Ned Rig Fishing on St. Lawrence River
St. Lawrence River · New York · Northeast
The St. Lawrence River stretches along the New York–Ontario border, a massive, current-driven system running through the heart of the Thousand Islands region. Rocky points, submerged shoals, weed flats, and deep channel edges create an incredibly varied structural canvas that supports world-class smallmouth populations alongside largemouth, northern pike, muskellunge, and walleye. Water clarity skews clear to moderately clear, which means finesse presentations and natural color palettes tend to outperform loud, opaque offerings across much of the season.
Ned Rig pairs a 3–4" ElaZtech-style floating plastic (TRD, Finesse TRD, or similar) on a 1/15–1/6 oz mushroom head jig. The bait's buoyancy causes it to stand upright on the bottom, creating a subtle action that triggers bites when nothing else will. Exceptional on hard bottom, gravel, and rock.
Ned Rig Setup for St. Lawrence River
| Rod | 6'10"–7'2" medium-light spinning rod, moderate-fast action |
| Reel | 2500 size spinning reel |
| Line | 10 lb braid + 8 lb fluorocarbon leader |
| Weight | 1/15–1/6 oz mushroom jig head (Z-Man Finesse ShroomZ or similar) |
| Hook | Size 1 or 1/0 wide gap, built into jig head |
Seasonal Tactics on St. Lawrence River
Lake: Smallmouth stage on shallow rocky shoals and sand flats in 4–10 ft as water temperatures climb through the low 50s into the low 60s; pre-spawn fish are aggressive on tube jigs and suspending jerkbaits worked near current breaks adjacent to deeper wintering areas.
Ned Rig: Deadly on pre-spawn fish holding on gravel and pea-gravel flats in 4–12 feet.
Lake: Post-spawn fish slide to main-river rocky points, mid-river shoals, and current seams in 12–22 ft, where gobies and crayfish dominate the forage; drop shots and football jigs worked slowly across hard-bottom structure are the workhorses once temperatures push into the upper 60s and 70s.
Ned Rig: Work deeper rock piles and main lake points. Drag slowly, let it stand. Green pumpkin and watermelon dominate.
Lake: Cooling water triggers aggressive topwater and swimbait action as smallmouth chase shad and shiners along weed edges and channel swings; October fishing can produce the year's biggest individual fish before the river shuts down.
Ned Rig: One of the best techniques as fish get finicky before winter. Match shad colors on sandy/gravel bottom.
Lake: The St. Lawrence sees very limited open-water fishing in winter; ice-up typically covers large sections of the river by January, and access is restricted — late-season anglers targeting the final open-water weeks in late November focus on deep channel edges in 25–35 ft with blade baits and drop shots.
Ned Rig: Best cold-water finesse technique after drop shot. Extremely slow drag on hard bottom near deep structure.
Best Conditions
Clear water, hard and rocky bottoms, post-cold-front, heavily pressured fish, any season except peak summer spawn
Use Z-Man ElaZtech plastics exclusively — they float and are nearly indestructible. Regular soft plastics sink and kill the technique.
More Techniques for St. Lawrence River
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