The 3 Best Ways To Rig A Curly Tailed Grub
The curly tailed grub has probably caught more fish than any other plastic lure in existence. It’s got a subtle, undulating action that can accurately imitate just about anything fish eat. Crawl a brown or pumpkin grub along the bottom, you’ve got a crawfish. Wind a white one higher in the water column, and you’ve got a spot on shad imitation. From tiny panfish offerings, to 8 and 10 inch models designed for saltwater species – the curly tailed grub is a fish catching machine.For some reason, though, in recent years the curly tailed grub has fallen out of favor with many anglers. It’s not because it stopped catching fish – just that it’s been outshined by fancier (and newer) technology.We’re here to tell you though, you should not forget about the grub. To help – we put together three of the top ways to rig one.
1. Curly Tailed Grub On A Jig Head
Probably the most classic grub presentation, the lead head jig is also the most versatile. By changing the weight of the head, you can effectively fish a grub in water from 2 to 40 feet deep. Try swimming one around shoreline timber, or hopping one along offshore rocky structure.
2. Texas Rigged Curly Tailed Grub
Much less common, but equally effective – Texas rigging a grub is a great way to fish snaggier cover like grass and wood. Use a light sinker, and a thin wire 1/0 or 2/0 EWG hook, and slowly work the grub along weed lines, laydowns and boat docks.
3. Weightless Curly Tailed Grub
Any time a curly tailed grub is moving, its tail is kicking up a commotion. Try rigging one weedless with no weight and winding it along the surface like a super-finesse buzzbait. This technique can be deadly during mayfly hatches, on super pressured urban fish, and on pond bass.
Check Out Some Other Curly Tailed Grub Tips
Updated April 6th, 2017 at 5:17 PM CT