Winter Pool Crappie

By
Gabby
October 23, 2008
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| With most of the lakes being dropped to
winter pool the crappie are moving trying to find a
area that has a stable water level and suitable water temps. When
the crappie are moving around like this there will be some crappie
in fairly shallow water and some in
deeper water. The reason for this is because the
crappie will not really relate to or hold to cover for long periods
of time as long as the water levels are dropping and unstable. The
crappie will be what a lot of fisherman call being scattered all
over the lake. The one thing that you can always count on when
trying to find scattered crappie is that if you find the schools of
bait fish the bass and crappie will be close to the same area. The
falling water makes the schools of bait fish pull away from shore
line cover and into and over deeper main lake water and the crappie
will follow. This makes the fish hard to pattern because they are
not relating to wood or weeds or rocks like they normally do.When
you are faced with trying to locate and catch crappie that are
scattered one of the best methods can be to troll for them. There
are several fish that can be trolled for in the fall with good
results at times. Fish like the musky or the walleye and crappie all
can be caught by trolling the right baits in the right locations at
the right times. Some guides will use trolling just about altogether
in the fall to catch fish. Trolling for fall crappie can be very
rewarding if you do a few simple things first. Make sure that you
look for the schools of bait fish on your fish finder and try to
follow it with your boat as close as you can. And try different
types of baits in several different colors. But your bait selection
is fairly simple try small tube baits or grubs or the crappie flies.
And also be sure to use live minnows in a large and small size also.
I have been trolling live minnows in the late fall
early winter
for crappie and have caught keeper large mouth and small mouth bass
and walleye. So this is always a bonus to keep in mind. You will
have to experiment with different size and color baits to try to
keep the action going during the day. The rods that work best while
trolling are longer light to medium action rods with a good back
bone and a light action tip. Use spinning or spin cast reels . Rig
up several rods with different artificial baits and some live minnow
rigs. Once you have located a area that you want to fish cast out
several rods around the boat and slowly make your way along with the
trolling motor
or let the wind drift you along. It is not uncommon to have fish on
more than one pole at a time. This is when it can get exciting. The
key to trolling is to locate a area that has a long or large area of
water that you can work in a single pass with out having to set up
again. Examples of this is like following a creek channel a stump
roll or a bluff wall . Look for these type of areas to fish. Give
trolling a try this fall it can be a very productive way to fish.
You can Email me at
gabbysfishingfever@yahoo.com |
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Comments peter@fishin.com