Twin Tail Trailer Grub - Soft Plastic Swimbait, 5.7in
Specifications
| Type | Twin tail trailer / soft plastic swimbait |
| Length | 5.7 in (145 mm) |
| Weight | 0.77 oz (21.7 g) |
| Depth | Depends on head weight and retrieve |
| Action | Dual curly tail kick with strong tail vibration |
| Hooks | Sold unrigged, pair with jig head or hook of choice |
| Best for | Largemouth and smallmouth bass in grass, laydowns, and open water |
Product description
This twin tail trailer grub brings a lot of tail action to any jig or swim bait head. The split curly tails kick hard on the fall and during a steady retrieve, pushing water that bass can track even in stained conditions. The salt-infused body has a soft, lifelike feel that holds up to repeated bites and casts.
Rig it behind a swim jig for a bulky profile in grass and around laydowns, or thread it on a football jig as a trailer for extra flutter on the bottom. It also works well as a stand-alone swimbait on a jig head for covering water along drop-offs and points. A solid pick for largemouth and smallmouth in warm to cool water.
How to fish it
- Thread the body onto a jig head or swim jig, keeping it straight for balanced tail action.
- Cast past cover and let it fall on a semi-slack line to trigger reaction strikes.
- Retrieve with a steady swim or slow lift-and-drop to keep both tails kicking.
- Slow down around cover and let the tails work on a near-stationary presentation for a followed but hesitant bass.
Frequently asked
Anything from 1/8 oz to 3/8 oz works well depending on depth and cover. Lighter heads suit shallow grass, heavier heads help it get down quickly in deeper water or current.
Darker, high-contrast colors with flake move more water and show a stronger silhouette in stained water. Save natural, translucent patterns for clear conditions.
A medium-heavy casting rod with 12 to 17 lb fluorocarbon gives you the backbone to work it through cover and still feel subtle bites.
Yes. The tail kick and compact body work for both species, especially when swum along rocky points or grass edges where bass are actively feeding.