Quote:
Originally Posted by icebadger
you have to keep moving until you find them when you do find them you have to see what kind of mood they are in. Lately they have been glued to the bottom and on the finicky side. What i like to do is let the jig hit the bottom and then stir up the silt with the jig then flutter it up off the bottom like a bug that is hatching and trying to get to the surface and that usually works. When i use a jig like a rippin rap i like to rip it up and down fast a bunch of times and then just let it sit then shake it a bit and they come in and look to see what all the commotion is and hit it when it is slowing down. If you use jig head style jigs i like to put some kind of meat on it (meal worms or spikes etc) and with spoons i will put a minnow head on,you always have a minnow that dies in your bait bucket use the head or the whole minnow on the spoon. As for the flouro/mono i use both on my jig rod, mono main line a small barrel swivel to prevent line twist and about 12 to 16" of flouro as my leader. Hope this helps tight lines 
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Thx for the advice Badger. I slapped on some barrel swivels.. 5lb ice flouro... put 1/16 n 1/24th jigs and tipped them with butter worms. Drilled n searched...drilled n searched...jigged and nothing. Then the pressure dropped and the bite was on. My buddy and had 1 goal... jig up a fish using our Garmin striker4s. And boy did we ever. We got off the ice at 1pm and about 30 sunfish later. Bluegills... pumpkins and Red breast. All in 5 to 6 feet of water. They were tearing up the butter worms one after another. 1 hole I landed 9 fish in a row in about 10mins time. Unbelievable. Cant wait to do it again.
Thx again.
(Ice was 5inches black.. 2 white... no melt or slush).