Jiggin' Johnsons' 1.0" Triton Soft Plastic Bait

Availability:
Ships with tracking in 1-2 business days from Iowa.
Pack Quantity:
Package of 24 Baits
$2.69
Current Stock:
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On-the-water overview (demo copy)
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 Trailer Shallow grass, slow roll
Texas Rig Pitching to cover
Ball Jig Head Dragging sand or rock
Split Shot Natural subtle glides
Link to custom color order form
Length
1.0" micro triton with a ribbed body and three soft “antennas” that flare and rebound on tiny shakes.
Best for
Crappie and bluegill when you want a compact meal with a little extra presence—especially around cover and under ice.
Style
In-place action: the antenna tips pulse and stop cleanly, so you can “talk” to fish without moving out of the strike window.
Where it shines
Tight fish on brush, weeds, or dock posts—plus basin crappie that need something small but noticeable in the cone.
Presentation cue: give it a few quick “ticks,” then let it sit. The antenna flare happens on the start and the stop.

Top 3 ways we fish it

Small bait, crisp cadence.

Ice Jig, Tick & Pause

Short moves that keep it centered on the mark.
  • Rig it straight so the body hangs true and the antenna stay free.
  • Use quick, 1–2" lifts, then stop completely.
  • If fish follow but won’t eat, hold still until they commit.

Ice Deadstick

A “do nothing” bait that still moves.
  • Hang it just above fish—nose level gets the most bites.
  • Let micro currents or line tremors pulse the tips.
  • Every so often, lift an inch and reset to the same depth.

Micro Jig, Vertical Cover

For dock posts, pontoon legs, and weed pockets.
  • Drop straight down and keep line angle minimal.
  • Shake slack to flare the antenna without lifting the jig.
  • When the line tightens, reel and sweep—keep hooks pinned.