When they biting like that try down sizing your jig. Also the addition of some slab sauce or a nibble will make all the difference.
I went out early the other morning to lake Ray Roberts in North Texas. Water temp showed 84.5F at 6am. I was fishing bridge pillars and flooded timber. 5-10mph winds fishing from a kayak was tough to stay in place. I caught 3 fish (not including a small channel cat and bluegill). I was fishing a tandem jig lowering it down next to the standing trees and casting it along bridge pilings. I got a ton of tiny *tap tap* bites on the submerged trees, but was barely able to land any fish (compared to the number of bites I was getting). The fish seemed to hit between 8-12 feet down in 20 ft of water.
Curious to know what y'all thought. Am I too late on the hookset or maybe the fish were just too small? I'll hopefully get out on the water soon and try again. Unfortunately it's tough fishing a lot of water in a kayak so I'm also having trouble figuring out where to look for fish this time of year with the warm water. Different boat ramps have different structure nearby (bridges at some, flooded timber at others, and submerged brush piles at another.) Any insight is greatly appreciated on techniques and locations to start looking.
I was happy about this guy. 13.5" and pretty thick bodied.
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When they biting like that try down sizing your jig. Also the addition of some slab sauce or a nibble will make all the difference.
I ordered some slab sauce a couple of days ago wondering if they were grabbing it and spitting it back out instantly. I'll try it out when it comes in. I tried injecting some tubes with crappie nibbles (using a syringe works great) but it didn't seem to make a whole lot of difference. I caught two on the crappie nibble tube and the big one on a white curly tail grub. Unfortunately I was using the smallest jig I own. It was a 1/32 jig with a sickle hook. My local Bass pro, academy, and field and stream don't have anything smaller. I'd have to order them online.
Another thought I had was too light of a jig. It was pretty windy and the wind would put a bow the line some due to the double 1/32 jigs. I wonder if I had a heavier jig if it would help the line stay tight to detect bites better?
Thanks for the response!
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Just watch that bow in the line, if it jumps, set the hook!
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Proud Member of Team Geezer!rippyro LIKED above post
“Tap tap” is usually indicative of a small bluegill to me.
I can do all things through Christ, who strengthens me.rippyro LIKED above post
If the bites are coming at less than 15ft deep, and the fish are relating to vertical cover, I'd use this technique : Crappie Pappy Article
And from my experiences, Crappie will tend to be on the "shady side" of this cover.
Don Fischer LIKED above post
Very well written. Thank you. I was almost doing the opposite out there trying to figure them out. I would start at 6 feet and very slowly lower jig in the water. If I didn't get any bites I would strip another foot of line off and lower it further. I would continue that process until I thought I was finding the fish. I would start to get a consistent small *tap tap* but no fish when attempting to set the hook. Never tried reeling up though them though. I'll give it a shot next time
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You were 100% right. I've been out quite a bit since then and can now pretty well distinguish the difference in the bites (for the most part) lol bluegill have seemed to be a more erratic fast tap tap while the crappie bites are *thump* haha at least that's the best I can describe it.
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ET Fish LIKED above post