has anyone done this? i was watching a show about it and ive fished horseshoe but the wind is usually bad enough where we cant work the docks much. which docks and what do yall use to shoot them. thanks
river
:confused:
Printable View
has anyone done this? i was watching a show about it and ive fished horseshoe but the wind is usually bad enough where we cant work the docks much. which docks and what do yall use to shoot them. thanks
river
:confused:
I don't really shoot the docks, but I know what you are talking about. I really don't have to shot, I chunk n wind just as well. Only time you would have to shoot if the water was high or little clearance under the docks. The deeper docks are better during hot weather, of course. Went the first of June and managed 49 and 41 on two trips around the docks. Went last friday and only made it home with 14. Its getting hot and may be goin even deeper.
Try the NW,N, and NE part of the lake to find the deeper piers. The east bank will slowly get shallow but there are several piers that have deeper water. There is a drop off that will run from about 8' out to 14' or so with a few piers being deeper. I use mainly a gray and chart. hair jig and tube jigs of all colors. Mainly black and chart. and black and pink. Don't really shoot the jig but pitch it under the piers as far as I can get them. Reel as slow as I can and also loose alot of jigs.:mad:
Early in the day I would start with set maybe 24" then adjust it down as the bite dictates. They will come up for a bait pretty well but never had any luck with them going down for one.
I would listen to hammer....he knows horseshoe. I'm not sure about trying a slip cork at 2 feet deep this time of year on the deep docks. I think deep and slow is the way to go when it is this hot. Just my .02
thanks yall
If you fish the docks at Horseshoe, shooting docks is the only way to go. You can get farther back in the shade where the fish hide. Get a 4 1/2 ft. graphite rod and an ultralite reel with about 4 lb. test line. Under the rod spincast reels are easier to use, but I can't find any that hold up and give a smooth retrieve, so I use an open face. Practice a lot at home, and you'll be able to get the hang of it pretty quickly. The key is to always have the same length of line from the rod tip---this gives you consistency in casting. I use anything from a 1/48 to 1/16 oz. jig, depending on depth. I've tried the cork rig, and can't seem to make it work very well--it messes up my casting and accuracy....others may get it to work better. Keep moving until you find the fish. Use a depth finder to fish piers close to deeper water. When the crappie bunch up in fall/winter, this method kills'em.
ive practiced at home and the only way i can cast with a bobber is a smalll weighted bobber but i love it because you can shoot it a country mile. you should try it. smaller is better though. :rolleyes::):):D:D:D:D
the weighted bobber helped with it not flipping but i found out to be sure to hold the rod parallel to the ground /water when im releasing it. and i know what you mean with the bobber. i watched a midwestcrappie show on shooting docks and they were using the smallest bobber possible because as soon as the fish puts resistance on it, the bobber goes under and the fish feels alot less resistance and it feels more natural. so fly fishing or ice fishing bobbers may also be good if your using like a 1/48th oz. jig. but the downside to that is distance you can shoot it.