The Fayette Citizen-Sports Page

Friday, December 15, 2000

The doodlin method of bass fishing

(Starting this week will be an in-depth four part, four week series about certain plastic worm fishing methods. Plastic worms are by far the most versatile lure there is today. The plastic worm comes in many sizes, shapes, colors and styles and can be used in almost any imaginable situation using many worm methods.)

Part I

"Doodlin"

This method is used mostly for spotted bass but is also used for large mouth bass. The doodlin method involves fishing a four or five inch straight tail or curly tailed worm rigged on a unique rigging scheme and presented Texas style to the bass.

First, thread on a three-sixteenth ounce, five-sixteenth ounce, or one-fourth ounce bullet type weight on your line above a "glass head" (which should be either red opr chartreuse) above a real sharp 1/0 to 2/0 light wire hook.

I always use the rig on six to eight pound green fishing line for spotted bass that are holding on deep structure sych as submerged brushpiles, boat docks, standing timber, and stumps.

For largemouth bass, however, I primarily use the doodlin method for inactive bass, post frontal bass, and for bass relating to boat dock structure.

Now once I find the type of structure that the bass (whether spotted or largemouth) are holding on or around, I will cast my worm presentation out and allow it to sink to the bottom.

I will then slowly crawl the worm until I feel the structure. Then I will doodle or shake the worm in place by shaking my rod tip back and forth which, in part, makes the glass bead and bullet weight come in contact with each other making a clacking noise in the water.

The clacking noise draws bass to the worm and causes the bass to impulsively strike the worm.

I hope that what I have shared with you today will help you catch a lot more bass.

Next week's method will be "Pitching."

Good fishing

Chris Foster

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