Bay of Quinte Fishing
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The
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Ice
Fishing Crappie Tactics
By Tim
Allard
Fishing success relies on many factors, regardless of the species
you’re after. Yet, when it comes to catching crappie through the
ice, this particular species has a tendency to sometimes test an
angler’s patience to the limits. If you’re finding yourself stumped
by paper-mouths these tips are sure to improve your catch rates.
Enjoy the Hunt and Fish as a Team
A lot of crappie fishing can be spent in search mode, so put
yourself in the right frame of mind. Don't expect to find willing
biters beneath the first hole you drill. If you systematically stalk
these fish though, you'll eventually find them and the reward of
landing that first slab after a lot of legwork will be worth the
effort.
Teamwork will also catch you more crappies. Working as a group helps
you locate the best spots faster than doing it solo, especially when
tackling large expanses of water. Take time to scout areas and
review maps to develop a strategy with buddies. Once on the ice,
spread out and drill lots of holes to cover ground. Stay in contact
with 2-way radios or meet occasionally throughout the day.
Top Spots
The following spots serve as good starting points for your crappie
search. In small, fertile lakes you can expect to find fish relating
to deep holes or the main basin. They may also hold near healthy
weeds until the vegetation dies off. In large lakes, crappie often
occupy mid-depth flats or deep basin areas but will related closely
to structures like points, islands, humps or at the base of drop
offs. In rivers, crappie will avoid current and reside in backwater
areas, like sloughs, protected shorelines, side channels, or canals.
Work the Entire Water Column
Crappies are renowned suspenders. Astute anglers fish the entire
water column and catch more fish for their efforts. Slowly swimming
lures down not only helps intercept suspending fish but the
presentation's more natural than dive-bombing baits. Don't discount
right beneath the ice in shallow areas either. Last year I iced
several crappies at dusk jigging less than a foot below my ice hole.
The fish would streak in from the sides and smack the ice jig,
making for productive and adrenaline-filled fishing.
Fish at Night
One of my fondest hard-water memories is an evening of incredible
first-ice crappie fishing with a teenage friend. The only sounds
filling the crisp, winter air were the hiss of a glowing gas
lantern, our laughter, and the occasional "zip" of a reel drag. A
sure-fire way to improve your winter crappie catches is fishing at
night. Paper-mouths become more aggressive at twilight, pushing onto
structures, like humps or points, or invading shallow areas and
weedlines in search of food. Like walleye fishing, it’s best to
arrive early and set up in advance so you're ready when the feeding
frenzy starts. Also, for around $20 you can get a compact headlamp
that provides excellent hand-free illumination.
Be Sonar Savvy
Without a doubt using a portable sonar when targeting crappie will
catch you more fish given their suspending tendencies. Monitoring
the display also offers clues on the activity level of fish based on
how they relate to your bait. Tweak your presentation accordingly
until you crack the code to trigger bites.
It’s also important that you learn how to fine tune your
electronics. Crappie are notorious suspenders. Faint, weak,
flickering sonar signals might seem like interference to novices but
to veteran users these subtleties are clues that fish may be on the
edges of their sonar’s cone signal. They’ll adjust their strategies
accordingly and catch more crappies for it.
Work as a team, fish the entire water column and be thorough, and
use your sonar to its fullest potential and you’ll see your
slab-catching success skyrocket.
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