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Rick, crappies and plastics...


united jigsticker

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  • we are 'the leading edge' HSO Creators

We caught some bass, both smallies and large mouth, sunfish and a few crappies.

Thanks Tom for a great trip.
rick-bass-crappietomzumbro032504.jpg
1st Fish

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First Crappie

rick-crappie-crappietomzumbro032504.jpg
Biggest Crappie smile.gif

All the Crappies & Sunfish were taken using plastics only!!!

Tom knows his crappie fishing.

Thanks again Tom.

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Crappie Tom,
I am not much of a crappie fisherman and I want to learn to get better. My question to you is this what would be your top three lures to catch crappies and would you care to share your best technique to catch them. Thanks for your reply in advance.
Steve

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I took Rick out to a little corner of open water this morning and fished for some craps. We Started with bait, trying to locate a few, but all we could catch was bass. After making a couple shoreline adjustments I found where the craps were and we commenced to have a ball....every one of them came off plastics over deep water at abot 6 feet deep. And they were dandies. Twisters on small jigs were very hot when fished under a float. We also took numerous sunfish , a white bass, a smallmouth and another largemouth ....all off the plastic. Found the water to be 44 degrees even though we were within a short distance of some serious ice-pack. We had a great time packed into three hours of fishing. Thanks for the company Rick! We need to do this again!

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Plastics...making better fishermen without bait! Good Fishing Guys! CrappieTom
[email protected]

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Steve....I would have to say plastic, plastic, and plastic. I tend to put an awful lot of emphasis on the correlation between water temp and profile. And to a certain extent color. In water which has opened up in yet-frozen lakes, much like what I'm currently fishing, the temp will be in the low 40's almost immediately. The fish will prefer a smaller profiled bait...some thing too that does not have lots of action at rest. Right now I am focusing on 1" twisters on small heads(1/32)fished under a float. I cast this out and basically let the current carry the unit where ever the current is going. Whe you find the fish, you can almost pinpoint the location where they are stacking and can cast time after time to this spot and hit fish every cast. The only adjustments at this time that I will make is with color and to maybe cut off half of the twister to reduce the acitvity level of it if the fish are neutral. This fashion of fishing will hold up until the water approaches between 48-50 degrees. Then I swith to tubes. I never use two inch tubes. I fish the tubes with insert heads (1/32) and again the only thing I will change is the color. These too are fished under a float. I use this set-up until the craps move off the spawning beds. Water temp will determine where I fish, but I strongly lean towards staying in the general proximity of deeper water.... this is where the fish will be after cold fronts until we have gotten to the immediate pre-spawn period. Keep in mind that this fish which are visisble during the immediate pre-spawn and during the spawn are NOT the largest of the fish. Those stay in the deeper water for all of the activities. As the spawn winds down and the fish move into the larger expanses of the lake, I get rid of the bobber and fish a tight line, vertically jigging twisters up to three inches in length on 1/16 and 1/8 ounce heads, often in water over thirty feet. If the wind is favorable, or by using an electric motor, you can hang a twister under a float on a jig and drift or slowwwwwww troll. I mention floats. I prefer the #2 mini-stealth thill float....shows hits well, especiall the upward ones and cast very well using the mentioned techniques.The only reason I use floats though, is to keep my presentation consistant- very important if you want to stay with fish. As the water cools in the fall, this order gets reversed. Hope this will help.

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Plastics...making better fishermen without bait! Good Fishing Guys! CrappieTom
[email protected]

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Good post Tom!

You talked about 'current'. Were you fishing on a lake where a creek runs in or on a river? The reason I asked is that I've always waited for the ice to go out when open water crappie fishing but might try it on some lakes around central MN here when the starts going out.

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  • we are 'the leading edge' HSO Creators

Thanks again Tom for a good time and great company!!!

Those Culprit Crappie Plastics were dynamite.

We used the Chartreuse Pepper Culprit Paddle Tail Grub (Tom calls them Sliders).
ptg.gif

Again we had a very productive morning and it was a blast to say the least!!!!!

Here are some pics. I made Tom stand in fornt of the camera for all but one pic today.

We were catching all black crappies and I caught a white crappie earlier. Then Tom caught a very nice white crappie at the exact same time that I caught a black crappie. Here is a picture of those two fish.

Black & White Crappie:
rick-crappietomzumbro032604-whiteandblac
Both Caught Using Culprit Paddle Tail

Nice Bluegill (Paddle Tail Pictured).
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Nice Crappie
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Nicer Crappie
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Smallie caught fishing for crappies.
rick-crappietomzumbro032604-smallie-culp
Also using the Culprit Crappie Plastic Paddle Tail Grub

We used NO live bait. Get some plastics and stay with them. I caught one crappie with the Culprit Paddle Tail sitting absolutely still while taking a picture of Tom's fish.

It's not hard to figure out the touch once you're on crappies.

The best part is I never had to re-bait up getting cold fingers and wasting time out of the water in the process.

Bring your minnows if you have to. It's not a bad idea. If you need to use the minnows to find the crappies. But be prepared with a plastics rod and get after them.

Many times you will outfish your friends who insist on using minnows only (I know, we had a minnow user down a ways from us. He had two crappies). Maybe it was location and maybe not.

Can you tell I'm into soft plastics smile.gif

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Blackjack....The lake I fish is an impoundment with a dam at one end. There is always current to some degree. If you have open water and water in the 10 foot deep range within casting distance, I'd be hitting it now. You don't need current to drill first open water crappies. Just havin fun....I prefer plastics over bait. BUT, you have to remember that we are fishing and sometimes things are not going to go in our direction so bait has to be considered an option. Don't get me wrong, I do fish with bait when the fish dictate the use of it. My comfort zone is with plastic. It is where my confidence lies. Hope this helps answer your question.

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Plastics...making better fishermen without bait! Good Fishing Guys! CrappieTom
[email protected]

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Well, the commander (Rick) and I did the crappie thing this morning and it was far from a bust. Coservatively, we threw back about fifty/sixty and brought a couple home. The bass were at it again and Rick stuck a nice smallie and a whitebass. Today we took all of our fish on Culprit sliders, chatreuse and junebug/chartreuse, and black/chartreuse. These baits seemed to be real head- turners for the fish and when hit, it was solid. They were fished on 1/32 heads and at six feet over ten foot of water. Under a float. Last nights rains were bringing the water up at a fair clip...it rose three inches in that many hours. The water temp came in at 45, up a degree from yesterday. On average, the fish were at least an inch bigger than yesterday with only one fish at the end that may have been a questionable keeper. Rick has some pics and will post those this afternoon later. Thanks again for the company Rick...you should move to Rochester!

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Plastics...making better fishermen without bait! Good Fishing Guys! CrappieTom
[email protected]

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