Extreme Jigging: Dogtooth Tuna, Yellowtail Kingfish (Hiramasa), Amberjack, Samson Fish > Tackle & Techniques
How do you tie your assist hooks?
Ivan Verhage:
All i do is start with around 20-30cm of 200lb dyneema then double it up and thread it through the eye of the hook make the loop comeing out of the eye as long as required then go to the other side of the cord, lay it flat againsed the hook shank and tie a 4-5 turn uni knot.
jerry dollar:
just curious. does anybody put treble hooks on the back end of the jig or do you go with assist hooks off the front end only and do you use 2 assist hooks or just one?
Brandon Khoo:
Actually, a very good question, Jerry. If you fish around enough, you will find that it is very popular among the Japanese for them to rig with a big treble at the end of the jig when they are fishing for doggies. Now (please note - just my opinion) my view is that this is about the dumbest rig you can go with for doggies. Trying to get a hook to stick into the mouth of a doggie is one of the harder things to achieve in jigging in the first place. if you think you need to stick a hook hard into a GT, its nothing compared to a doggie.
Their rationale is a doggie attacks from the rear and you get a better hook up rate. I used to do this but I dropped so many fish and also, I hooked up on the bottom so many times!! You may get a better hookup rate but the retentiohn rate sucks!!
Even running single assist, I have had innunerable occasions where the hook has simply fallen out during the fight. A good friend of mine who is an excellent jigger hits the doggies so hard with his attempts to drive the hook home you have to see it to believe it. It helps being a big bloke too! When jigging for doggies, I'm now using the Fisherman Shidens which are a thinner guage and finer barb which in my view should (theoretically) be easier to drive home. I know a lot of experienced doggie jiggers who use two assist of equal or varying length. I have no doubt you get a better hookup and retention rate but at the back of my mind is also the thought that if the bugger gets away, I'd prefer him swimming around with one hook in it rather than two. That's why I only use one hook.
The other problem with running a treble off the back is that I think it increases significantly the likelihood of snagging up on the bottom. Not a worry if you're using Williamson jigs but if you're using Fisherman or Seven Seas jigs, it matters!!
As I wrote earlier, these are just my views based on my experience. Others may have the complete opposite view.
--- Quote from: jerry dollar on July 26, 2007, 12:52:50 PM ---just curious. does anybody put treble hooks on the back end of the jig or do you go with assist hooks off the front end only and do you use 2 assist hooks or just one?
--- End quote ---
Neil Griffiths:
Matsutani San probably has a lot to answer for here. Years watching him jigging dogs with treble hooks has to sway opinion.
I tried trebles last doggie trip and it's obvious Matsutani doesn't use high drags as all the best trebles I tried just opened up when the pressure really came on.
Wire is a waste of time, use one or two assists with the strongest, or better still doubled up, assist chord and big hooks.
DaveIrving:
Have to admit that I cheat when it comes to doggies.....I use at least 2 assist hooks and I have been known to use 4 assist hooks at times...two at the front and two at the back.
Very unsporting but it does work ;)
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