Great trip. Outstanding results for just a short trip. keep up the great work. Tight lines.
We had a good bit of rain overnight Thursday in to Friday morning. Finally cleared out about 10 am and I began to think about wetting a line after work. After 2-3" of rain, I wasn't sure how the bite would be.
I pushed off from shore at 4pm, with air and water temp both at 68. Bit of a breeze, but the water clarity was not as bad as I expected, although it was stained more than usual.
I clipped on a pearl colored split tail from Bobby Garland along with the Stoll'r and the curly tail grub I've used on this water recently. Thanks, Pico lures, for the tip of white baits in stained waters; it shows on the "Featured Guests" forum as the last question posed when he did the live Q&A a while back.
Anyway, that pearl lure would stay on the entire trip as both the bluegill and crappie wouldn't leave it alone; it was clearly the lure of choice on this trip. Here are a few pictures of what came home with me.
Here is that last one on the ruler, big fish of the night.
The difference in the bite between the 'gills and the crappie was something last night. The crappie bite was very light while trolling, just a little twitch of the rod tip while moving along while the 'gills would practically rip the pole out of the boat. I made it a full night, fishing right up until 7pm before pulling in the lines and calling it a night.
I kept 16 nice crappie, from 9" up to 13", with most of them 11-12", along with 8 big bluegill. I stopped keeping the 'gills when I realized how good the crappie bite was going to be. I tossed back a couple of smaller crappie, maybe half a dozen or so. Bluegill?? Too many to keep track of, easily 25+ went back in for another trip; I was busy all night long and loved every minute of it!
Yes, I was talking to myself; sometimes even I have to ask for expert advice.
Great trip. Outstanding results for just a short trip. keep up the great work. Tight lines.
Great catch. That's a good tip about using a white lure. I will try to remember that.
I love it when I read about folks having a great time out on the water.
Beautiful pictures, thanks for taking me fishing!
“If your too busy to fish, you’re too busy!” Buddy Ebsen
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Nice catch....pictures too...thanks for sharing
I have spent most my life fishing........the rest I wasted.
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Great box fish of fish. Good looking sky as well
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass along
That’s a fantastic evening! Can you give me some of the basics of how you troll for them with jigs? I’m pretty good at catching them at night but not very successful in daylight.
I like to think I'm not doing anything special, simply tossing out my lines and rowing around. If I'm working near the weed lines I'll use 1/32 oz. lead jig heads with various plastics. Usually in the 12-16' water depth range. The Roadrunner spinner has worked well for me this year in that scenario. I have no power propulsion on my rowboat, just me rowing and I try to keep my speed around .7-.8 according to my graph's GPS. I use baits in the 2" and smaller category.
Same speed but 1/16 oz. heads are working for me now in some deeper water, more in the 18-24' depth range. Here in CT we can use 3 lines except in some special areas so I usually run 3 different plastics to find something that's working. I try to run parallel to the edges rather than up and over them or from the shallows dropping over the edge in to the deep.
I tend to fish more in the evening after work rather than in the early mornings. I seem to boat more fish that way but that's probably 'cause I have more experience in the evenings. To my way of thinking, they are getting hungry from laying around all day waiting to put on the feedbag in the evening, rather than having fed all night and looking to take it easy for the rest of the day when I hit the water in the morning. Whether that's true or not I have no idea but that's my story and I'm sticking to it!
I lean my rods against the back seat (one of my recent posts from a morning trip has a picture of my setup) and try to keep them within an easy, quick grab; when I see a change in the rod tip, I have to drop the oars and grab the correct rod or rods, if it's a double hookup. I like the rods in the 6 to 6 1/2' length, light action tip helps see the strike even when they are light. Despite my handle of 6 pound test, I've dropped to 4 lb. test mono on all my rods.
One thing I feel is key is my mapping. I've mapped a lot of my fishing areas using the Autochart Live function on my Humminbird. The contour maps I've found of some of my water's are not at all accurate. My mapping has helped me stay in the correct depth and contour ins and outs along the structure edges. Hopefully, you have some sort of depth finder to help keep you on track.
That's pretty much my take on what I'm doing. I'm not sure how widespread the crappie population is there in VT or where you're at. I used to own land up in the Cabot area but at the time, my interest was in upland bird hunting and not fishing so I'm not familiar with the crappie situation there. We have another NE board poster from VT who I believe is more toward the southern end on the CT river system. When I think VT, I think trout, bluegill and perch for most places and lots of bigger stuff in places like Lake Champlain.
Yes, I was talking to myself; sometimes even I have to ask for expert advice.QuinnTheEskimo LIKED above post