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Inshore Slow-Bee Jigging

Catches every Inshore species from Tarpon to Drum to Snapper

Join the Slow-Bee Jigging Rovolution!

Most anglers have heard of slow-pitch jigging. Slow-bee jigging is a similar technique—but one that can significantly improve your catch rates.

Slow-bee jigging can be fished both vertically and horizontally, making it extremely versatile. The method is simple:

  • Vertical presentations: Ideal for deeper structure. Let the jig hit bottom, then work it with short, controlled hops.

  • Horizontal presentations: Cast out and retrieve using short snaps of the rod tip. This causes the jig to dart randomly left and right in short hops as it moves along the bottom.

This technique is effective in extremely shallow water—less than a foot deep—or as deep as conditions allow, as long as you maintain bottom contact. Slow-bee jigging can be done from beaches, fishing piers, jetties, kayaks, or boats.

It’s productive year-round, day or night, from the heat of summer to the coldest winter days. Fish slow-bee jigs across grass flats (they’re surprisingly weedless), along channel edges, around docks, and over reefs. Wherever fish are feeding near the bottom, slow-bee jigging excels.

In life, if something seems too good to be true, it usually is.

The Slow-Bee Jig is the exception.