Get Ready for Late Fall and Winter Crappie Fishing




As the winter approaches, the crappie should start moving upriver and stream channels in Texas’ large water impoundments, locating on underwater brush or other structure. Some will prefer bridge pilings. One of my favorite winter crappie locations was bridge pilings. Another was an underwater grate on a discharge tunnel next to the dam on Lake Conroe.

Crappie fishing pros will tell you to target brush piles and river bends, or preferably a combination of the two.

Toledo Bend has the Sabine River winding through the lake for 60 miles and crappie are everywhere from Logansport to the dam. Finding a key spot will likely mean years of catching crappie from the same areas. The bridge pilings are legendary for holding crappie in the fall.

The “Chicken Coop” is a legendary crappie hot spot on Toledo Bend. Situated near mid-lake, this area has produced literally tons of crappie over the years.

Sam Rayburn has been producing limits of crappie on brush piles this fall.

The bridges on Lake Fork are legendary crappie magnets. A couple of anglers could fish one bridge and have their limit when the bite is on. But a note on bridge pilings; not all will be magnets for crappie. It’s a process of checking each one till you find one that has the algae and small aquatic organisms coating the structure or other underwater structure that the crappie dines on.

Brush piles and channel swings on Fork are also excellent spots leading into winter.

The two primary baits are jigs and live minnows. Tie two jigs 12-18 inches apart and get to work. Use contrasting color jigs. The first few fish will likely choose one color over the other. Keep experimenting until the best color is dialed in. I never learned how to work a jig for crappie but caught all my fish on small live minnows soaked about two cranks on my reel off the bottom. A small minnow works best for crappie.

An ultra-light spinning outfit is a blast to catch crappie on. Spool the reel with 4-8-pound test monofilament line. A 20-pound test braid is perfect; you won’t catch 20-pound crappie, but there is near zero stretch in the line so you can feel the lightest bit. Also, even though it’s rated as 20-pound test, it has the same diameter for 4-pound monofilament, which does have a stretch coefficient when under pressure.

Crappie have been given the name of “paper mouth” because their mouth is paper thin. A hook set like you use on largemouth bass will leave you with a scale, or nothing on your hook. Watch the tip of your rod, or the line for a slight movement. Or, hold the line between two fingers waiting for the light bite. A simple slow upswing of your rod will hook the fish.

We don’t have snow yet, but you know it’s coming on our lakes around and north of the Dallas/Ft. Worth area. Check the weather and blend in with the prediction. I remember one time of fishing with one of my daughters, anchored over a crappie hot spot in Oklahoma. A light snow was coming down. We were dressed in our parkas and mittens, shedding a glove only long enough to rebait with a minnow, or take a crappie off a hook. She would have been justified in complaining about the cold, but she was sitting there laughing, having a great time. We only quit because we had to get home for her younger sister’s birthday party. Beautiful memories can be made crappie fishing.

 




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Lake Fork

Fishing Report from TPWD (Apr. 23)

GOOD. Water Stained; 63 degrees; 0.25 feet below pool. Bass fishing has been slow with some early morning catching near areas with the shad spawn using DieZel chatterbaits. Once bass move off the shore, switch to squarebill crankbaits in 3-5 feet, or Yum dingers and flukes around grass, and frogs in the grass. Report by Marc Mitchell, Lake Fork Guide Service. Black bass are post spawn and the top water bite is on! Frog patterns are working in the shallow vegetation. The crappie are moving shallow, small clousers are producing well. Large bream have moved shallow, wooly buggers are producing good fish. Channel catfish are cruising 2-4 feet biting clousers. Report by Guide Alex Guthrie, Fly Fish Fork Guide Service. The crappie fishing on Lake Fork is moving rapidly into the post spawn pattern. Fish are loading up on brush piles, ledges, underwater bridges, road beds, bridges and post spawn trees in 14-25 feet. The fish are hungry after the spawn and they will bite just about anything you out in front of them. We are having great luck with small hand tied jigs but minnows and soft plastics will also work for the next few months until water temps heat way up. Seeing a lot of small fish this year mixed in so some days you will catch and release a lot of short fish. Report by Jacky Wiggins, Jacky Wiggins Guide Service.

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