Why You Should Stack Jigs

There are plenty of reasons anglers stack jigs, but the simplest is this: more jigs in the water means more chances to get bit. When fish are holding at different depths or responding to different profiles, stacked jigs give them more options without overthinking the presentation.
That idea isn’t new. Anglers have been stacking jigs for decades by tying a dropper line to the bend or shank of another jig. The technique works, but it hasn’t always been clean or efficient.
Why Stacking Hasn’t Always Been Easy
Traditional stacking methods come with a few built-in frustrations. Tying to the hook bend allows the line to slide, which can lead to line twist building up over time. Tangles happen. Casts get ruined. Add in the guesswork of where to tie your dropper line for best results, and many anglers end up abandoning stacking altogether and fishing a single jig instead.
The concept works. The execution has often been the problem.

A Cleaner Way to Stack Jigs

The Eagle Claw Ladder Jig was designed to simplify stacking while eliminating the most common issues anglers run into.
Each Ladder Jig features a Powerlight swivel molded directly into the jighead, giving you a fixed tie point for stacking jigs and helping reduce line twist. The result is a cleaner presentation, fewer tangles, and a setup that’s ready to fish.
Just as important, the Ladder Jig features Eagle Claw’s Pro-V Bend hook design, which helps keep fish pinned once they commit. When stacking jigs gives fish more opportunities to bite, the Pro-V Bend helps make sure those opportunities turn into landed fish.
The Ladder Jig makes stacking jigs and increasing your odds as an angler simple and efficient. Whether you’ve been guiding for years and want a cleaner solution, or you’re new to stacking jigs and want an easy place to start, the Ladder Jig removes the guesswork and lets you fish with confidence.
Most importantly, it invites anglers to experiment again with stacked presentations, adjusting depth, profile, color, and weight until they find what fish want. With four color options and three sizes including 1/32, 1/16, and 1/8 oz., the Ladder Jig makes dialing in those variables simple. There’s a Ladder Jig available for a wide range of angling situations, making it easy to stack jigs and adapt your presentation to the conditions in front of you.
