Quarry Man Posted May 25, 2017 Posted May 25, 2017 When fishing a bank with docks using topwater baits, is it best to fish parallel or perpendicular to the bank? Quote
Super User J Francho Posted May 25, 2017 Super User Posted May 25, 2017 Yes. Also try angles to the dock. 10 Quote
XpressJeff Posted May 25, 2017 Posted May 25, 2017 As stated; The answer is D All of the above! 1 Quote
jr231 Posted May 25, 2017 Posted May 25, 2017 Senko, fat ika , squarebill, dropshot and a jig are my favorites for aggravating the bass around docks... I do my best to get em underneath the dock as far as possible. I also try to stay a nice distance away when making the first few casts so I don't spook em if they are on the outside of the dock. 2 Quote
Blackhawk83 Posted May 31, 2017 Posted May 31, 2017 My personal experience has shown that the best approach can vary greatly depending upon general mood of the fish, water temperature/conditions, and skies clear vs overcast, etc 1 Quote
davecon Posted May 31, 2017 Posted May 31, 2017 As a "general" rule I start perpendicular. If I can determine that most of the fish are a certain distance from shore/cover and it is consistent then I switch to parallel. 1 Quote
IndianaFinesse Posted May 31, 2017 Posted May 31, 2017 All of the above... I tend to start out doing both until I figure out which way works best for that particular time. 1 Quote
Super User RoLo Posted May 31, 2017 Super User Posted May 31, 2017 I'd work the whole dock of course, but would start about a cast-length away, while the area is still unmolested. My most anticipated cast (high-confidence cast) would be standing at the foot of the dock, and casting parallel to the dock, missing the edge by inches. Before leaving, I'd pitch underneath the dock as far as possible, this is when lures are lost Roger 1 Quote
Turkey sandwich Posted May 31, 2017 Posted May 31, 2017 It depends. I think starting out throwing longer casts that land well away from the dock is a good start to work fish sitting well outside without spooking the ones likely sitting right on or under the dock itself. After that, it's time to start taking notes. Where are fishing sitting? Are you catching fish off the deep edge of the dock? Are you catching them in 2' of water near the shoreline? Are they sitting along the shady edge of the dock? In the sunlight? Once you find the fish, you want the presentation to stay in the strike zone as long as possible. If I'm catching them primarily along the shady side of the dock, you bet the majority of my casts are going to be perpendicular and along that shady side. If I'm catching them in the middle of the dock sitting consistently at 4' of depth, I'm probably going to be working that depth perpendicular or at different angles to the dock. Is there a weed edge boulders, or quality laydowns anywhere around that dock? That's also going to be super high percentage and I'm likely going to want to keep my top water in those areas for a while, too. Part of breaking down cover efficiently, to me, is identifying high percentage areas and hitting them until I do so in a manner where I'm likely putting my bait in front of as many active fish as possible at least until I gather enough information to weed out what's inefficient and can establish a quality pattern. And sometimes after putting in all that work and thought, I'll just throw into open water on a crap cast while not paying attention in between two docks and catch a random cruising fish. That's valuable information, too. 2 Quote
Super User Bankbeater Posted May 31, 2017 Super User Posted May 31, 2017 I fish the corners of the docks like they were natural points. 1 Quote
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