Kingdom Metal Shrimp Sinking Jig with Spinner Spoon

Kingdom Metal Shrimp Sinking Jig with Spinner Spoon

Q004 / 46mm-21g
$29.99
Sale price  $29.99 Regular price  $0.00
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Kingdom Metal Shrimp Sinking Jig with Spinner Spoon

Kingdom Metal Shrimp Sinking Jig with Spinner Spoon

$29.99
Sale price  $29.99 Regular price  $0.00
The Kingdom Metal Shrimp is a sinking jig built to imitate a fleeing shrimp or baitfish, with a segmented metal body and a spinning spoon blade at the tail that adds flash and vibration on every drop or retrieve. The weighted body...
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The Kingdom Metal Shrimp is a sinking jig built to imitate a fleeing shrimp or baitfish, with a segmented metal body and a spinning spoon blade at the tail that adds flash and vibration on every drop or retrieve. The weighted body gets it down fast, making it a solid choice for reaching bass holding deeper in the water column.

It pairs a front treble with a rear treble on the spoon attachment for solid hookup coverage. Available in multiple weights, it works well for vertical jigging around drop-offs, points, and deeper cover where largemouth and smallmouth bass stage, and it also handles casting and retrieving for pike and other predators sharing the same water.

Specifications

TypeMetal shrimp jig with spinner spoon
Weight8.5g / 14g / 21g / 28g
DepthSinking, depth controlled by weight and retrieve
ActionFluttering shrimp body with spinning blade flash
HooksFront treble hook plus rear treble on spoon
Best forLargemouth and smallmouth bass, pike, deep structure

How to fish it

  1. Cast out and let the lure sink fully to the target depth before starting your retrieve.
  2. Work it with a lift-and-fall jigging motion to trigger the spoon's flash and blade spin.
  3. Slow the retrieve near drop-offs, points, and deep cover where bass are holding tight to structure.
  4. Vary the pause length between jigs, since a longer fall often draws the strike on the drop.

Frequently asked

The 14g or 21g covers most bass fishing situations. Go lighter in shallow water and heavier when you need to reach deep structure or fish in current.

Yes. Natural, translucent finishes work best in clear water, while brighter or darker high-contrast colors help bass find the lure in stained or murky conditions.

A medium to medium-heavy spinning or casting rod with 10 to 20 lb braid or fluorocarbon gives good feel for the jigging action and enough backbone for hooksets.

No. The flash and shrimp profile also draw strikes from pike and other predatory fish sharing the same water, making it a versatile jigging option.

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