Jiggin' Johnsons' Skirted Tube Jig w/ #6 Hook

$1.89
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Pack Quantity:
Pack Contains 5 Jig Heads
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Length
This jig head is sized for the Jiggin’ Johnson’s 1.75" Skirted Tube. Pick the head size based on depth, wind, current, and how slowly you want that compact tube to fall.
Best for
Smallmouth, largemouth, crappie, bluegill, perch, and trout when you want a small tube profile with a lighter hook than a full-size bass tube setup.
Style
A skirted tube jig head with a #6 hook, built to pair cleanly with compact tubes and preserve the skirted bait’s fall, flare, and subtle bottom action.
Where it shines
Use it around rock, docks, brush edges, shallow current seams, weed pockets, and suspended panfish that need a slower, smaller tube presentation.
Rigging tip: With a small skirted tube, the jig head should help the bait breathe instead of overpowering it. Insert the head straight, bring the line tie out cleanly, and check that the skirt flares evenly on the pause. If the bait darts awkwardly or falls nose-heavy, re-rig before blaming the fish.

Top 3 ways we fish it

Built for the 1.75" Skirted Tube

Inside tube jig fall

Best all-around pairing for the 1.75" Skirted Tube
  • Insert the jig head so the line tie exits centered, which helps the tube fall naturally instead of rolling over.
  • Cast it around rock, dock posts, or brush edges, then let the bait glide down before adding any movement.
  • Use short hops and long pauses because the skirt does much of its best work when the bait is falling or resting.

Tick bottom slowly

Best for smallmouth, perch, and pressured fish
  • Let the jig reach bottom, then crawl it with the rod tip instead of swimming it steadily through the water column.
  • Keep each move small enough that the tube looks like a bug, craw, or small baitfish nosing along the bottom.
  • Pause when the jig contacts rock, wood, or a harder seam because that is often when following fish finally eat it.

Float or hover it

Best for crappie, bluegill, trout, and suspended fish
  • Set it under a float when fish are holding around docks, shallow brush, weed pockets, or current breaks.
  • Use tiny twitches and slack-line shakes so the skirt pulses without pulling the bait away from the fish.
  • For deeper fish, hover it just above the school and make them rise to it rather than dropping straight through them.
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
Pack Quantity::
Pack Contains 5 Jig Heads