Throw a black/blue spinnerbait or chartreuse/white chatterbait first, then follow with a Texas-rigged creature bait skipped tight to the dock posts. đŁ
First move
- Lure: 3/8 oz chatterbait or 3/8â1/2 oz spinnerbait
- Color: black/blue in darker stain; chartreuse/white if itâs just slightly dirty
- Target zone: shady sides of dock posts, walkways, floats, and any current seam where runoff slides past the dock
- Retrieve: steady swim with short pauses; if they miss it, slow down and tick the posts
Why it should work
Heavy rain usually pushes bass to the cleaner edge of the dirty water and turns docks into ambush cover. With stained water, bass rely more on vibration and silhouette than perfect visibility, so thump and flash beat finesse early. In your conditions, the best window is often the first stable day after the rain, especially around sunrise and the last hour of daylight. The forecast trend matters too: rising pressure after the front can make them a little sluggish, so keep the presentation simple and close to cover.
Adjust if
- If the water is muddy, go darker and louder: black/blue, heavier blade, slower retrieve.
- If itâs only lightly stained, switch to white/shad or green pumpkin with chartreuse highlights.
- If fish arenât chasing, pick up a Texas-rigged craw or creature bait in green pumpkin/black flake and pitch dead-still beside the posts.
Backup plan
Try a black frog or buzzbait around dock shade if thereâs some surface chop and the rain didnât muddy it too hard. If the docks have deeper water nearby, a 3/8 oz jig with a black/blue craw trailer is the âdonât overthink itâ optionâskip it in, let it sit, then drag it slowly out. If you want a ready-made starter box, something like the FONMANG 322-Piece Fishing Lures Kit covers the basics, and the PLUSINNO 137Pcs Tackle Box is handy for rigging options.
Keep it tight to cover and donât be afraid to slow way downâafter rain, the dock fish often bite like theyâre late for work. đ











