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Our Squirmin' Grubs have proven effective at drawing strikes from crappie, white bass, smallmouth and walleye cast after cast. Rigged solo or as a jig trailer, the Squirmin' Grub's ribbed body and high-action grub tail combine to produce dynamic swimming movement. Be sure to stock your box with our money-saving jumbo packs!
Our Squirmin' Grubs have proven effective at drawing strikes from crappie, white bass, smallmouth and walleye cast after cast. Rigged solo or as a jig trailer, the Squirmin' Grub's ribbed body and high-action grub tail combine to produce dynamic swimming movement. Be sure to stock your box with our money-saving jumbo packs!
We used the 3 inch model. Caught Rainbow, Cutthroat, and Brown. Color we used was Rainbow, pearl with black back, clear with black back, crystal mist. We used them on lakes. Average fish size we caught was 13.5 inches. Biggest one we caught was 19.5 and weighed 5lbs. Hope that helps?!
has anyone used the one inch, if so how has the worked out, it seems a little too small for me, also have you tried letting it fall weightless slowly too the bottom i could seeing you tear up a school of pond bluegills or even bass like that
Works well with micro jigs and a tiny split-shot rig. 1/64th oz jighead is the heaviest you can go as far as jigheads. A tiny bb shot with the smallest baitholder hook (smallest I've found is a 16 and it works for me) does well for my split-shot rig. The jighead does well when I'm fishing vegetation, snaggy rocks and/or wood/brush. Mini split-shot does well for cleaner bottoms, especially vertical structure.
White and chartreuse always. Then a couple of colors to match local forage. For me that is salt and pepper (shad) and some variation of pumpkin. I also believe that the size of a bait, matching the local situation, is usually more important than color.
white is my preferred color, then red, other colors that i will sometimes use, but not often, are a foggy green with glitter/sparkles in it and yellow. i use these with grubs or tubes
The 1" is the whole grub and it works on the jighead size 1/64 but also will work on the 1/32 jighead too. But, the 2" grubs will work better & attract bass, crappie & rainbow trout.
For most soft plastic makers the advertised length is the overall length (body and tail) of the lure as it would naturally swim through the water. The weight of a jighead used is more a function of fishing conditions encountered. This would include depth, current, wind, drift, etc. A good starting point is to only use as much weight as is needed to keep the lure in the expected fish's strike zone. Typically experimentation and persistence result in experience that yields results. Matching jig hook size to the size of lure used is also critical to good hook-ups. For grubs, I typically prefer to have the shank of the hook run approx 3/4 of the length of the body before exiting and exposing the business end. For these reasons I make all of my jig heads. I will have a particular size jig hook for a particular size grub with different weights of heads.
If you lay the grub out naturally with the tail crooked like it wants to be, it measures 1" from the tip of the body to the outside of the bend in the tail, not the tip as if you stretched it out straight.
These are not as thick in the body as Berkley Power Grubs and it stretches them pretty good getting them over the shaft of 1/32nd oz jig heads.