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
2.0" skirted tube built for compact bites and clean hook-ups in tight quarters.
Best for
Smallmouth, largemouth, and panfish when you want a “bug + baitfish” silhouette in one bait.
Action
Skirt pulses on the fall, then breathes on pauses—especially when you just shake slack.
Where it shines
Rock, docks, brush edges, and current seams—anywhere a small, natural drop gets noticed.
Tube cheat code: most of the “life” is on the fall. If you’re not pausing, you’re skipping the best part.
Top 3 ways we fish it
Drop it. Pause it. Shake once.
Tube Jig Head (Inside)
Classic tube fall with a clean profile.
Insert the head so the line tie sits centered and the tube tracks straight.
Hop it like a tiny craw, then let the skirt flare on the drop.
On rock, keep hops short—more “tick-tick” than big jumps.
Ball Head Jig (Outside)
Fast to rig, great in current.
Thread straight and keep the hook exiting centered for balanced spirals.
Swim it just off bottom; the skirt will “fizz” in the flow.
Add micro pauses—most bites happen as it glides back down.
Drop Shot
Suspend it and let it breathe.
Nose-hook for maximum skirt flare, or lightly Texas-rig for cover.
Small shakes make the skirt pulse without moving the bait far.
Excellent around docks and when fish are hovering 1–3' up.
Profile note: Tube body adds presence; skirt adds “alive” without needing speed.
When to pick it: Clear to stained water, pressured fish, and anytime you want a compact fall bite.