I've heard some say they start trolling cranks at those temps in the Western part of the state. Me personally, I'd slow down to 0.5mph Pulling (or Pushing) jigs in water at those temps. You may even want to try Spider Rigging
Been out 3 times in the last week longlining on Falls Lake and nary a bite despite seeing tons of fish and bait on sonar views and knowing that my fin spin jigs are at or above their depth at about 10-12 ft at 1 mph.
water is about 51-54 degrees and stained with only about one ft of clarity. Various color jig heads and plastics, mostly bobby garland s’trollers.
Will tipping with minnows make a huge difference? Fish will be moving into shallow water in the next month I would assume but figure I must be doing something wrong to have zero luck so far. Any advice?
I've heard some say they start trolling cranks at those temps in the Western part of the state. Me personally, I'd slow down to 0.5mph Pulling (or Pushing) jigs in water at those temps. You may even want to try Spider Rigging
My thoughts are slow down too. I single pole fish and have to hold it in front of them to get a reaction sometimes.
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heavenornot.netcglarsen thanked you for this post
Same for me. Once they react I can speed up a bit, but just reeling it by them ain’t workin for me either.
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SuperDave336 LIKED above post
I don't longline at all and surely some of the members here know FAR better than I would, but does the average underspin actually run 10-12 feet deep when pulled at 1MPH? I don't know how heavy they are, but if they're your standard 1/16 ounce type jig or maybe even 1/8 ounce, I would think at that speed that they'd pull pretty close to the surface. Crappie feed up, yes, but if the water really is stained and if the water temps are fairly low, I'm not sure that they're chasing 8 or 10 feet to clobber a jig. I'd agree with the others, slow down a bit and see if that helps, partly because I suspect you'd be pulling your jig closer to their level and partly because I think they'll just see the jig and react, possibly have a larger strike zone if they sense it coming and know that they can catch it easily.
Big gizzard shad look a lot like crappie on traditional sonar. That might be what you're seeing, especially this time of year.
As others have said, unless you are pulling some heavier than normal jigs or adding a split shot above your jig, I doubt you're getting to 12 ft. at 1.0 MPH. As reference, my 1/16 oz. curly tail jigs run about 6 ft at 1.0 with 4 lb test mono.
To get an education on depth at a certain speed and weight, find a flat to test your current setup then you'll know for sure what speed equals what depth.
Chris
Try pulling some charlie brewer sliders and slow your speed down to @ .7 mph and see if this will help. This time of the year they seem to like less movement, atleast as far as I can tell. I pull a mix of sliders and southern pro hot grubs. Ive tried stroll'rs and they didnt get bit.
Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in hospitals dying of nothing.
I knew there was a good thread on here to help you. I found it.
https://www.crappie.com/crappie/sout...ing-questions/
Butch(GABowman) is probably one of the best longliners in the south. Pay attention to his posts in that thread.
91tiger LIKED above post
We Livescope fish and for the past six weeks, you need to deadstick your bait within 6 inches of their mouth. You need to figure out which is the head end and keep the bait right in front of their mouth. They are not willing to chase baits right now. As the water warms up, they will should chase more, but with the water in the 40's, they don't seem to be interested. Even by dipping right at their mouth, a small percentage will still not bite.