Do the Blakemoore Roadrunner jig head work better on crappie than a regular "ball" head jig with or without a spinner blade ? What's the best way to fish a Roadrunner , fast , slow, jigging ? -Thanks
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Do the Blakemoore Roadrunner jig head work better on crappie than a regular "ball" head jig with or without a spinner blade ? What's the best way to fish a Roadrunner , fast , slow, jigging ? -Thanks
i love roadrunners, but i really only have success in a more "open water" scenario because otherwise i get hung up every cast. if the fish stack up on top of structure off a point, that's when i tie on a roadrunner. hold on though, i think i have caught a greater diversity of fish of a roadrunner than any other lure. i never seem to have much luck jigging them, but that's just me.
They work when a regular round head wont. Fish them slow. I usually fish them vertical or with a slow movement of the boat. You can also troll with them. I found that I do better with them when I fish them vertical and then use the trolling motor at a slow speed. Normally I use a blakc head with a charteuse body or a white head with a white body. Every know and again I'll use I orange head with a blue & white body.
Even Roadrunner says you can't fish them wrong as long as you fish them slow. However all jigs are pretty much the same as far as speed to fish them and Roadrunners are good, but so are mine and most other jig makers.
SLOW then Slow down some more...
Do fish finders help find fish? I have never used one, but am thinking about it.
Hogman
I don't really see any great difference in using a "horse head" jighead, over a ball head or pill head or most any other shape of head ... when none have a spinner blade attached. The Roadrunner, and it's "cousins", utilize the spinner blade for flash and the creation of pressure waves ... which can be detected by the fish.Quote:
Originally Posted by kyron4
I know Blakemore says fish them "slow" ... but, I've found that they work best when retrieved at a moderate, steady, & constant pace. They're pretty good for trolling, too, if you don't stand much chance of dragging them across wood. I generally use them for straight cast & retrieve, when the Crappie are no deeper than 8ft, and they're not in close proximity to any timber. Otherwise, I'm more likely to be throwing a weedless jighead/plastic body. I've never "jigged" with them, or used them in any vertical method .... but, I've seen other people catch Crappie doing just that. .... cp :cool:
They help you find structure ... the cover on that structure ... the baitfish swimming near that cover ... and the fish hanging around the baitfish, cover, or structure. Also, by showing you the depth of the water under you, the depth of the cover, or the depth of the fish ... it can help you determine the best method/presentation to use to catch them. ...... cp :cool:Quote:
Originally Posted by hogman
Hey Hogman:Quote:
Originally Posted by hogman
A graph will definitely help you put more fish "in the box" if you fish year around. If you only fish for crappie during the spawn when they are shallow and relating to visible cover - stuff you can see sticking out of the water - then a graph isn't necessary. But when crappie move deeper and relate to the same type of cover that is too deep for you to see then a graph is indispensable.
You don't have to spend a lot of money on a graph either. I use a Matrix 12 on the front of my boat and you can find them on the Internet for under $150. It will do everything that the (much more expensive) Lowrance I have on my console will do - at least for what I use it for.
I've jigged with them,a sharp snap upwards of about 2 feet and let it flutter back down will get the blade spinning.Too slow of a retrieve and the blade just tucks against the body or hangs there doing nothing,ya gotta feel it "pulse"