[VIDEO] How to Fish Grasslines with Crankbaits

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In this video, Jonathon VanDam shows how a crankbait lights up grasslines. He parallels grassline edges, finds isolated clumps with forward sonar, and rips the bait free for reaction strikes. He explains why wind stacks baitfish on breaks. while also showing how depth and angle keep a crankbait in the strike zone.

Why Crankbaits on Grasslines

VanDam focuses on the grassline because it concentrates cover, current, and baitfish. Wind stacks forage on the edge, and bass set ambushes. A crankbait tearing free from strands often flips followers into biters. It’s fast, visual, and well suited for pressured water.

The Pattern

Most bites come along a 12- to 14-foot break with scattered clumps. VanDam works long parallels to stay in the strike zone. He varies speed, adds short pauses, and snaps the bait clean when it ticks grass. Meanwhile, he watches live sonar for fresh clumps and roaming schools, then adjusts angles as the wind shifts.

Cadence That Triggers

VanDam runs into multiple quality bites on short stretches once the cadence clicks. He leans on spot-lock after a first strike, then repeats the same angle for follow-ups. Several fish come in quick bursts, which underlines how small groups stack on one clump or bend. It’s a repeatable sequence for natural lakes all over the country.

Boat Setup