If you put your city in your location it would help with your question.
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Looking for folks willing to teach me how to catch sacs all year long!
Usually I'm a spring time guy, but wanna learn how to hunt en down and catch em all year long!!
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You may need to talk to "theygotaeat." He lives over around the Shreveport area. He is a master at pulling crankbaits and catching crappie with them. Just look at some of his posts. He doesn't mind helping a feller out either. Good guy, in my humble opinion.
The Lord is good. His mercy and love endures forever.Bossier_Rob LIKED above post
If you was around Lafayette I would
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Derek Picard :D
Greg, aka Theygotaeat has been killing them since I started fishing again back in Aug. He knows how to find them. If you don't see him on the lake, just look for the wad of boats and bulldog your way in. On Friday, there had to be at least 30 boats within the same half mile diameter on Cypress.
A bad day fishing is better than a good day at work, unless you fish for a living.RobJohnson LIKED above post
Was a lot of boats on Cypress Sat when I went. Didn't see much catching going on. Rob, I am probably go in the morning, then maybe again on Sat. You are more than welcome to tag along and may even learn a few things not to do.
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Thanks Bob! I usually only mess with them in the spring. Winter time is spent bow hunting! So I'm trying to learn how to fish them year round
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fish. every chance you get
read fishing. fishing reports. books
talk fishing. people at tackle shops at work one of the best tips I have gotten was at a doctors office
After all this you will discover spring is fall and summer is winter
LET UM GO TO GROW
They're pretty easy in the late fall through winter. They'll be deep and schooled up. Find the structures with fish and start jigging from the bottom up until you start catching. It helps to have several rods rigged with different jigs to find out what size, weight, and color combo they want. I do pretty good when I find a big ball of shad with fish all around it, but they move. You find them schooled in big structures, you can sit there and work them over. Or you can drag a bunch of cranks through the deep water. That's been working quite well for me, but doesn't replace the thump on a light rod.
A bad day fishing is better than a good day at work, unless you fish for a living.