There have been many articles written which describe how to catch
fish from around and under boat docks. It is true, boat docks offer
prime habitat for bass. Boat docks or sheds offer shade during any
time of the day, and the posts allow the predator to lie in wait for a
passing minnow or crawdad.
Virtually every article I have read instructs us to work jigs or worms
around the posts and adjoining cover, but there is another way to
stimulate a bass into taking a synthetic resemblance to its diet. The
method of using a modified crankbait can be a real producer around
docks and sheds.
This method of working boat docks came to me completely by
accident back in the late seventies. My fishing partner, Brent, was
throwing a medium running crankbait along a rocky shoreline on
Pickwick Lake. The shoreline of this cove soon gave away to three
or four boat docks. I had fished the south side of the dock with the
crankbait with no luck.
Brent made a hard cast in an effort to get his bait under the dock.
His cast left a little to be desired, landing six feet from his point of
aim. As luck would have it, it hung on top of the dock. He gave it a
good hard jerk, and, surprisingly, it freed itself. The only problem
was that it contacted a piece of metal as the slingshot effect
accelerated it back toward the boat.
After inspecting the lure and discovering that no parts were broken,
Brent gave it a sling along the front of the dock. Picture this; the bait
hits the water a few feet past and to the outside left of the front of
the dock. As Brent began his retrieve, the bait began diving hard
right. "Great!" he said (actually he said something a little different).
"I've fouled up my bait!"
When the bait got to the first post of the dock, it was already about
two feet to the right of it. He continued his retrieve, and the bait
wobbled around the post and began to dive under the dock. Before
it got to the second post, my partner grunted (One of Brent's
trademarks was that he always grunted when he got a strike.). A
few seconds later he boated a nice keeper.