Shooting Crappie Jigs
Posted: Wednesday, January 27, 2010
by Roscoe Ledbetter
http://www.catchingcrappie.com
Shooting jigs under docks can be a very productive way of loading your live well with crappie. Though mostly a technique used in the summer, it can also produce in the fall and spring. Crappie love structure and the shade provided by a dock is just as much a crappie magnet as is a submerged cedar tree. On a lot of lakes, the owners of some docks sink trees under them. This makes for a super crappie magnet.
Shooting jigs will allow you to get your jig into spots that you just can't get to by conventional casting techniques. A lot of times I will lie on my stomach and shoot under docks 5 to 10 times the distance that a norm cast could go. This technique has put a lot of fish in the boat. We have fished docks behind fishermen that weren't shooting jigs and have caught more and bigger crappie than they did. Even though they thought they had caught them all. One more tip. I usually like a 6' to 6'6" rod for crappie fishing. However, for shooting, a 5' seems to work best. I don't hit the docks with the tips of my rods with the shorter rods.
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