All articles you read will say the fish will be on the bottom in 40 + fow. Then Richard Gene posts a video of him catching them on shallow flats. Your not the only one lost during this time of year.
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I am struggling to catch any crappie once the water temp drops below 50 degrees. I have been primarily fishing Logan Martin, and I know the crappie are around somewhere but I haven't been able to figure them out.
What types of patterns do yall look for once the water temp gets in the 40s? Are there certain depths of water you look for, or depths you rule out?
I did ok shooting docks and fishing brush in 15 to 20 ft until the water temp dropped more. Thanks in advance for any info, I still have a lot to learn.
Chuckster2 LIKED above post
All articles you read will say the fish will be on the bottom in 40 + fow. Then Richard Gene posts a video of him catching them on shallow flats. Your not the only one lost during this time of year.
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I think each lake is different. Two of the lakes I fish don't even have 40' water. I would use electronics and scan and look for them and baitfish. Sometimes they are right on the bottom and hard to see.
wahanlin LIKED above post
I’m having the same problem. I fish a big creek a lot where the deepest water is 25 ft. I know it’s full of crappie. I caught them consistently all summer even days close to 100 degrees. Last few trips I can’t find fish anywhere. My last trip I spent a lot of time scanning just seeing if I could see anything. Only thing I could find was bait fish. Maybe Dave is right and they are on the bottom. I’m not great at reading a graph so next time I’m gonna try fishing the bottom around bait fish.
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wahanlin LIKED above post
Find the baitfish schools, Crappie will be there or very close by.
When the Crappie aren't feeding, and the water is 40 and below sometimes they will lay flat on the bottom. I've caught Crappie in those conditions with mud on their fins and belly. I'm not a deep-water guy and typically catch my fish in 10 feet of water or less year-round. Finding the baitfish is always the key. Next is depth of fish since Crappie will come up to hit a bait, but don't look down. Then bait color and size and finally the action of the bait.
Especially in winter the baitfish school you see may be small gills or stripe instead of shad. If you don't catch any Crappie on the first school you find then keep moving. The perfect setup is a bait school with large fish just below the school. In my experience these are usually Crappie following the shad and picking of weaker members of the group.
I think when you find Crappie on vertical structure, they are waiting for baitfish to move by to rush out and get a quick meal. This is the reason when fishing laydowns I keep moving looking to just catch the one or two active school on each piece of structure. I find I catch more by continuing to move rather than anchoring or tying up and sitting in one place.
Damion Kidd, wahanlin LIKED above post
They tend to pull off cover and chase bait balls at that temp. Check shallow flats and creek channels. Trolling the creek channels or casting a float and jig on flats is best this time of year. Pm me and I'll give you my number. We can talk or make go for a little on the water lesson.
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The crappie will not be far behind the bait. The bait is looking for warmer water when it is available.
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass alongwahanlin LIKED above post
I can only tell you what works for me. I fish different than most but catch a few.
Damion Kidd LIKED above post
Attack123 LIKED above post
I definitely appreciate your advice. I do think there is a lot to be said for continuing to move around and find active fish. I am better than I used to be but still working on that, continuing to move and try new spots.
I have been focusing on targeting cover, and I am going to try targeting bait fish, particularly tight grouped balls of bait that look like they have predators under them.
I haven't been fishing in any water deeper than 25 feet, and I am going to look there as well on logan martin. It seems complicated this time of year, like the fish could be quite shallow or very deep or anywhere in between, which just means I need to spend more time looking. My outboard motor has been out of commission for a while which has made it harder to cover a lot of water.
I enjoy the challenge of figuring fish out, and I recognize that I need to stop fishing what I want to fish and let the fish tell me where they are and what they want. Thanks everyone for the input.
Damion Kidd LIKED above post