That's what I would do too. When fishing from a dock I'll start with a portion of a dock that I've had good luck with and start at a depth I think they should be at and then adjust up and down from there as needed.
trying to do better at figuring out what depths the fish are at if you don't have electronics while on shore on off docks. What do you guys do? I usually make assumptions from past experience and give it a go. Both tight line or with float.
Thanks in advance as we are always learning and appreciate the knowlege CDC members have are willing to share. as this is a common question tried to find a thread on topic but didn't.
Jamesdean LIKED above post
That's what I would do too. When fishing from a dock I'll start with a portion of a dock that I've had good luck with and start at a depth I think they should be at and then adjust up and down from there as needed.
Warrensburger, Jamesdean LIKED above post
Same here, often if I’m not sure and I’m on a dock I just drop it to the bottom and slowly bring it up until I find them.
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Jamesdean, emptycooler LIKED above posthdhntr thanked you for this post
It’s a puzzle. If I had to pick one variable over all others it would be depth of the forage fish, in this part of the country that means shad. If you're dock fishing or without electronics then I’d say a combo of water clarity / sunlight penetration and water temp would be your best indicator. I do know this from my personal experiences, when I miss them, and I often do, it’s more often due to fishing too deep instead of too shallow. I believe not all fish hold at the same depth at one time in a body of water or even in a small area of the lake. If you have fish holding at 10 feet and some at 20 bet your bottom dollar the more shallow fish are more actively feeding and the ones at 20 are more neutral.
got crappie LIKED above post
I start shallow and work my way down, a lot of the time on the docks the fish are just under the floats, and remember crappie bite up, Now in cold water, 40 or below I go deep, all the way to the bottom, sometimes in 50 ft. of water, and come up slow, and hold the jig still as I can, fish seem to be a bit slower on the bite in the cold water. summertime shallow early, deep late, 6' all the way to 20'.
and all the above can change at any time. My friend Rick , the crappie professor keeps a diary of his fishing trips, and has for many years, he can go back and form a plan from past trips.
Thanks for the tips beagle. If that’s how you do it then that’s how we should all do it. I don’t know if anyone on here catches more fish than you.
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