Ice Fishing Tips -Check your local regulations! > Bluegill

catching blue gills

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harold_lssu:
Has anyone ever took the treble hook off a small spoon and tie it to your line then tie a some line to the bottom of that to tie your ice jig to? if you have dose it work to attract to fish in and bite.

kerosenecounty17:
What you're talking about is called a dopper rig.  They're commonly used for perch, and sometimes crappie.  Perch feed on minnows whenever they're available, so the the flash of the spoon attracts them to the area.  Bluegill, on the other hand, almost never feed on minnows.  They key primarily on insect larva during the winter.  A dropper will work on bluegill, if they're agressive that day, but isn't as effective as it is for perch.  If the gills are neutral to negative, the spoon will scare more of them away than it will attract.  Anyway, that's from my personal experimentation.

kerosene

rgfixit:
The fussier the gills..the smaller the jig.

Try a fly such as a scud, hairs ear nymph or ant up the line about 6" to a foot from your jig. I tip mine with a single spike or leave it bare. I'll sometimes go to a #16 bare hook with one spike when they're really fussy.

I regularly use the rig you describe for big perch down deep.

RG

emptyhanded:
It would have to be a very small treble -- bluegills just nip they really dont strike -- inless they are fighting over your bait. I use a aquaview and very small -- very small teardrop or rat finkes with mousies. If it is small enough they inhale it -- then whammo

I use drop rigs on lake simcoe for perch -- they work great for attracting fish

harold_lssu:
Thanks for the information Kerosene it will help in the up comeing season

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