Description
Bladed jigs combine the profile of a jig with the flash and vibration of a blade, creating a hard-thumping action that triggers reaction bites. They’re especially effective around submerged vegetation—tick the tops of grass and rip it free to trigger strikes—or swim them through open water and along cover like docks, rock, and laydowns.
This DeLong version keeps the category’s proven fish-catching design but is built with the consistency and quality you expect from our tackle lineup. Fish it like a moving jig, a shallow search bait, or a grass-line workhorse—then let the blade do the talking.
What it’s best for
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Bass + Pike (reaction strikes)
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Grass and vegetation (especially effective)
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Stained / low-visibility water
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Covering water fast to find active fish
How to fish it (simple, effective retrieves)
1) Steady retrieve (“wind it”)
Cast, engage, and reel so the blade stays vibrating. This is the easiest way to fish a bladed jig and still get the signature action.
2) Tick-and-rip through grass
Let it tick the tops of hydrilla/milfoil/coontail, then pop it free—this “snatch it free” move is a high-percentage strike trigger.
3) Slow roll (cooler water / deeper edges)
Slow it down to keep it low and stable along deeper grass lines, points, or transition edges.
4) Burn (active fish)
Speed up to keep it moving higher in the column when fish are chasing.
Colors
Paste your exact color names here (don’t invent names—use your official store names):
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Black/white
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Black/Blue
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white/chartreuse
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fire tiger
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Fire Craw
Pack options
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Single (individual)
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5-pack
FAQ (recommended)
Q: What is a “chatterbait”?
A: “ChatterBait” is a brand name; the lure category is commonly called a bladed jig or vibrating jig.
Q: Where does a bladed jig work best?
A: They’re especially strong around submerged vegetation and also work around docks, rock, and other cover.
Q: What’s the best retrieve for beginners?
A: A steady retrieve is the simplest—keep the blade vibrating and adjust speed until fish respond.
Q: How do I get more bites in grass?
A: Let it tick the grass and then rip it free—many strikes happen right after it breaks loose.











