Hawnjigs
KISS
20 years ago I'd never even seen a live trout up close, then my wife's daughter moved with family to Colorado. So once a year on vacations I got to gradually explore fresh water fishing including at the time tiny wild trout in urban creeks & pond stockers. Thru the years got to explore still and moving waters in CO, WY, & NE at most a few weeks at a time on annual vacations. 11 years ago my wife & I separated so moved to a small town in NE the only familiar place where I could afford to buy a very modest house. Being single again got lots more fishing time including stockers & holdovers trout in a nearby managed for trout 300 acre lake. Back then a 12" was a welcome respite from cookie cutter 8-10" fresh stockers. As the years went by eventually I got a hint that the outflow into a river might offer better opportunity so I explored. Sticking to EZ access public area there were a few & far between bigger ones.
Then I got the idea to ask permission to access private river front from landowners, and surprisingly all 5 conditionally allowed access meaning do not encroach on hunters as some properties riverfront was leased for seasonal hunting Oct thru Feb and of course used by landowners + family & friends.. So I avoided weekends and otherwise stayed away when shots were audible or decoys were set in the river or even if anyone was present.
Since not all the hunters or landowners exploited the piscatorial resource there were some spots that held really nice trout, not a lot but some of a size I never dreamed I would encounter in Nebraska. Tackle continually evolved to adapt to the challenge, even now I'm still learning.
Which brings us to the point of this post. Long ago in CO I mostly used trout specific crankbaits until Jigger John McKean sent me a few shank propeller Boolies tied on 1/16 tube jigheads with rabbit fur & gold Flashabou. Back in those days just getting acquainted with fresh water gear & tactics I used tube jigs somewhat successfully for all species with trouting results the mediocre exception. The results were posted & archived in this forum transitioning me into a jig purist.
So back to the point, after all this time experimenting with all manner of jig variations of heads, tie materials & patterns, pinned plastics, colors, discovered today that back to basic may be the best pick one jig. Got lucky with six nice ones in an EZ access public river area on a fair weather weekend with a simple black head black mink no flash or prop 1/16 #6 jig the same one for all the fish in 2 different holds. Due to continual harvest by all manner of anglers including worm dunkers this perpetually plundered area has been fishing poorly with me trying all manner of jigs changing every session.
Back to black, & thinking of dismantling a lot of my other jigs and refurbishing them to match.
Then I got the idea to ask permission to access private river front from landowners, and surprisingly all 5 conditionally allowed access meaning do not encroach on hunters as some properties riverfront was leased for seasonal hunting Oct thru Feb and of course used by landowners + family & friends.. So I avoided weekends and otherwise stayed away when shots were audible or decoys were set in the river or even if anyone was present.
Since not all the hunters or landowners exploited the piscatorial resource there were some spots that held really nice trout, not a lot but some of a size I never dreamed I would encounter in Nebraska. Tackle continually evolved to adapt to the challenge, even now I'm still learning.
Which brings us to the point of this post. Long ago in CO I mostly used trout specific crankbaits until Jigger John McKean sent me a few shank propeller Boolies tied on 1/16 tube jigheads with rabbit fur & gold Flashabou. Back in those days just getting acquainted with fresh water gear & tactics I used tube jigs somewhat successfully for all species with trouting results the mediocre exception. The results were posted & archived in this forum transitioning me into a jig purist.
So back to the point, after all this time experimenting with all manner of jig variations of heads, tie materials & patterns, pinned plastics, colors, discovered today that back to basic may be the best pick one jig. Got lucky with six nice ones in an EZ access public river area on a fair weather weekend with a simple black head black mink no flash or prop 1/16 #6 jig the same one for all the fish in 2 different holds. Due to continual harvest by all manner of anglers including worm dunkers this perpetually plundered area has been fishing poorly with me trying all manner of jigs changing every session.
Back to black, & thinking of dismantling a lot of my other jigs and refurbishing them to match.