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Willow Wobbler Review as Presented in WWW.riversmallies.com
BIG
DADDYE'S WILLOW WOBBLER
John McKean
Catch and release is a way of smallie fishing life for me and most of our members.
Yet back in the sixties an eye-popping string of giant smallmouth literally
changed my life and helped get me into this fascinating sport. It was on New
York's Lake Chautauqua at the beginning of bass season when a group of three
anglers stopped for gas and supplies at the small resort at which I was vacationing.
They placed a frighteningly heavy triple-limit stringer into the water at the
dock, all smallies, none of which were less than 20 inches!!All three had medium-size
abu-reflex spinners on their lines and said fishing was always this easy in
early season --just cast such spinners around the lily pads in the lake's shallow
bays. It's fortunate that not many guys fished for or kept smallmouth on this
famed muskie lake (big smallmouth are still there in big numbers!) and it's
a wonder I didn't become a life- long spinner bait man!!
Oh, sure, I've done my share of spinner fishing, both with straight shaft models and with overhead blades, but never seemed to get much personal fulfillment out of this work. Particularly in streams and rivers spinners seemed to give me trouble: they snagged a lot, many were too heavy for the very slow presentations which I came to favor through jigging, they snagged a lot, they didn't allow natural presentations while dead drifting in currents, they snagged a lot, they weren't too good with my favored dropping technique, and, did I mention -- they snag a lot! Yes, I caught a lot of fish with various spinners over the years when my finny competitors were active, but usually had better luck with more subtle presentations.
These days, and for the past 30 years, most of my smallmouth (or any fish) work revolves around small or ultra light jigs. While I've experimented with attaching overhead spinner arms on my lead heads at times, this approach still seems to stifle my own particular nuances for swimming/twitching/dropping a lightweight jig. Enter my new friend, Mel Eaton from Snohomish, Washington. Mel, who runs "BigDaddyE.com," is also a small jig fanatic and has created a special jig attachment which not only resists stifling any jig presentation, but actually ENHANCES it!!
Mel
calls his little blade a "willow wobbler."As the name suggests, it
is a willow leaf spin blade of about 1 1/4" length (he has three sizes)
with a swivel on one end and a snap on the other. It's attachable to any size
jig hook eye, providing flash up front and a slight twitching spasm on the retrieve.
In particular, during a slow downward drop, arguably the jig's most effective
motion, the little blade flickers seductively and actually shakes the tail feathers
(whether they be marabou, bucktail, or plastic) into action. The total effect
is that of a slightly struggling, helpless wounded critter; something I've always
had to agonize over in trying to achieve, but now is essentially done for me!!
A neat thing about the willow wobbler is that this extra little bit of hardware
gives casting weight to even a tiny jig or weightless fly with light spinning
gear. Just last evening I spent a few hours at an extremely hard-fished local
pool.It was Easter Sunday and tremendous weather in a trout stocked area near
Pittsburgh, PA and it was really hammered before I arrived!!I used Mel's willow
attachment and a 1/50 oz jig tied in sparse flashabou. The tiny bait easily
sailed the length of this hole and woke even these well spooked fish right up
-- got three bass, several nice crappies, and scads of bluegill and sunfish.
I also discovered that the up front, flat blade actually helped slide my single
hook jig right up and over rocks and logs -- Look ma!No more snags!!!!Only warning
is that those used to tackling giant smallies may not be used to the constant
fish activity generated by these nifty little rigs!!!
Additionally,
Mel's small company (www.bigdaddye.com) offers some of the niftiest ties I've
seen in hackle and bucktail patterns, as well as other spin blades. Be sure
to check out his site and see what he can add to your jig fishing this season!!
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