---GREAT EXPLANATION !I would imagine the worm would just sink down beside the drop shot if casted from shore. I would never tell you not to experiment, but they call it a "vertical presentation" for a reason.
I do not think dropshotting would be the method of choice here. I'm thinking more of a Carolina rig. My thought on this would be you also want a suspending bait and this is all good but might need a little tweaking to get the bait to suspend the way desired. Let me know if you have any other rigging questions about carolina rigging or drop-shotting.
you guys use this technique for fishing for trout or bass from shore. i don't have a boat, but am interested in trying this to keep a stick bait 6-12 inches jus off the bottom. if you google search it, most sites talk about its application from a boat.
you guys use this technique for fishing for trout or bass from shore. i don't have a boat, but am interested in trying this to keep a stick bait 6-12 inches jus off the bottom. if you google search it, most sites talk about its application from a boat.
By stick bait I will assume you mean a hard jerkbait and not a senko type bait. Jerkbiats are "reaction" baits. 95% of the time you want that bait moving either ripping it hard and making it move2-3' per rip or hard twitches where the bait has a lot of side to side action but only moves forward a foot or less. Bass "react" UP almost always. It is the action of the bait over their head that causes the "reaction". With a drop shot or carolina rig neither of these presentations are possible. At best you are just moving the bait forward in a slow, almost actionless motion. I have experimented with the jerkbiat on a carolina rig with little to no success. They make jerkbaits that will dive to 8+ feet and suspend. My favorite brand of jerkbait is Lucky craft. Pricey but worth it. I have 3-4 different models in 2-3 different diving depths to cover the water column.