Think I'll stick to a few drops from a fresh lemon...
Think I'll stick to a few drops from a fresh lemon...
6poundtest LIKED above post
wannabe fisherman haha
sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales![]()
Happyfisherman LIKED above post
and when you get 4 pcs. per side , that defines "large" in the world of crappie , and every once in a good while I ketch an 8 pc ....just saying
but on the serious er side , keeping the sizes of fish to be fried/baked uniform , makes for a way better finish at the table![]()
sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales![]()
JUNGLEJIMJIGS LIKED above post
Spoonminnow thanked you for this post
One thing the winner should have made sure his aerator worked before fishing or if he knew it didn't he shouldn't have fished a tournament. He also should have kept the fish or gave them to somebody that would have ate them instead of being a pathetic individual & throwing them away. Very unsportsman like conduct if you ask me.
I found out from someone who was at the weigh-in that he did clean many of them later but threw out the small ones not worth cleaning. There should be a dead fish penalty percentage-wise. Maybe I'll suggest it the next club meeting if I go which I rarely do.
9” thick blacks have plenty meat. The rules on my boat are simple. Dont keep it if you are not going to consume it.
We like the gentlemen stated in a previous post usually filet the 10” slabs and scale the 9” ones to fry or bake whole.
we save the heads and back bones for our crab nets this time of year so we are far from wasting any of our fish.
BON TEMPS!!
What water system are you catching your fish in? If it’s good clean water you should cook some crappie; they are light, flaky and very clean tasting. If fileting they should have no bones and we don’t care about the time it takes that’s part of the whole experience of catching and eating your own food.
The water is very clear especially in deep water not affected by recent rain runoff.
I am very tempted to follow all the great suggestions in a previous post as far as cleaning and cooking some of the 11" crappie I will catch next time I fish this lake.
Fortunately I have the whole lake to myself as far as catching fish: bank fishermen have to deal with the weeds; kayakers and small-boat anglers that were anchored must not have seen me catch & release fish after fish, anchoring further north in 6' of weedy water. Even if they did fish where I was, there's no guarantee they had the right lures or presentations to fish in 9'. Sonar also helped find schools and weed edges off structure as well as humps/rocks though lures were the real fish-finders.
Nice when things come together to make for a perfect day on the water. The strikes & fights even from small fish were strong bending my light action rod big time!