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glow jigging lures

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Technique notes

  • For glow jigging, start with short lifts and pauses; let the lure sit long enough for fish to track the glow.
  • In ice or vertical jigging, keep the rod movement subtle first, then add sharper pops only if fish follow but won’t commit.
  • Pair smaller glow jigs with waxies, spikes, or tiny plastics for panfish; use larger profiles or minnows for walleye.
  • If fishing deeper water, charge the glow often and work directly under the hole or boat with a vertical drop.
  • If you need extra visibility on spoons or vertical rigs, JB Lures Glow Trebles can help.

When to switch

  • Switch to a spoon or more flashy metal jig when fish want more vibration, flash, or faster fall.
  • Switch to a larger jig or dropper-style presentation when targeting bigger walleye or when small glow jigs are getting ignored.
  • Switch to a finesse panfish jig when fish are pressured and only want a tiny, slow-moving profile.
  • If fish are active and chasing, a glow jig may be too subtle; go with a more aggressive jigging spoon or chopper-style rig.

Related searches

  • glow ice fishing jigs
  • walleye glow jigs
  • vertical jigging glow lures