Tips
and Techniques > Rigging
natural baits > Nose rigging


Nose rigging is a quick
way to rig any baitfish for trolling or as a drop back bait.
It is particularly well suited to using with circle hooks as
it ensures that the hook point is not masked by the bait, and
the short trolling 'bridle' allows the bait to be easily turned
for swallowing.
You will need a rigging needle (mortician's needles are best)
and a length of old Dacron or waxed cotton or linen thread.
Dacron works great for me.
For a smallish baitfish such as an Atlantic mackerel or a Mullet
use a 4 inch needle and around 20 inches of thread. Scale up
to a 6 inch needle and around 30 inches of thread when using
something like a Bonito or Skipjack tuna. Secure the thread
to the needle with a single half hitch to stop it pulling out
of the needle eye.
1) Take the baitfish and insert the needle into the gill
cover approximately 1/3 way up from the throat latch at the
bottom. Pass the needle right through and exit the opposite
gill cover in a similar position.
Pull the Dacron almost
all the way through and tie off under the chin using a Surgeons
knot. The gill covers are now tied closed.
Trim off the tag end only.
2) Insert the needle up
through the lower jaw and out of the RIGHT nostril. Pull to
take up any slack. The Dacron from the gill covers will lay
neatly in the groove beneath the jaw.
Come around and again
pass the needle up through the lower jaw and out of the RIGHT
nostril using the same path that you used the first time.
Pull tight
to close the right side of the mouth.
3) Now it becomes a little (but only a little) more tricky.
Insert the needle up through the right side of the lower jaw
and out of the LEFT nostril.
Before pulling through
the slack Dacron put your index finger against the mouth of
the baitfish and take up the slack around your finger. You are
forming a towing loop the size of your finger. Again pass the
needle up through the same hole in the lower jaw and again out
through the left nostril.
Pull tight and the left
side of the mouth is now stitched shut.
4) Pass the Dacron around
your finger a second time and insert the needle up through the
centre of the jaw and out of the upper jaw between the nostrils.
Pull tight and you will now have two towing loops around your
finger.


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Photography
by Jim Boyd
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5) Remove your finger
from inside the trolling loops and finish with several half
hitches around both loops to make things secure.
Baits prepared in this
way can be stored in a cooler until required with no chance
of tangling.
To attach to a hook, pass
the hook point through the two loops, wrap the loops around
the hook point once and pass the point through the loops again.
The bait should hang about an inch from the bend of the hook.

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