1/3 crawler is best shellcracker live bait that i have found...bead head nymph fished along bottom real slow good on flyrod.
Driller,Originally Posted by driller
I never get a shellcracker to hit a leech. Big bluegill tear them up and I have found the smaller bluegill don't bother the leeches as much. I fish barkley and KY the most. 1/3 of a crawler works best for me. Which area of barkley do you fish?
Thanks
Chris
1/3 crawler is best shellcracker live bait that i have found...bead head nymph fished along bottom real slow good on flyrod.
I have found shellcrackers will take a cricket just as often as bluegill in south Louisiana. Look at my pic that's a 2lb'er caught on a cricket:D . I do agree that they bite softer than bluegill. Either one fries up good.
Jim
The best time to go fishing is now!:D
Yep, that green stuff with the yellow flowers is mustard grass. When it is blooming the shellcrackers should be beding just off the deeper edge. Since thy like a gravel bottom, you need to find some growing on or near gravel. When bedding they will hit almost any bait you toss in the beds. Dont waste your time fishing the mustard grass growing on mud flats.
Doc, I Agree about the 1/3 of a nightcrawler. I Catch nearly all my Shellcrackers here that way.Cast it out and a Slow -Stop an Go Retreive back!!Originally Posted by fishdoc
Good Fishin To Ya!! Dennis Dale Hollow Crappie www.dalehollowcrappie.4t.com
Here's my 2 cents. My boy and I go to Kentucky Lake every year fishing for Bluegill and Redear (Shellcrackers). We fish the areas north of Paris Landing. We use nightcrawlers on plain 3 hook crawler harnesses with either #4 or 6 hooks. It seems the smaller work better. We use spinning equipment with ultra to light action rods and NO weight. Tossing the crawler and let it settle to the bottom. After letting it sit for a short while we work them very slowly back to the boat, stoping it occassionally, keeping it on the bottom. When they hit the crawler you know it. You don't miss many this way. The 3 hooks really hook the fish good. I'ts not uncommon to hook them in the side instead of the mouth. It's also not uncommon to catch 2 at a time, I have several pictures of this. This is a very productive method. The only problem is that you go through a BUNCH of nightcrawlers. If you get into them you can run out pretty quickly.
Another method we use is 32 oz jigs tipped with Bee Moths. In some areas they call them meal or wax worms. These are the type that look like a maggot and not a worm. Just casting the jig and letting it fall to the bottom is the best method we have found. Working the jig like plastic worm usually produces the hit on the fall. You don't miss too many this way either.
Out of both methods the crawler harness produces the best for us.
Mealworms=ShellcrackersOriginally Posted by stumpbumpers
Im also on ky lake, 4mi north of jonathan creek, been catching a few shellcrackers the last few weekends, mostly on mealworms tipped on a jigg my neighbor came up with,, he cuts the tail off a black twister,then threads 3 pieces of line throught the body,, it looks like a crickets,, amazing results,, caught crappie, lg mouth and sm mouth bass, catfish, and bluegill and shell crackers,, going back down this weekend,,
we are lucky right next to our dock is gravel bank with the mustard flowers,, so I dont even have to get in the boat to catch enough for dinner,,,,
Hey Driller I have caught some Redear but have never weighed one but have measured a few. How long is a 2lb.+ Redear?
I have always swithed to red worms after I found them. Just seems to be their preference of the baits they have on hand.
On a side note: I have read that there prefered diet is aquatic snails. They actually have specialezed teeth in the back of their mouth designed for crushing shells hence the name "shell cracker".
I have actually seen them feed this way while diving at Ginny Springs in Florida.
Oscar
http://webpages.charter.net/jmayer54...s/evrcfish.htm