So Good Baits 2.75" Hand Poured Fork Tail Minnow Soft Plastic Bait

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Your baits are made to order to ensure freshness and ship with tracking in 1-2 business days from Iowa.
Pack Quantity:
Pack contains 12 baits
$7.99
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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
Length
2.75 inches long with a streamlined baitfish profile that stays balanced on light jigheads and finesse rigs.
Best for
Crappie, walleye, perch, and smallmouth when fish are keyed on minnows and respond best to subtle movement.
Style
Hand-poured fork-tail minnow with a slim ribbed body and soft tail action that activates easily on slow retrieves.
Where it shines
Brush piles, breaklines, docks, and open-water schools where a clean, natural presentation gets more bites.
Quick tip: Fish this one with less movement than you think. A slow swim or controlled fall usually outperforms aggressive retrieves, especially when fish are pressured or holding tight to cover.

Light jig and swim

A consistent approach for crappie, walleye, and roaming fish.
  • Rig on a light jighead sized to keep the bait just above fish holding depth.
  • Swim slowly enough to keep the fork tail moving naturally.
  • Pause occasionally to let the bait glide and fall through the zone.

Vertical finesse drop

Best for tight cover like brush, docks, and grouped fish.
  • Drop straight down and stop just above where fish are holding.
  • Use small rod-tip lifts instead of aggressive snaps.
  • Watch the line closely for subtle bites during the fall.

Current seam drift

A reliable option for rivers and moving water.
  • Cast upstream and let the bait drift naturally with light contact.
  • Allow it to swing through seams rather than reeling constantly.
  • Add small lifts occasionally to trigger followers.