Porgy Rigs Plain Jane or Bells and Whistles?

Chinacat

Well-Known Angler
So I have always tied my porgy rigs as a standard hi lo with 2 dropper loops on a 2-3’ leader with a loop for a bank sinker at the bottom. Nothing on the dropper loop but the hook. In my drawer of “stuff” in the garage I found a bag of red beads and another of green. I decided to get a little frisky and add some beads on some rigs and see if it makes a difference. Not sure how to measure a difference since I’ve never had a problem catching all we wanted when the fish are there ?‍♂️?‍♂️??
 
So I have always tied my porgy rigs as a standard hi lo with 2 dropper loops on a 2-3’ leader with a loop for a bank sinker at the bottom. Nothing on the dropper loop but the hook. In my drawer of “stuff” in the garage I found a bag of red beads and another of green. I decided to get a little frisky and add some beads on some rigs and see if it makes a difference. Not sure how to measure a difference since I’ve never had a problem catching all we wanted when the fish are there ?‍♂️?‍♂️??
Keep it simple!
 
Do you fish with friends? Then have on plain jane. The other with all the beads and flashy hardware.

See who out fishes who.

I do this with fluke too. One gets pink, one gets white and one gets green.
 
As you know I run a lot of Porgy trips throughout the year. In most cases, I also agree that the simpler the better when it comes to rigs. However, despite the fact that there are few days when the Porgies play hard to get there are exceptions to every rule

So, to play it safe I would have a mix of both leaders with and without beads. I have seen a few days when the beaded rigs do make a difference on both size and numbers.

For hooks, I also like the baitholder style to keep the soft baits on the hook a little longer. I too like a size #1, either beak or sproat, nothing smaller, I have seen the large spawners we catch in the Peconics break smaller hooks. Nothing wrong with going with a 2/0 size if you want to cull out the smaller stuff.

Also, cannot deny that Sandworms can be dynamite baits, although pretty expensive unless you dig your own. I never have a problem filling the box with the old reliable clam baits and occasionally small squid pieces. But clams are far more consistent.

See you out there soon, Mitch.
 
As you know I run a lot of Porgy trips throughout the year. In most cases, I also agree that the simpler the better when it comes to rigs. However, despite the fact that there are few days when the Porgies play hard to get there are exceptions to every rule

So, to play it safe I would have a mix of both leaders with and without beads. I have seen a few days when the beaded rigs do make a difference on both size and numbers.

For hooks, I also like the baitholder style to keep the soft baits on the hook a little longer. I too like a size #1, either beak or sproat, nothing smaller, I have seen the large spawners we catch in the Peconics break smaller hooks. Nothing wrong with going with a 2/0 size if you want to cull out the smaller stuff.

Also, cannot deny that Sandworms can be dynamite baits, although pretty expensive unless you dig your own. I never have a problem filling the box with the old reliable clam baits and occasionally small squid pieces. But clams are far more consistent.

See you out there soon, Mitch.
Thanks for the input Mike!!
So what I ended up doing was an overall mixture. 8-)
some plain jane, some with green beads above the hooks and some with red beads.
I also have a bunch of rigs leftover with 1/0's as well so I think I'm good to go.
Unlike fishing for sea bass on structure, we very rarely get hung up or lose rigs fishing for porgies in Peconic.
More often than not a smaller hooks breaks while unhooking a fish
I've caught many porgies big and small on 4/0 hooks targeting sea bass on the Shinny Reef (y)
Claim is the preferred bait for me.
 
I never fish a dropper for anything.

Always snelled hooks for me. Leader length can vary between 4" -12" depending on conditions.......
 
📱 Fish Smarter with the NYAngler App!
Launch Now

Members online

Fishing Reports

Latest articles

Back
Top