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Thread: Late summer pattern

  1. #11
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    Oct 2011
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    snowbird,

    I have not been on the docks for the past couple of weeks due to family functions, but I expect to find crappies there until late in the fall when the docks get taken up around here. I will know more this evening, if the weather permits me to get out.

    However, during the day I also expect to find them deep and bottom oriented during bright hot days in and outside of the outside weed line and not in the mood for taking much of any size or speed offerings. IMO they continue to graze on tidbits pretty much all the time, but become much more active and feed up in the water column and on larger offerings in low light such as very early and very late in the day. Where fishing pressure is heaviest that includes night time, especially for the larger sizes.

    I general I fish crappies during low light periods both due to their natural tendencies and to their responses to fishing pressure, which is normally heavy around here, especially in the summer. In fact, I seldom fish them during the middle of the day at any time of the year, although occasionally I will do so and at times find a decent bite, although usually of smaller fish. I keep my tackle right in the car all summer and will at times take a break from an errand to do a little mid-day catch and release fishing, sometimes successfully, sometimes not, although I seldom get completely skunked. The scattered crappies I occasionally take during those periods point to crappie residence that I will concentrate on when I have the time to work more likely times of the day. IMO they are around if not active even then. I generally find crappie bite best either before or after bass bite has tapered off and sunnie bite has also. If you can find breakline perch, it often pays to wait out their end of bite as daylight ebbs. Crappies may follow their decreased activity. Some of my favorite crappie spots are multi-species feeding areas, and there is often a pattern regarding which species are most active and in what order. One other thing I key on is presence or unexpected absence of sunnies. If they are not out and about during their normal activity periods in their normal areas; something has disturbed them enough to put them down and crappies are even more timid, unless fully active and IMO actually key on sunnie alarm; so I do also. Crappie fishing then is likely to be difficult to completely unproductive.

    This time of the year crappies can get real fussy about size, color, and pattern of offerings as well as presentations, especially when the sun is high in the sky and when there is little or no cloud cover. In a tough bite I generally downsize and slow down my action to almost nothing for best results, but if that does not work I go in the other direction. If that does not work, I move. I usually have backup locations in mind before I even wet the line for the first time anywhere. Usually I don't work a non-productive location for more than a half an hour, before moving on.

    One personal superstition, that I find has worked out far too often, is the fish on the first presentation. That often results in no further fish. It is the second and third offering and how they produce that I normally key on first, that and my confidence in the location. Far too often that immediate first fish is all that comes of a spot. Whether that is generally accurate or not, I do not know, but it seems to plague my fishing.

  2. #12
    jackie53's Avatar
    jackie53 is offline Crappie.com Legend * Crappie.com Supporter
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    " Kids Corner"
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  3. #13
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    no1son,

    Thank you for your reply ... I was not very clear. I have been fishing in low light ... first light before dawn in the mornings and 6:00pm until complete dark in the evenings. I was just wondering if the bright days had pushed the fish out and they were not coming in as close in the mornings and evenings. It may also be that the lakes are really down and that has pushed the crappies beyond my reach from shore.

    Your observations about the sunnies is interesting. Last night, the sunnies were up on the shoreline. The night before, they were out ... I caught one in deep water on a vibrax.

    jackie53: " Kids Corner" .... should I be insulted For some of us old farts, shore fishing is a lot healthier than a boat ... especially standing and walking (or in my case riding a mt biking) into places is healthier than sitting for long periods of time.

  4. #14
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    How dense am I!

    Lake levels way down changes the usable and comfort structures and light penetration. That moves the forage, too. Not much you can do from a dock when water levels change dramatically. Normally I catch my crappies along the dock leg rather than at the end, and I have long docks available; so I would move out to farther breaks, but the proper breaks may just not be there.

    But last fall I found crappies at various depths on the inside of the cross T. They were laying in the proper degree of overhead shade rather than at a given depth. When they are in at the docks, mostly they lay in the dock shadow far more often than roaming out in open water.

    If your heat wave finally broke like ours has, don't give up on the docks too soon. Especially not if you are now getting some rain like we are that is restoring your water levels at all.

  5. #15
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    Tried two docks this evening.

    The first is a short dock, just barely beyond the outside weedline, and the Park Board cleared away the weeds for about 50 feet along the one side. Sunnies were around and some bass for those who could cast far enough, but the crappies were missing in action. Left after about half an hour or so.

    The second is a long dock well out beyond the weed line past a couple of deeper breaks to water over 20 feet deep. The take was 15 small crappies between 8:00 and 9:15, plus a few sunnies and a dink perch. First crappies were deep at the breaks out to 20' on a pearl 1" shad on a 64th oz jig head. Initial bite was so soft that I doubt I would have noticed it without the noodle tip on my little stick. Later on the crappies moved up the breaks and up in the water column and the bite also got more aggressive taking a pearl BG baby shad. Size improved too, but this is a small fish lake; so there were no slabs and probably no fish actually made 9". All fish came out of the dock shadow fishing on the side were the slight current flowed under the dock carrying the little jig back under with it.

    I packed it in about dark, when I could no longer see my line.

    One other guy on the dock ended up taking a walleye about 14" and a 30" muskie casting a fat crank bait. The walleye was at the outside weed line, but the muskie was under a tree right up at the shoreline. He was rigged for bass; so there was a bit of excitement around the muskie.

  6. #16
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    Nice reports no1son. thank you
    Remember "I" before "E," except in Budweiser

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