We have a lake just 12 miles from home that is a classic northern crappie lake and 14" fish are not uncommon. Like Bob mentions, you can catch a lot of lesser fish in with the larger ones. We've found that the larger fish don't really hang with smaller fish and prefer very specific water to exist in, but the smaller fish encroach on the water the larger fish prefer, hence catching them along with larger fish. Even at the spawn the large fish have different needs for getting that job done. For the most part the fish under 12" like to spawn on shallow shoreline water - water two to four feet in depth and where shade is almost constantly present. The larger crappies spawn at depths down to 6 to 8 feet and on sunken bars or break-lines next to much deeper water. The water's depth in this case provides the protection from direct sunlight. The water temperature at the deeper depths is way more stable and actually is warm enough to see spawning taking place maybe a week before the shorelines get active. The larger fish seem to prefer to spawn about 4 degrees cooler than those using the shallow shore-line water too.
Every body of water is different and the crappies in different digs behave different too. Its interesting to see how one body of water will require certain tactics to get crappies while a similar water on the other side of the road is entirely different.


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