Good report! Congratulations on finding them and thanks for sharing
The Wastehouse in the East Pearl River is a favorite for many Crappie Anglers. It's Mouth is located right above the I-10 Bridge on the East Pearl. This time of year I start tracking how far the bait have migrated into The Wastehouse simply because the Crappie usually follow. Well, not Yet. One fish has moved in, saturating every deep hole where clouds of bait are, shading every place Crappie like to shade, that is a multitude of species of GAR.
The Gar are everywhere, while fishing I saw several Gar swim by with small Crappie, Bluegill, Pearch, in their mouths. It looks like they were foul hooked with a tear along the bone but no its small fish we like to eat too. When I found Crappie they were tucked tight in heavy cover and shade. They were hungry too. Pulling out a trick from Ketchn I downsized to some #6 Matzuo Jigheads with a bait I get from Jason's Jigs Store on EBay. Here is the description
Jason's Crappie Stinger Iridescent Prism
The Crappie ate these well but once the active fish were done I switched to Shiners. This is where things got interesting as the Stingers got the bite started but I threw almost every fish back. The Shiners put the fish in the box. Another comment from Ketchn was as a Shiner hits the hot water it dies which was true for most of the Shiners hooked in the mouth. A Cajun way to hook Saltwater live bait is thru the eyes. When I switched to hooking the Shiners that way a fish was on before it had a chance to die. I'm looking forward to the Crappie Wisperer to read this and comment if He knows why the Shiners live longer eye hooked.
Water clarity is the best for Mid August in The Wastehouse I have seem in 7 years. The temps are well up in the high 80's at 7am. That's high 80's under the trolling motor where the transducer is located. Most of the older crowd know where the big, not part of the Food Chain, rod bending, fighting Crappie are, deep in the Main Channel. Since I'm a dedicated Single Pole angler Carolina Rigging Shiners and dropping them on the bottom in the passes does not appeal to me personally but it is effective with current flow to concentrate the fish. The Gar and Catfish bycatch is unappealing too.
Good report! Congratulations on finding them and thanks for sharing
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heavenornot.netRojo thanked you for this post
I’ve been using some jigs very similar from Bobs Jigs. Been working good for me.
Rojo LIKED above post
Yep I can’t stand gar. Lose a few crankbaits to them most summers.
Get a bite, like a dog shaking a rat, then SNIP and nothing. There went $7
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Shoals Area Crappie AssociationRojo LIKED above post
Sounds like a nice trip
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass alongRojo LIKED above post
Just checked with Bob, he still has the crappie stinger mold if anyone is interested. They’ve been working good for me lately.
You can see the gar circling the brush on my lake too. Those and flatheads is why you see the tails of crappie all beaten up this time of year trying to duck around the brush as one of the predators are chasing them around. Scott
Very Interesting post with good information, thank you.
I’d rather catch sacalait, but I’d rather eat alligator garfish. Anytime I have the fortune of getting my hands on an alligator garfish at least 3 feet long, I’m cleaning that thing. In my honest opinion, alligator garfish is the best freshwater fish I’ve ever tasted. I buy 10-15 lb roasts every chance I get. The small backstraps get cut into nuggets and fried, and the huge roasts get turned into chicken fried steak or hash brown/green onion Patties. Alligator garfish are so underrated on the table.
As teens we fished all night on Lake Hermitage below Belle Chase for Huge Alligator Gar. Some New Orleans Firefighters had a camp at the end of the drive, right at the mouth where the bayou opened up into the Lake. Monsters were there back then. We cooked a many a gar backstrap too. Not too fond of them today since you can't drop a shiner anywhere near one. Toothy Critters just get a snear out of me today.
We used to call gar freshwater marlin , ones up around 5 foot long and or larger would often go to the air , The mighty trinity river was full of really large gar back then , seen several that looked like part of a telephone pole just under the surface with eyes as big as baseballs if you get to see them really up close and personal .
big time summer fun for us teens to go play with , a few spots would get us several hookups per visit . now the trinity still has them in the lower reaches of the river ,but up in the dfw area they seem to be long gone , have not seen a huge one in many moons .
there are several guide services down that way these days that specialize in river monsters and ketch and release ONLY now due to the onslaught they suffered for decades and the subsequent demise of the populations in the upper river system .
We never ate them ,but to be very sure some of the gas stations down in south Texas had them there deli inside things going on and often had "garballs" on the menu ....
sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales