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Thread: Slabbin on lake cumberland

  1. #1
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    Thumbs up Slabbin on lake cumberland


    Me and a buddy were fishing on cumberland saturday when we came to a rock wall with a tree fallen into the water. He said, "watch this I'm gonna catch a hawg crappie." I said,"we only catch crappie off the dock and out of the baithouse around here go ahead show me how." He casted and landed close to the wall but over the tree, then after about two minutes he said here we go. he set the hook and comminced to reeling, I thought he was really dramatizing the catch like they do on tv. Then I seen the fish turn just enough to flash and it was so big I thought it was a drum. We got it in it weighed 2lbs12oz and was about 18.5" long. this was the biggest crappie I had ever seen. With the excitement up we got all rods out and he caught another that was well over 2lbs. within 5 minutes. then another. It just kept going and going. So this makes me wonder is cumberland really worth crappie fishing. This has built my hopes up and I believe that it is a great place to crappie fish that no one fishes that hard

  2. #2
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    Welcome to the site kyslabslayer, good to have you here.
    Thanks for the C-land report. I've seen some pics of huge crappie out of that lake but have only caught a few myself (no monsters). Were you using jigs or minnows? Keep us updated on the crappie down there.

    Take care,
    Greenfish

  3. #3
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    Thanks for the reply, we were using minnows down about 7-8 feet deep

  4. #4
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    Thanks for the info!!

    Take care,
    Greenfish

  5. #5
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    I bet they were pretty come up out of that clear water! Catch some more!

  6. #6
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    Shhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!! Don't tell everybody:D just kidding but yea Cumberland has some nice crappie in it. I don't fish much in the winter but spring thrue fall it's crappie time.

  7. #7
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    Sounds better than my zero trip on Friday....

  8. #8
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    CrappiePappy is offline Super Moderator - 2013 Man Of The Year * Crappie.com Supporter
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    Exclamation Welcome aboard .... KySlabSlayer ...

    Quote Originally Posted by kyslabslayer View Post
    Me and a buddy were fishing on cumberland saturday when we came to a rock wall with a tree fallen into the water. He said, "watch this I'm gonna catch a hawg crappie." I said,"we only catch crappie off the dock and out of the baithouse around here go ahead show me how." He casted and landed close to the wall but over the tree, then after about two minutes he said here we go. he set the hook and comminced to reeling, I thought he was really dramatizing the catch like they do on tv. Then I seen the fish turn just enough to flash and it was so big I thought it was a drum. We got it in it weighed 2lbs12oz and was about 18.5" long. this was the biggest crappie I had ever seen. With the excitement up we got all rods out and he caught another that was well over 2lbs. within 5 minutes. then another. It just kept going and going. So this makes me wonder is cumberland really worth crappie fishing. This has built my hopes up and I believe that it is a great place to crappie fish that no one fishes that hard
    Even in its lower leveled state, Cumberland Lake is a great Crappie lake. You've just got to put in the time and find the structure they use, during the various periods of the year. It's not really "underfished" for Crappie ... it's just such a big lake that one cannot always venture far and wide, to sample its many potentially good areas. The lowered levels has also caused a misconception, in the minds of many, that it's a dried up hole :p ... so many have moved their efforts to other bodies of water. That, in itself, isn't a bad thing ... at least not for the anglers that stay, since it allows them less competition for the better areas

    That story reminds me of a similar situation, that happened to me, on Lake Herrington. Late friend of mine, that I used to fish with, told me to buy a few white marabou jigs in 1/16oz and come on down. He took me to a rock wall, with a huge Sycamore trunk hanging down its side. We tied up to the tree, and he told me to drop my jig straight down thru the branches, about 8-10ft and very slowly reel it back up. We pulled alot of 2lb Crappie off that tree, that day ... and I took my (then) girlfriend's dad to the tree, and we repeated the same results. I'd fished Herrington almost all my life, and never caught Crappie that big from there :D That was the birthplace of my "Vertical Casting" ... and the resurrection of that method, occurred on Watts Bar Lake, TN ... almost 3 decades later

    Luck2ya, on Cumberland Lake ... post your stories and pics, for the rest of us to see ... would'ya please.

    ... cp

  9. #9
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    Default cumberland crappie

    I am new to the site and am hoping for a little advise. I go to cumberland religiouly and have recently become addicted to crappie fishing. I have never fished for them on cumberland and just started fishing for them in general. I was wondering if anyone could provide any pointers to fishing cumberland. I am heading down for the holiday weekend and am going to gice it a shot.

    Thanks
    Matt

  10. #10
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    I know of ppl that fish slides that fall into the lake. Usually an eroding cliff will give way and it creates a hump out in the middle of deep water and usually had lots of the trees that slid in piled up on it. Just go down a bank and you can look and spot most of them with your eyes. There are some at Cave Run, aside from that I cant help out much more at C-land, usually affter brown fish there. BTW, Cumberland will be fantastic for crappie when the water comes back up. I will be down there when that happens. It will boom for a while til the cover rots back from drawdowns.

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