Bait Up
Considering the neko’s dynamics, VanDam chooses worms that complement the rig. His favorites are the Strike King Ocho (stick worm), a 5-inch Strike King Fat Baby Finesse Worm, or a 6.5-inch Strike King Finesse Worm. With each, the seductive fall sells the ruse.
“With the Ocho, you get that quiver on the fall, and when you nail weight it, you get that gliding, head-first fall,” VanDam said. “With the Finesse worms, it’s more of a straight fall, but when you shake it, the worm is softer, and it has a more pronounced wiggle to it.”
Noting that both styles have their place in his neko rig game, VanDam said he chooses the Ocho when he’s searching a broader target area because the bait’s gliding motion creates a more attention-getting profile. When he pitches his neko-rigged stick worm around standing timber or a grass line, VanDam does so with the confidence that his rig can draw fish from a distance.
“When I’m focused on a precise spot where I know they’re sitting — say, it’s a bridge piling, and I can see them on my electronics — it’s hard to beat the finesse worm,” VanDam said. “It has a slower fall and a little more action, so when a fish is right there, it’s pretty easy to talk them into biting it.”
With either worm, VanDam neko rigs his bait with a Mustad Alpha Point Apex Dropshot Hook . Because he’s often fishing around cover, he typically opts for the weedless version, which features a fluorocarbon weed guard that rests behind the hook’s barb.
“It takes no pressure to get the hook into a fish’s mouth, but the design makes it very weedless for fishing around wood, brush piles, or grass,” VanDam said. “I love this rig for boat docks. You skip it around dock cables, cross members, and things you can hang up on. That’s where that weed guard comes in.”