As an aspiring crappie angler 20 years ago, I was enthralled after seeing a Bill Dance fishing show where his guest was a little-known Pickwick crappie guide named Roger Gant. Gant had developed a method of trolling that he called side pulling or simply pulling. Gant discovered the tactic one day during a fishing trip with his father when the two of them hung their crappie poles on the side of the boat and drifted while eating lunch. The pair caught fish afteGant still fishes sideways for crappie on Pickwick. Over time he has developed his tactic, which now accounts for a specific boat design offered by War Eagle Boats and a specially designed rod for B’n’M Poles. He and his brother Bill Gant guide almost 250 days out of the year. During a recent interview with Roger Gant, we discussed why he continues to side-troll even with the popularity of tight-lining and other trolling tactics.
“For one, with tight-lining there are so many rods in the water, it’s hard to tell when there’s a bite and which rod it’s on because there’s so much going on in the front of the boat,” Gant says. “I know it works and that a lot of tournament anglers do extremely well with it, but as a guide I have to show my clients a way to fish that’s both easy and fun to do.”
One tip that Gant offered for crappie anglers fishing this time of year is to forgo the use of a minnow on the end of a jig.
“Crappie bite light, light, light this time of year, and they also tend to short strike,” he says. “The jigs we make and use are 1/8-ounce hair jigs, and the hair only extends about a quarter of an inch beyond the hook. Any little bite we see on these sensitive rods is a fish we can catch, not a short strike that only gets the minnow.”
To learn more about Gant’s deadly side-pulling tactic, visit the B’n’M Poles website at www.bnmpoles.com or contact Roger Gant at Superpro Guide Service on Pickwick Lake at 731-689-5666.
Phillip Gentry
pgentry6@bellsouth.net
