Just thinking if they are shallow then spook easier. I have barely any experience when it comes to this but just saying and hoping someone that knows jumps in.
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Just thinking if they are shallow then spook easier. I have barely any experience when it comes to this but just saying and hoping someone that knows jumps in.
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brettw LIKED above post
I lived on a lake in Tennessee that had good populations of black and white crappie.
The white crappie do school up in deeper open water flats and trolling crankbaits, pushing and pulling in summertime was a sure method of catching a limit daily.
That is why l ask.
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It's not the numbers or the size, it's the time spent on the water!brettw LIKED above post
Fellow Wylie boys are say 1 percent White crappie
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G3PO
Pushing works better in smaller bodies of water where you do not have enough room to make wide sweeping turns (like you do pulling pulling ) to keep your lines from getting crossed up. Pushing you have less line out because you are controlling depth with a weight. Pulling you have way more line out because you are controlling depth by length of line out.
Pushing we used up to 5 oz weights with leader to lipless rattle crankbaits or jigs.
Pulling you can use leadcore line to shorten line distance out back of boat and still get depths desired or let out enough mono line to get deep diving lipped cranks down to desired depths.
We usually were trolling in 25 to 40 fow.
As usual find the fish feeding on bait fish balls and troll through them.
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It's not the numbers or the size, it's the time spent on the water!brettw LIKED above post
No. Lake in Tennessee l used to live on had good populations of blacks and white crappie.
The schools of white crappie were targeted by crankbait pullers in the summertime.
The black crappie were almost always on some type structure which could be brush, bridge columns, rocks and willow trees up river in shallower water.
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It's not the numbers or the size, it's the time spent on the water!brettw thanked you for this post
I pull cranks on some smaller shallower lakes and do well catching blacks, but you have to be prepared to catch everything else in the lake as well. BUT I’ve had my most success in long narrow lakes rather than broad flat ones. So I would assume the ones I’m plucking would be coming off of nearby cover or structure as my offering is passing by. If I were going to somewhere like Monticello (using it as an example only because of its shape) I don’t think it would work as well as if you went to let’s say a Greenwood and started up the Saluda and worked your way down. I guess on Wylie, I’d go back up a good deep creek and work it back out to the main lake, something that would give you a run of a mile or so. Pay close attention to your electronics (sidescan would be a plus) and where you are getting fish. As inkdabber said, you are probably be picking up fish off of brush or other cover along the way.
I enjoy trolling crankbaits because I catch a lot of fish, many different species, and in the heat of summer usually get a little breeze by moving. Plus I get to see a lot of water and have found a lot of new stuff to fish along the way. Oh and I promise you will catch all the perch you would ever want in Wylie.
Rob
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