Tyme's results at Patoka Lake 4/15/2013
We arrived at Walls Lake ramp about 1015 hours. Headed in to Dumplin Creek Bay and fished in mostly 12' of water. Water temp around 60 degrees.Set bobbers to a depth of 10' to 11'. We adjusted depth but most bites were deep.
We must have caught over 90 crappie between the three of us. However, only 3 keepers. The ones we kept were 12". All others were released because of their small length. Only caught a few that we debated about keeping but I talked Knute (The Heathen) into releasing some 8" to 9" fish.
Mrs.Tyme and myself used minnows while Knute (The Heathen) was using a crappie jig.
There was no rhyme or reason on a pattern. Most of the fish were in "open" water and not hugging the obvious stumps. Maybe there were submerged stumps that we did not know about.
Nothing up shallow. If we weren't in 12" of water, no bites not even the small guys.
Trolling motor worked all day long and that's good because of the wind we had today. The powers that be were also releasing a lot of water. The lake came down about 4 to 6 inches while we were there.
Left for the return trip home about 1800 hours.
All in all, it was a nice day on the water. Didn't get rained on,caught some fish, and no equipment breakdowns.:D
Not hugging any structure at Brookville
[QUOTE=Tyme2fish;512764]We arrived at Walls Lake ramp about 1015 hours. Headed in to Dumplin Creek Bay and fished in mostly 12' of water. Water temp around 60 degrees.Set bobbers to a depth of 10' to 11'. We adjusted depth but most bites were deep.
We must have caught over 90 crappie between the three of us. However, only 3 keepers. The ones we kept were 12". All others were released because of their small length. Only caught a few that we debated about keeping but I talked Knute (The Heathen) into releasing some 8" to 9" fish.
Mrs.Tyme and myself used minnows while Knute (The Heathen) was using a crappie jig.
There was no rhyme or reason on a pattern. Most of the fish were in "open" water and not hugging the obvious stumps. Maybe there were submerged stumps that we did not know about.
Nothing up shallow. If we weren't in 12" of water, no bites not even the small guys.
Trolling motor worked all day long and that's good because of the wind we had today. The powers that be were also releasing a lot of water. The lake came down about 4 to 6 inches while we were there.
Left for the return trip home about 1800 hours.
All in all, it was a nice day on the water. Didn't get rained on,caught some fish, and no equipment breakdowns.:D[/QUOTE]
Fished all day same thing at Brookville Lake 4 fish all day. not where they usually hang out just scattered.
Electric Fillet Knives come in handy
Years ago I started using an electric fillet knift to clean my fish. It makes the job so much faster and easier.
I also like to clean the bigger fish. When they get to around 12" they are easier to fillet.
Since I am not suppose to eat fried food anymore I don't keep and eat as many crappie as I use to. I bake the fish in an oven these days or grill them on the gas grill outside. Just wrap them up in aluminum foil and add butter and lemon juice to them before wrapping them up in the foil. It's not a tasty as when they are fried in a good batter but it's much healthier to eat.
I still have frozen fish fillets in my freezer from last year. I probably need to replace them as they are probably freezer burned by now.
I'm thinking about going today but it may rain a lot today. So I'm still trying to decide what to do.
[QUOTE=Tyme2fish;512858]I guess the slab crappie I'm used to catching at Lake Barkley and some Florida lakes has me prejudiced against anything under 9 inches. I was surprised to read the regulations and find out there is no size limit on crappie in Indiana.
We caught a lot of 7 to 9 inch crappie at Patoka but I released all of them.
No disrespect to those that keep the small ones. My filleting skills aren't that great on small fish and I stopped scaling and gutting them years ago.
We'll probably try again after these rains stop.[/QUOTE]