Magic piers? The key is location, location, location

It's not always what's around a pier that makes it a fish magnet, but where it's located.

Where a pier is located is more important than how it’s “sweetened”

Each year, Mr. Y sweetens his pier like a professional gardener. He strategically sinks around it brush treated with fish attractants, thins the brush out to limit snags, and leaves pockets within the vegetation to dunk his minnows and jigs. He’s rewarded with a scant number of puny crappie. Less than 50 yards away, his neighbor, Mr. Z waddles down to his pier, plunks his posterior in an easy chair and catches crappie after crappie. Mr. Y shakes his head and wonders why.

If Mr. Y would think of his pier and his neighbor’s pier as two stops along an underwater highway system, he would know why Mr. Z’s pier is better than his pier.

Just as most cars travel along interstate highways to reach their destination, most fish use underwater highways in the form of points, creek channels, and lake-bottom irregularities to get where they’re going.

The heavy traffic along a major highway encourages stops along the route in the form of malls, gas stations, rest rooms, and eateries. Similarly, fish migrating along underwater highways have stops along the way, such as rocks, stumps, brush, shad-infested eateries, and piers.

Secondary roads on land or beneath the water can’t match the heavy traffic flow on highways, nor will their stops on route attract the same number of travelers.

Unfortunately for Mr. Y, his pier is off the beaten path, despite being a short distance from Mr. Z’s pier. Mr Z’s pier is located along an underwater highway used by most fish. When fish are prompted to migrate to the shallows, more of them will take the main-traveled road to Mr. Z’s pier rather than the out-of the-way road to Mr. Y’s pier.

By sweetening his pier, Mr. Y may attract a few more fish, but his pier will never hold as many fish as his neighbor’s.

Mr. Z should take care not to ruin the fishing at his pier. Should Mr. Z do any landscaping that affects the underwater highway near his pier, the fish may seek an alternate route just as travelers look for alternate routes to avoid road construction.

The mobile bass or crappie fisherman using electronics can motor about and target piers situated near fish highways. The fisherman confined to one pier can only hope the pier is like Mr. Z’s.

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