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Tired of fishing with your GPS and finding
nothing, tired of dragging that Carolina rig all over the bottom
of the lake, tired of trying to come across that magic spot on
the lake. Well you may be ready to try your hand at fishing rocky
riprap or seawalls, those obvious shoreline, hugging features
found on lakes, rivers and reservoirs across the county. These
forms of cover can held bass throughout the year. These spots
are simple to find and are easy to fish. Here are some tip for
fishing riprap and seawalls.
SEAWALL PATTERN: When theres a large surface mat of water
hyacinths has blown up against a long stretch of seawall. When
you tie on a Gary Yamamoto custem bait 3 inches fat baby craw,
with a big bullet weight and begin picking the floating vegation
apart. Fishing floating mats against a seawall or near the seawall,
theres usually clean water underneath it all the way to
the wall. This is a good spot do to combined horizontal cover
with vertical and its open underneath. That crawl space will
attract a lot of space.
Flip right through the top of the mat and start at the deep
edge. But dont forget to fish the seam between the mat
and the seawall.
GIVE THE SEAWALL A HUG: One technique is paralleling the wall
with hard plastic lures and buzz baits. Also hugging the wall
with a lizard, tube, worm and creature is just as important.
One of the most important things if your pitching against the
wall is to get the bait to fall as close to the wall If you are
using a baitcaster you have to feed line out to allow the bait
to fall up against the wall. If you are using a spinning reel
its the same just dont close the bell until the bait
hits the bottom. The other you can do is pitch the lure toward
the wall and have it hit 1 to 3 inches before the wall, and then
peel off line. It tends to fall more toward the wall.
FALL PATTERN: When fall comes the bass are migrating into
and out of creeks, so the riprap provides an easy, dependable
way to intercept bass. Fishing in the fall the bass are moving
shallow or coming back out and they have to go through bridges
to do that. So riprap along bridges would be a prime pattern
Some good lures for this would be a shad colored crank bait like
Rebel Wee R or 5A and 6A Bombers to crank the rocks, also the
bomber long A jerk bait is another good choice. Cast parallel
to the rock line and concentrate on deflecting the lure as often
as possible. The biggest key in the fall is repetitive casting,
you ask why, because the bass have seen lures all summer. So
its important to cast repetition to a good looking area like
a point of the riprap or a tree or brush laying down along the
riprap.
PARALLEL PARKING FOR BASS: When it comes to bass fish there
are not to many hard and fast rules but when you come across
a seawall and lines of riprap, one rule rings come to mind. Take
a casting angle that enables them to be paralleled with a lure.
Another lure of choice for fishing seawalls and riprap or bulkheads
are throwing a topwater and spinner baits in the morning, then
a lipless crank bait or shallow diving crank bait later in the
day. But regardless of the lure, always parallel them as much
as possible and at least 45 degrees them, depending on the water
depth and position the fish are in. Remember to put your lure
as close to the wall as possible, or even bang it off the wall
as you bring it back to the boat.
RIPRAP ROADMAP: Riprap can be intimidating to some fisherman
or woman. Whether it is the foundation of a bridge, current break
or erosion control for a stretch of shoreline, riprap can look
over whelming in some situations. You may have riprap two miles
long and it all looks the same, so where do you start bass fishing.
You got to understand what lies beneath the surface is not exactly
the same. Its important to locate irregular features in an otherwise
uniform line of riprap. So you look for visible things like logs,
treetop or flotsam that has drifted against the rocks or an unusually
large rock is always worth fishing. But there are concealed irregular
features that will hold a lot more bass. On lakes, a small ditch
or creek may run into the riprap and come to a stop. Usually,
a bridge crosses a channel and there will be a culvert nearby
on one side of the riprap foundation. This can be an outstanding
spot.0
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