#213268 - 09/30/03 02:14 AM
Squid jigg'n
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Returning Adult
Registered: 07/17/03
Posts: 365
Loc: Everett Wa.
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Time to dig out the rain gear and heat up the fry daddy! The Squid are in! Thoes of you who love callamari { I think that's how you spell it?} should head down to the edmonds pier. They are getting some pretty impressive catches of these lovely bivalves. It's very early so this could be the beginning of a great season! W.C. ![moose moose](/forum/images/graemlins/default_dark/moose.gif)
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25 years experience fishing the Puget Sound. 5 years of it catching fish.
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#213270 - 09/30/03 01:35 PM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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The Tide changed
Registered: 08/31/00
Posts: 7083
Loc: Everett
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A bright light and a squid jig. I have two buddies who catch tons every year off the piers in Downtown Seattle. I think it is pier 67 that alot of people jig from, and there are electrical outlets to plug your lights into.
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You know something bad is going to happen when you hear..."Hey, hold my beer and watch this"
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#213271 - 09/30/03 02:24 PM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Returning Adult
Registered: 01/06/01
Posts: 345
Loc: wa
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Squid aren't bivalves! Clams and mussels are bivalves. Squid are cephalopods with octopus and like critters.
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Give a man a fish, and you'll feed him for a day; give him a religion, and he'll starve to death while praying for a fish.
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#213274 - 09/30/03 07:03 PM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Returning Adult
Registered: 11/21/01
Posts: 387
Loc: Tacoma
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Slabquest, I've jigged squid more than most. The best time to jig is when the squid are in! Really, after years of jigging that is my conclusion. I would say to avoid ripping tides, but otherwise high, low or in betweeen -- it is good when the squid come. Clear and cold, foggy and warm, rainy or snowy -- it is good when the squid come.
My other advice is: You can easily jig too fast, but you can't jig too slow. If you want to catch more squid, slow down your presentation. Then slow down some more!
You really don't have to yank hard to set the hook. A slight snap of the rod tip will do the trick. Go down extremely slowly and keep your line tight. When you get good, you can feel the squid touch your jig. Novices randomly go up and down and catch squid randomly.
I like to use a very sensitive graphite rod with spider wire. The spider wire is great cause it is very sensitive and yet it is strong enough to bend the wires of a jig when it is stuck on a rock or something.
If you want to learn to catch squid try to stand next to an old Korean and mimic what he does!
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#213275 - 09/30/03 07:13 PM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Returning Adult
Registered: 06/20/03
Posts: 296
Loc: Edmonds
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I have a few squid gigs (lures) and a boat in Edmonds. I am wondering how deep to jig. Are they at or near the bottom or suspended at certain depths.
I want to give it a try- BTW anybody use fresh squid instead of hootchies for salmon?
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#213276 - 09/30/03 07:16 PM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Spawner
Registered: 03/22/03
Posts: 860
Loc: Puyallup, WA
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To me it seams like it would not be very fun. It would be like getting a clump a seaweed on you line right?
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They say that the man that gets a Ph.D. is the smart one. But I think that the man that learns how to get paid to fish is the smarter one.
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#213277 - 09/30/03 07:23 PM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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It all boils down to this - I'm right, everyone else is wrong, and anyone who disputes this is clearly a dumbfuck.
Registered: 03/07/99
Posts: 16958
Loc: SE Olympia, WA
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Yeah, 'cept seaweed doesn't taste as good! But then again, seaweed doesn't get ink all over the place either. Squid aren't about the fight........they're about the meal afterward. ![thumbs thumbs](/forum/images/graemlins/default_dark/thumbsup.gif)
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She was standin' alone over by the juke box, like she'd something to sell. I said "baby, what's the goin' price?" She told me to go to hell.
Bon Scott - Shot Down in Flames
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#213278 - 10/01/03 12:39 AM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Returning Adult
Registered: 07/17/03
Posts: 365
Loc: Everett Wa.
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Not anly are they great for eating but they are great for bait when the ling's and but's get going again this spring. Often the best depth to catch them is any depth. Squid are shadow hunters. They sit out of the light and wait for one of the bait fish that are attracted by the plankton that your light attracts to slip into thier stike zone. Some time the best way to get them is to swing your jigs into to dark and S-L-O-W-L-y jig your way back to the lighted section of water. When you really get into jiggin these guys you can have fun making your own jigs too. Kid's love this type of fishing. Wolley, Your'e right, I must of had razor clams on the mind. ![beathead beathead](/forum/images/graemlins/default_dark/beathead.gif)
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25 years experience fishing the Puget Sound. 5 years of it catching fish.
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#213279 - 10/01/03 02:26 AM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Parr
Registered: 06/11/03
Posts: 50
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They also make great crab bait. We used to do well inside the hook in P A.
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#213280 - 10/01/03 05:50 AM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Spawner
Registered: 11/26/01
Posts: 550
Loc: Browns Point
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its good to hear that they are showing up. i usually jig in the redondo/des moines area, but never this early. i will have to cruise through and check things out this weekend.
does anyone have a report from the south sound piers?
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alcohol, tobacco, firearms, who's bringing the chips?
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#213281 - 10/01/03 07:03 AM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Returning Adult
Registered: 05/09/03
Posts: 368
Loc: Florida
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Originally posted by w. coyote: They sit out of the light and wait for one of the bait fish that are attracted by the plankton that your light attracts to slip into thier stike zone. No, sorry........ You look at the jig and it is similar in shape and size to the squid you are catching. When the school together like that and attack the jigs, it is during a mating frenzy if the biologist was telling me straight. That is how they mate, by grabbing hold of each other. If they were feeding, you could throw anything at them and catch them. Only the jigs seem to work...... MC
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MasterCaster
"Equal Rights" are not "Special Rights"........
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#213283 - 10/01/03 09:18 AM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Returning Adult
Registered: 07/06/99
Posts: 470
Loc: Seattle, Washington, US
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Wrong, these squid are actively feeding. Size and color of jig matters this time of year. Pink, pink/white, white, blue/white, green/white and orange/white work well and represent the colors of prey. Also smaller is better. I've seen the National Geographic episode where commercial jiggers drop lines of jigs into millions of spawning squid and use large jigs that represent female squid. But this is not the case for Puget Sound. Besides the majority of these squid (that I'm catching now) are still sexually immature. The female egg sacs are all very tiny and the sperm "needles" haven't developed yet in the males.
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#213287 - 10/01/03 04:47 PM
Re: Squid jigg'n
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Returning Adult
Registered: 07/23/02
Posts: 476
Loc: Edmonds
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I think the regs say three jigs per line. I never go more than two.
The light rod with the spyder line is an excellent tip.
you truley can feel them grab on to the jig.
Use the first time to learn the ropes. Ted's has some of the better jigs.
It can be a real blast when the squid are in. Sometimes you can look down and see a school go buy.
No electricity at edmonds. They used to allow generators. They shut that down because of the noise and fire hazard.
I have used a wagon to tow a couple of batteries and used a twelve volt fog light. Just hang it over the side. Lantern on a rope will also help.
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