Ok that is intresting NOW. Lets come south into East Texas. The water in Caddo lake is very seldom clear. Most of the time after a jig goes down 12 inches it is lost to sight. On a clear day (water wise) maybe two feet visiblity. On those days the only jig that will take fish is the electric chichen. On a cloudy overcast day I will go to a darker color jig. On a day that the water is dirty ,It will run a red brown color ( ask Flatfish )and you can see down maybe 6 inches. At that time very dark color jigs black and brown. Most of the time on a normal day 10 to 12 inches of visiblity I use Electric Chichen, White and blue (tail/body), white and black, yellow and black, yellow and purple.
Now travel to LOP or Toledo Bend, or Lake Fork it is a different story. Flatfish and I had a conversation on this about three days ago. I am under the opion that water tint, sky cover, temp, and bait fish varity will be the factor in what jig that should be used. It will very because each body of water is different. One should be versitile and be willing to change to be able to catch fish. What works in one lake may not take one fish in a nother. Today when I go out I will start out fishing the river at 14 feet with a electric chichen. before the day is out I might have to be on Big lake in the sturmp fields with a white and blue tube jig at 8 feet in order to catch Crappies.
Something I would like to see is a study to see if there is a differance in say the fathead minnow that is in the deep south compared to the fathead That is in the lakes in the upper mid-west. Even the color of the bluegill fry in Wright-Patman Res. compared to the fry in Lake Fork. Some biologist should be able to get some Porkulus money for a study like that!!!
Go where the fish are and fish a jig to match what they are feeding on at the right depth when they are feeding. Now that equals success no matter where you fish. This is just my opion.
Good fishing
Redman


Likes:
Thanks:
HaHa: 

Reply With Quote


[/IMG]
















