How to Hook a Live Shrimp with a Jig Head

1.Tail Hooked 


Shrimp regularly swim in reverse when they move quick. They slither forward or push ahead gradually my moving their flippers and feet, yet when they move rapidly, they kick in reverse.

In this way, snare a shrimp to a dance head by the tail makes an increasingly characteristic introduction. The shrimp is snared from the base during that time tail joint. The entire apparatus is streamlined, simple to work, and travels through structure well. The heaviness of the dance head keeps the shrimp upstanding when sitting on the base or traveling through the water. Natural should it looks as much as possible. I cast the dance head and work it back to the pontoon attempting to cause the shrimp to give off an impression of being as normal as could reasonably be expected. A couple of fast lifts of the pole tip pursued by enabling it to settle toward the base. This works for Seatrout, wallow, redfish – truly any fish that is in the region.

This is likewise a perfect method to move a live shrimp along the base as you fish it. Cast the dance and let it settle to the base. At that point work it gradually back to the pontoon on or simply off the base with the lift and settle technique.

The one inconvenience of this attach is that such a large amount of the shrimp is uncovered with no snare in it. It looks increasingly regular, yet you may wind up missing fish. That is on the grounds that littler fish will hit the leader of the shrimp and miss the snare. With this connect you should give the fish a chance to take the lure only somewhat longer before setting the snare. Obviously bigger fish are not an issue – they breathe in the entire lure and the connect is much simpler.


2.Double Tail Hooked



This introduction is fundamentally the same as the first, however here the shrimp is really snared twice. It's a considerably more secure attach, yet it enables the shrimp to stay upstanding in the water. At the point when shrimp kick to swim in reverse – which is their specialty to escape risk – their tails twist under. This connect has the tail twisted under and the shrimp all the more safely appended. 

I utilize this introduction then I need to work the shrimp quicker. Keep in mind – normal looking. I can work it quicker without tearing the snare through the shrimp as would occur on a solitary tail attach. 

To snare the shrimp begin by running the snare down through the highest point of the shrimps' subsequent joint. At that point turn the snare and bring it back up through the underside of the shrimp. The heaviness of the dance head indeed keeps the shrimp upstanding as you move it in the water – recollect regular looking? 


This introduction is likewise great on the off chance that you have crisp however dead shrimp. A dead shrimp loses muscle quality rapidly, and a solitary tail attach won't remain on the snare. Be that as it may, this twofold connect will, and it gives you a chance to cause a dead shrimp to seem, by all accounts, to be live. In some cases crisp dead shrimp will get the same number of fish a live shrimp. It's all in the introduction

3.Head Hooked Live Shrimp



There are times that I will hook a live shrimp on a jig head and hook it through the head of the shrimp. If I want a slow vertical presentation – one that keeps the bait in the strike zone for a longer period of time, I will hook the shrimp through the head.
By hooking the shrimp in the head, I allow the shrimp to kick its tail naturally. This works extremely well for large live shrimp, and they can actually move around some with the jig head. I use a more vertical, up and down presentation, lifting the rod and letting the jig settle. Sometimes I may do that three or four times before taking up any line. This allows the shrimp to kick and act as natural as possible in the strike zone.
Notice in the picture where the hook penetrates the head. Put it through the clear spot just ahead of the dark spot on the shrimp’s head. That dark spot is the brain.








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