Home Outdoor Sports FAQS Fishing Golf swimming Skiing and Skating Cycling Climbing Other Outdoor Sports Camping

How to Fish for Crappie

If you need to know how to fish for crappie, you need to understand what to look for in locations, presentation, bait, the water condition and what fishing gear you need. Once you see how easy it is to fish crappies, you will wonder why you waited so long. You will be enjoying fish dinners in no time once you learn how to find the fish and get them to bite. The crappie is not a picky fish, but you do have to give them something they want.

There is plenty of baitfish, so you have to make the presentation. The bait is the last thing you need to consider, but it is still important when you are planning your fishing trip.

Crappies do well with a jig and a minnow, but some anglers have had incredible success with albino assassins. One will have to have a few different things to try when fishing different locations. The color of the lure should be yellow or even green. Again, the color can change from water to water. Although crappies are crappies, they live in different environments and will have different tastes for bait and as well, the color that attracts them.

Presentation is vital to fishing for crappies. You can troll, vertical drop or pitch a jig, which is new to crappie fishing, but old hand for bass fishing.

Some anglers have tried the pitch a jig method for crappie and had amazing success. Vertical dropping is great during the cooler temperatures. If you find the zone, you can the bait into the zone and avoid making the crappie work for the bait.

This works great when you are in the deeper waters and should not be used around deadwood and brush as the bait can get hung up and cause you more problems.

Location is another consideration when fishing for crappie. If you are looking for white or black crappie, you have to fish the waters where each inhabits. It is not uncommon to see white crappies in one water with no black crappies and the other way around. You have to choose a location that has a record for crappie catching. If you try to fish water that is not productive, you are not going to be any different from other anglers. Choose the water and then choose the right bait for that specific location to avoid any frustrations.

Water temperatures need to be warm to make sure that the crappies are going to bite. This is true if you plan to fish shallow waters. If the water temperature is cooler, the crappies will stay deep. If the water temperatures warm up, the fish will move into shallow waters to feed. You can judge the temperature starting with the spawn.

Once the fish spawn, they should be able to stay in shallow waters afterwards. Check the local water temperatures to see when the water is right for spawning and go from there. If the water you are fishing is cooler, go deep to catch crappies.

Copyright © www.mycheapnfljerseys.com Outdoor sports All Rights Reserved