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
1.75" paddle-tail minnow with a slim body and a boot tail that starts easy.
Best for
Crappie, perch, bluegill, and trout—plus bonus walleye when they’re feeding small.
Style
Steady tail thump at slow speeds, with a little body roll that looks like real forage.
Where it shines
Edges of weeds, docks, brush piles, current seams, and open-water schools that won’t commit to bigger baits.
Little swimbait, big job: keep it moving just enough to feel the tail. If you can barely tell it’s swimming, you’re usually right where you need to be.
Top 3 ways we fish it
Simple swims that put fish in the net.
Slow Swim on a Light Jig
The everyday crappie-and-perch deal.
Rig it straight on a small jighead so the tail tracks clean.
Swim it just over weed tops or along dock edges.
Add short pauses to let it glide and re-start.
Vertical Over Fish
Down the hole or straight under the boat.
Drop to the level of the fish and hold it there.
Use tiny lifts and controlled falls instead of big snaps.
When they follow, pause and let the tail keep flicking.
Cast, Count, and Pendulum
Cover water and keep it in the zone.
Cast past the school or edge, then count it down.
Retrieve slow so it swims and swings back toward you.
Near the end, pause and let it fall one more time.
Pour & profile: Slim forage shape with a paddle tail that kicks at slow speeds and stays true when rigged straight.
Made for: Light spinning and ultralight setups, small jigs, and the kind of fishing where “just enough” wins.