I always hook through the lips using a bare hook. I adjusted the split shot up or down to give the minnow more or less freedom to swim. If the fish wanted an active bait I made sure the weight gave the minnow room to dart around
Do any of yall feel that there is or isn't an advantage to hooking a minnow thru the lips using a bare jig head on a loop knot or using a standard hook and split shot when slip cooking for crappie?
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I always hook through the lips using a bare hook. I adjusted the split shot up or down to give the minnow more or less freedom to swim. If the fish wanted an active bait I made sure the weight gave the minnow room to dart around
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass alongderek dutton, Jebrown LIKED above post
With a jig I hook them from under the V of the throat and the hook exits between the nostrils. On a plain hook I hook them behind the eyeballs, making sure not to puncture their eyes.
When slip corking I pretty much always use a #2 Aberdeen hook & a #5 split-shot sinker.
If we're literally talking "lip hooked" (ie: hooked thru the minnow's "lips") ... my experiences tell me that a "bream" will knock that minnow off the hook with only the slightest of pecks. They're bad enough about pecking one to death, when hooked otherwise, if they can't/don't get it off the hook in the first place.
derek dutton, Jebrown LIKED above post
When the fish are a big negative, a jig head works great to keep the minnow in the strike zone. When they are active, its hard for a crappie to resist a minner going wild on a bare hook under a split shot.
Another one is fishing in structure, less movement with the jig so less chance of the minner wrapping itself around a branch.
Through the lips for both for me too, chin right up through the nostrils .
derek dutton, Jebrown LIKED above post