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Pro Tips: Plugging for River Salmon

September 9, 2019 By JD Leave a Comment

Fall is here and that means it’s time for one of my all-time favorite activities: Plugging for king salmon!

If your plug game needs a little tuneup, check out my eBook Plug Fishing for River Salmon which contains everything you need to know to become a proficient wiggler angler.

It’s a quick read full of diagrams, photos and how-to goodies. And at $ 2.99, it costs less than a single lure!

Here’s a quick glance at what’s inside:

Just click the link above and it will take you to Amazon or google my name and the title of the book and you’ll find it.

Filed Under: Salmon Tagged With: flatfish, how to fish plugs for salmon, how to sardine wrap a plug, king salmon, kwikfish, plug fishing, salmon fishing, sardine wrapped kwikfish

How to Sardine-Wrap a Plug

June 13, 2011 By JD 18 Comments

Not many things work better for river kings than a sardine-wrapped plug!

For some reason, there seems to be a lot of mystery out there regarding sardine-wrapped plugs for salmon. It may be a bit intimidating to the uninitiated, but there’s really nothing to it. Here’s a quick crash course on how to do it.

It all starts with good bait!

You have to start with fresh bait. The bagged, mushy kind just won’t cut it. I catch my own, brine them on the boat and then vacuum seal and freeze ’em. You want a firm, bright bait with all its scales intact.

Next, a quick fillet job…

Take a sharp knife behind the sardine’s head and make a cut down to the backbone. When you hit the spine, turn the blade flat an cut a fillet from the side of the fish.

Now, just flip it over and do the same thing on the other side

Time to make some sardine pants!

Cut the fillet into sections. How large a piece you use depends on the size of the plug. In this case, I was wrapping smaller K14 and M2 sized plugs, so the pieces need to be smaller so as to not overwhelm the lure’s action. Using a pair of scissors, make a cut down the center line down each piece so that they look like little pairs of “pants.”

Fire Cure will preserve wraps and give them extra scent

At this point, you are ready to roll…simply place the baits on the belly of a plug and wrap it on with stretchy thread. However, you can also do some “aftermarket” upgrading too…Lately, I have been making my wraps the night before fishing and then sprinkling some Pautzke’s Fire Cure egg cure on them and letting them sit in a plastic tub overnight in the fridge. The cure toughens the baits, gives them extra color and, of course, you get that great sodium sulfate scent (+ krill and others) that kings love.

The finished product…

Now, wrapped up and cured, these plugs are ready to go!

More Salmon Techniques

Filed Under: Best of FishwithJD, Salmon, Techniques Tagged With: river salmon fishing, sardine wrapped kwikfish

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