
These are the strongest bass-flipping options in the set. The two Phenix Pro Series Flipping Jig colors are built for shallow cover and power fishing, which is exactly what most anglers want in a flipping jig. The Grid Iron Brush Jig and Megalodon Brush Jig are better if you’re pitching into heavier cover like brush, laydowns, and thick vegetation. The Grid Iron Arky Jig is the more versatile all-around choice if you want one jig for mixed cover, docks, weeds, and rock.
Flip or pitch these tight to cover and let them fall on a semi-slack line. For the Grid Iron Brush Jig and Megalodon Brush Jig, target the thickest part of the cover and be ready for a quick hookset. Use the Grid Iron Arky Jig when you need a jig that can also skip well under docks. If bass are pressured or the bite is light, the Phenix Pro Series Flipping Jig Peanut Butter And Jelly can be a good confidence color.
Switch to a finesse option like ShroomZ™ Micro Finesse Jig when bass are inactive, pressured, or in clear water and want a smaller bottom presentation. If you want a buoyant soft-plastic trailer-style setup for flipping and pitching, Giant TRD™ is a better match than a standard jig. For shad-focused fish in clearer water, a swim jig like Electric Shad Swim Jig is often better than a flipping jig.
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