You sweep the G-Ratt Baits Rocker across a school hanging mid-column, watching it glide, rock, and flash on forward-facing sonar before one bass breaks from the pack and smashes it. The ribbed body kicks vibration through the water, the forked tail flicks like a wounded shad, and the bait hangs perfectly horizontal—triggering fish that won’t touch anything else.
Hover it past a suspended school in 20–30 feet and watch the Rocker dart, tilt, and hang like a panicked baitfish—bass peel off from surprising distances, using the vibration to zero in before hammering it right as the tail kicks sideways.
Nose-hook it on a 1/8–1/4 oz hover jig or ball head so it hangs horizontal and rocks side-to-side on small rod shakes.
Yes—the subtle glide and vibration perfectly mimic small, wounded forage that suspended bass key on.
Absolutely—texpose it for weedless use and let the ribbed body and tail add extra kick without overpowering the blade.
3/16–1/4 oz is ideal for 15–30 feet; go heavier only in current or deep wintering schools.
A medium spinning rod with braid to fluoro leader gives sensitivity for hover strolling and quick hook penetration at distance.