Super User ChrisD46 Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 What are your favorite bass lures for fishing docks ? Off the top of my head I think of pitching arky jigs or casting swim jigs reeled parallel to docks . For soft plastics I think of pitching stick worms (either T- rigged or wacky) . Spinner baits and chatter baits may work (although not my first choice I think of) and lastly for top water I would think poppers worked around dock points may produce … What dock fishing techniques have worked best for you ? 1 Quote
Woody B Posted March 7, 2024 Posted March 7, 2024 From April until September or so docks get hammered around here. You've got to get something under them if you want to catch anything decent. When I fish docks I usually skip a wacky, a jig or a lipless crank bait way up under the dock. Quote
OmegaDPW Posted March 7, 2024 Posted March 7, 2024 I've had decent luck tossing a curly tail worm TX rigged and fished extremely slow with small twitches parallel to the dock. My pitching skills to get way under docks need a lot of improvement. 3 Quote
DaubsNU1 Posted March 7, 2024 Posted March 7, 2024 Wacky rigged senko on a drop shot. I can pitch the weight way back...and it pulls the senko so far back. Deadly. Quote
Super User Bird Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 Zoom flukes Skip very well. 3 Quote
greentrout Posted March 7, 2024 Posted March 7, 2024 Skipping Yum Dingers and BPS Stik-O's with M/MH rods and spinning and spincast reels depending ... Good Fishing 3 Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 Fat Ika https://www.bassresource.com/bass-fishing-videos/lake-guntersville-2012.html 1 Quote
Super User Choporoz Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 Senkos, jigs and dropshot, primarily. Spinnerbaits, chatterbaits and lipless when I have comfortable clearance. I have a longstanding mental issue regarding snags around docks. I am unwilling to leave hooks in lines and ropes and probably go too far out of my way to avoid them with open hooks. Quote
Super User gim Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 I use a two-pronged approach around docks. 1) Early in the morning before the sun is too high, I target areas around them with faster moving lures like a buzz bait, spinnerbait, or chatterbait. Angles are key. If you can bump them into a post, that is often when a fish will strike. 2) As the sun gets higher, and there's less shade, I switch to a wacky rig stickbait, a fluke, or a tube. They all skip well. I don't use anything with lead weights like a jig, or anything with treble hooks around docks anymore. Weights make noise when you bang into something and treble hooks get hung up too easily. I try to respect people's private property which include their docks, lifts, covers, and anything else that might be there. And if I see someone on their dock or in their yard, I don't fish that specific one. I move on to the next one. Anything I can do to potentially avoid confrontation. I am not a lakeshore owner and never will be so I try to put myself in their shoes. I would not want someone banging lures off my stuff. 5 Quote
Super User gim Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 My biggest largemouth of the season in 2023 came from under a dock in early July. And my friend's biggest largemouth of the season in 2023 came from the side of a dock in early October. 9 Quote
Super User NorthernBasser Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 This guy has accounted for so many dock fish it isn't even funny. Texas-rigged with a 1/8 oz weight, unpegged. 2 Quote
GRiver Posted March 7, 2024 Posted March 7, 2024 Wacky rig weightless with a senko type bait by 3 Quote
Super User MN Fisher Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 Senko/Yum Dingers/etc Wacky rigged weightless or Zoom Trick Worm T-Rigged weightless. 1 Quote
Super User ChrisD46 Posted March 7, 2024 Author Super User Posted March 7, 2024 Thanks for replies to date - sides of docks and way back underneath docks may require some different approaches (i.e. baits that skip well) . 2 Quote
Super User FishTank Posted March 7, 2024 Super User Posted March 7, 2024 Senkos and jigs for skipping. Magdrafts or big cranks to call them out. Regular sized crankbaits and BFS stuff around the edges. Quote
Pat Brown Posted March 7, 2024 Posted March 7, 2024 Worm/jig/spinnerbait/buzzbait/chatterbait/swimbait. 1 Quote
Woody B Posted March 8, 2024 Posted March 8, 2024 Another thing that works around docks at some times. Burn a buzz bait or spinner bait around the dock, then follow up with something slower. I think burning the first baits wake the bass up. 1 Quote
JediAmoeba Posted March 8, 2024 Posted March 8, 2024 You can skip a Hudd 68 so far under docks. It's amazing 2 Quote
Super User J Francho Posted March 8, 2024 Super User Posted March 8, 2024 I use the usual suspects - fat ikas, senkos, jigs. Years ago I was skipping a sammy quite a bit. It's a high risk cast, but you get a quiet slurp from a monster, and it's worth it. Quote
Hook2Jaw Posted March 8, 2024 Posted March 8, 2024 I fish a lot of docks on Lake Sinclair here in middle Georgia, like, a looot. My most productive baits are mostly skipped under docks and those baits are a finesse jig, a shakyhead with a trick worm, and a wacky rig. Alternatively, as has already been said, beat up the docks posts with your choice of moving bait. Mine happen to be a squarebill crankbait and a spinnerbait. Finally, shakyheads don't skip well, but a larger bodied worm like a Senko or YUM Dinger manages to improve that. Quote
Super User MIbassyaker Posted March 8, 2024 Super User Posted March 8, 2024 Senko, Buzzbait, Senko, Spinnerbait, Senko, jig, Senko, and.....Senko. 2 Quote
papajoe222 Posted March 8, 2024 Posted March 8, 2024 Three favorites; Jig/trailer, Tube bait, crankbait tuned to run under one side of the dock. 1 Quote
Super User Columbia Craw Posted March 8, 2024 Super User Posted March 8, 2024 Tube with a 1/16 internal weight, Senko, jig. Quote
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