heads 4. Swimbaits 5. Tubes 6. Small swimbaits (I’d prolly trash, no hook keeper and super heavy for the hook size) 7. Ned rigs 8. Pretty much anything you’re bottom crawling, usually a creature or craw 9. same as 6 10. Small jigs 11. Swimbait/straight tail (look up chatterbait trailers, my favorite are z-man chattershads) 12. Huge hook for how light it is but I’d imagine some sort of worm/creature 13. Swimbaits… but like the other guy said. Experiment, lot of stuff will work just as good or better on a style head it wasn’t designed for. #5 is the only one that really only has 1 use cuz it goes inside of a tube
Top to bottom, left to right:
1. Jig worm- 4-6″ straight or ribbon tail worm
2.
3. Shakeyhead- 5-6″ straight or ribbon tail worm
4. Swim jig- fluke or paddletail
5.
6. Ball jig- curly tail grub, paddletail
7. Stand-up jig – short worm
8. Swing head jig- worm
9. Tube jig – small tube
Any the options is endless
Paddletail.
1st page:
Top left is a nedrig jighead, but can be for any kind of smaller plastic you want to sit more vertically on the bottom and bounced around. Have also used as a swimbait head in a pinch.
Top middle no clue, never seen it before
top right is a shakeyhead so any thing you want to give a shakeyhead presentation to, ideally some kind of trick/finesse worm. I’ve also used them to drag swimbaits on bottom
Left middle looks like some form of an underspin head where you can put your own blade or even an extra hook or weight off the bottom. Paddletail, straight tail or a creature bait
Middle middle is for ~~swimbaits but can be used with a lot of plastics. Good for yo-yo retrieves (bottom or suspended).~~ I didn’t realize the line tie… Probably more of a tube head?
Middle right is a generic swimbait jighead. Paddletails, straight tails or anything you want to swim or bounce off bottom.
Bottom left is a damiki rig head so any kind of FFS style minnow plastic or straight tail. They actually make insanely good bottom bouncing jig heads in current because the bottom weight helps to keep it from rolling over in the current. — Could also be more of a standup jig/shakeyhead style head, can’t quite tell.
Bottom middle is a wobblehead. Basically a swinging jig without the skirt. Swimbait or creature bait for me. Fished like a swimjig or texas rig.
Bottom right is a darter head. Good for vertical jigging and yoyo retrieves. Lots of bait options.
2nd Page:
Top left is a standard ballhead jig. Swimbaits, straight tails or anythin you want to swim or bounce off bottom.
Top right is a chatterbait without the skirt. Paddletails, straight tails and creaturebaits.
Bottom left is another style of a darter head.
Bottom right is another style of swimbait jighead.
they’re all pretty versatile and can be used with most all types of plastics.
White curly tail
Twister tails, paddle tails, tubes (gitzit), plastic worm, fuzzy grub, power bait, powerbait worm, or just about anything you can think of. I myself like a nice 3″ twister tail in my preferred colors.