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Dock Shooting For Lake Of The Ozarks Slabs


Phil Lilley

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By John Neporadny Jr.

“Dock shooting” is one of the most effective tactics for catching Lake of the Ozarks crappies tucked up in the shady areas of docks.

A local guide who shoots for crappie at the lake is Terry Blankenship. He had to learn the technique in order to compete with the shooters on his home waters of Lake of the Ozarks since the lake contains thousands of docks.

The technique can pay big dividends for those who learn how to become expert marksmen since the tactic reaches fish that are inaccessible for anglers with 10- or 11-foot dipping poles.

“The tendency of crappies is that they like to get under the darkest areas of those docks,” says Blankenship. “A lot of times whenever you shoot a jig way back into those dark areas a lot of your better fish are the first ones that will bite and they will bite really quickly in 2 to 4 foot of water.”

Blankenship’s favorite skipping lure is also a large plastic projective, a 3-inch Bobby Garland Slab Slayer attached to a 1/16-ounce Bobby Garland Mo’ Glo jighead. He believes the 1/16-ounce jighead is the ideal size for skipping, since a 1/32-ounce head is too light to propel the lure and a 1/8-ounce model tends to plow into the water and dives too fast.

The local guide skips his lures with 6-pound test Vicious Panfish HiVis Yellow line that allows him to detect any line movement indicating a bite when the lure falls in the dark spaces of the dock. “One of the key things is to get a line that doesn’t coil up real bad,” says Blankenship, who soaks his spool with line conditioner before a tournament.

A good lure launcher is another key to effective dock shooting. When he was a kid, Blankenship learned he could sling persimmons farther on a longer hickory stick, so he relies on the same principle today with his shooting rod. He uses a 7-foot Cabela’s XMLTi medium-action spinning rod that has plenty of flexibility for loading up the line like a bowstring yet is stout enough to allow Blankenship to control his shot in close quarters.

Relying on Humminbird 997 and 998 side imaging units have made it easier for Blankenship to find the best docks among the thousands to choose from on Lake of the Ozarks. “For crappie fishing that side imaging is one of the greatest tools I have ever seen for locating fish,” the local angler says. “If there is a row of 10 docks if I take my time and check those docks out, I can minimize my time greatly by finding the one dock with fish on it instead of having to fish all 10. I can go about anywhere on the lake and feel like I can catch fish, whereas before I felt like I had to work a little harder at it.”

His side imaging units have taught Blankenship that the looks of a dock above water can be deceiving compared to what’s happening below the surface. Most anglers target the dock wells and walkways where they suspect brush piles are hidden, but Blankenship notices more crappies under the swim platform and large deck areas of docks. “Those are the ones that the fish really seem to school under more than just the 4-foot walkways,” he says.

When scanning a uniform row of docks, Blankenship sets his unit’s side imaging range at 40 feet to show the most detail on his screen. With his unit fine-tuned, Blankenship can discern the difference between crappies and baitfish on his graph. “Crappies basically show up as a bunch of little specks,” says Blankenship. “The difference between crappies and shad is the shad seem to be more of a cloud on the screen whereas crappies tend to be more of a bunch of specks.” Blankenship originally suspected the specks were gizzard shad when he first started using the side imaging unit, but he soon learned the images were crappies when he would shoot his jig into the targeted area and kept catching fish.

For information on lodging and other facilities at the Lake of the Ozarks or to receive a free vacation guide, call the Lake of the Ozarks Convention & Visitors Bureau at 1-800-FUN-LAKE or visit the Lake of the Ozarks Convention and Visitors Bureau web site at funlake.com.

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very good article thnx for posting it phil. i saw a program on outdoor channel with Wally Marshal showing the technique for shooting docks and the information in this article is very close. I practiced in the back yard all winter and it didnt take long to get it down. I like a 1/16 #2 sickle hook jig and the bobby garland slab slayer does work well. but so does the strike king mr crappie joker.

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It's fun to do but I fear its days are numbered. You should hear the non-fishing dock owners describe witnessing this practice.

It is going to result in a regulation that prohibits fishing "close" to docks entirely if we aren't careful.

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Wrench i do not even try it anymore. All the boating has resulted in many docks having 6-8 cables. It is especially bd in Indian creek below litle Indian that side.It getting like that all over. I never was much for doing it anyway. To lazy insuppose. I will go through the floatation sometimes though. I took this new 7 ft spining rod down on the dock yeasterday evening and played with it a bit. Its action will let me shoot a cast pretty far and never get over 1 ft off the water. I am going to work with that.

I have never minded anyone shooting the dock. Only thing is I do not like them sticking the bow ofvthere boats into the same well with my Boat. That is how I got the bent up prop. I also have a empty stall. that is blocked on the end by a 2x12. It is nothing about fishing it is about additional dock frame support because there is no lift in that side.

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I know when I first started, I thought I had to be close to the dock, but it's best if you back off about 10-15 yds.

Love doing it.

I think there is a lake in So. IL, Lake of Egypt that has regs that you can't cast within a certain amt of yards to a dock.

I'm sure there are others.

Can't imagine they would do this on this lake. Docks are an important structure. But anything can happen.

You just need to respect people's docks. Jigs are cheap, if you think you might cause damage, break it off!

@lozcrappie

 

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It's not the "retrieving snagged baits" that is the issue I don't think. Even the best dock shooters overshoot from time to time, and when a person is out on their deck ir in their yard and a guy comes by shooting for specks, all the person hears is "WHAP!" when jighead meets encapsulated dock float.

No harm is done, but let's face it....when someone walks by your truck and you hear "WHAP!" Your hackles are gonna come up aren't they? And you're gonna run over to see what's up. :)

Those people don't even know what "shooting docks" is about, hell most don't even know why you'd even want to fish THEIR dock because they never catch fish from it. LOL

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So on lake Egypt it is prohibited to fish off of a dock ?

we have had this discussion before. Dock owners can fish off their dock, but anyone else can't cast within 10 feet of their dock. Egypt is owned by a private power company, i.e., just like LOZ.

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