When fishing a jig under a cork, what is your preference, pegged or slip cork and why? I have always seemed to have better luck with the cork pegged. Maybe it is the way it swings down when the jig drops vs. falling straight down.
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When fishing a jig under a cork, what is your preference, pegged or slip cork and why? I have always seemed to have better luck with the cork pegged. Maybe it is the way it swings down when the jig drops vs. falling straight down.
I fish a cork a lot and I always use a 7/8” plastic float hooked both top and bottom. A 1/2” float won’t hold up a 1/16th jig right and a 1” is too resistant to being pulled under. Used this set up for years and has proven to be the demise of thousands!
A pegged quill float shows lighter bites than any slip float (IMO). Pegged isn't always convenient. It's hard to cast a pegged float with 6 or more feet of line between it and the hook.
I like to use the ones with springs if I'm fishing a jig shallow less than 6 feet. If fishing with a minnow and deeper than that I use a slip float.
There is another thread down below this one with some good comments and info.
Bob
a single contact point float will out fish a double contact point float almost every day of the week . there are a few hard core bank anglers that use floats and to be sure the best of them use a single contact point float set up .
pegged floats will work ,but near as well as a float where the line only touches the float in one location . crappie are the kings of very subtle takes quite often and more than one contact point will cause many anglers to never see a take .
and once you step into the world of slip floats that number goes up for sure on the never saw the bite .
deep water slip cork fishing is often employed with great results using minnows but it wont work an artificial bait very well .
and KABOOM is the word :highfive
I can't remember the last time I used a slip float, majority of the time I use a 3/4"round weighted float for 1/32 or smaller jigs and a 1.5" weighted pear shaped float with heavier jigs. I think the single contact float set up is more sensitive to bites and less likely to tangle on a cast than the double contact float but I think I can cast farther with the double contact set up, so I use both.
I use a small slip float with minnows and jigs fishing stationary structures and a pegged float with jigs trolling shallow water.
Slip cork is very advantageous around these parts, especially when the fish get deep in the bushes. A slip cork allows u to pull up your line, stick your pole up in the bushes and then drop the bait slowly where you want it. Also helps when pitching to stumps and stuff.
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Thill Stealth
I really like these. They're all I use anymore.
When set up with the right amount of weight, they'll show any kind of bite.