This is placeholder text for Jiggin’ Johnson’s new template shell.
Once we’re happy with the layout and behavior, we’ll plug in real product
descriptions, rigging tips, and JJ-specific language.
Specs & build (demo copy)
Specs & build (demo copy)
Care & storage (demo copy)
Care & storage (demo copy)
Best ways to fish it (demo)
Swim Jig TrailerShallow grass, slow roll
Texas RigPitching to cover
Ball Jig HeadDragging sand or rock
Split ShotNatural subtle glides
Description
Length
1.0" micro scrambler with a segmented core, multiple micro legs, and rear feelers that kick with almost no lift.
Best for
Panfish and crappie when you need more motion than a straight bug, but still want a compact, easy-to-eat profile.
Style
Controlled chaos—legs flare, collapse, and pulse independently on shakes, creating constant micro movement.
Where it shines
Ice holes, dock shade, and inside weed pockets where fish sit tight and react to small bursts of motion.
Trigger note: this bait shines when fish won’t chase. Keep it close and let the legs do the convincing.
Top 3 ways we fish it
Maximum motion, minimal travel.
Ice Jig, Quiver & Hold
Let the legs breathe instead of snapping the rod.
Rig straight on a small tungsten or lead ice jig.
Lift just enough to separate from bottom, then hold.
Micro shakes make the legs flick without pulling the bait up.
Ice Deadstick Companion
A subtle contrast to an aggressive jigging rod.
Use the lightest jig that won’t spin.
Set it just above fish and leave it alone.
Re-set depth often—this bait works best nose-level.
Micro Jig, Vertical Open Water
For docks, pilings, and tight cover.
Drop straight down and keep the rod still.
Shake slack with your fingers to animate the legs.
When the line loads, reel smoothly—no snap sets.
Pour & profile: Segmented micro body with multiple legs and feelers—designed to create constant motion without forward travel.
Made for: Ice and finesse situations where small movements trigger more bites than speed or size.