I don't deer hunt, so I've got no clue :p
Anyway .... here's the scoop : I generally go down, for my Fall trip, in mid to late Oct. I have gone in mid Nov, and done good, also.
For the most part ... Fall fishing on Watts Bar, for me, has been dock shooting for Black Crappie. At least it was for the 5yr stretch of tournaments that I ran/fished, back in 2000-2005. The last several years, it's been warmer than normal, late in the year, and that's been a problem at times. It has to be on a cooling trend, to be productive ... not necessarily bitter cold, but the hotter the Summer, the longer into Fall it takes for the water to cool down. Water probably needs to be below 70deg, at least ... and cooler would probably be even better.
Deep water docks, and wood in 10+ feet of water or more, are the usual haunts of the WB Crappie. For the most part, the Black Crappie make up the majority of the catch, as the White Crappie tend to stay out in the channels/ledges areas. And as I'm not much of a "troller", and my partners boat isn't rigged for it, we tend to live & die by the casting/shooting methods.
We generally stay at Arrowhead Resort, which is in the mid-lake area +/- ... but do venture down towards the dam area, to a couple of places where we've had some success. Arrowhead closes at the end of Oct ... so if we go down in Nov, we'd likely have to hunt up another facility. That would likely be one of the camps in the Piney River/Spring City area (that's open at that time).
Here's a couple of reports from previous years trips :
http://www.crappie.com/crappie/main-...watts-bar.html
http://www.crappie.com/crappie/main-...watts-bar.html
The last good Fall (Nov) trip I had down there, we didn't really do any good dock shooting. I took a friend and his wife ... and even though I had taught them the basics of dock shooting, we found enough fish on a flat w/brush, that we didn't even bother with docks. We even fished along the rock cliff banks of the main lake, and caught some fish. Here's the report on that trip : http://www.crappie.com/crappie/main-...watts-bar.html
Hope you can glean some useful info from these reports.
... cp![]()


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... otherwise, you rarely have a small gap between dock & water, with the gap normally being at least a foot high (and several feet across).
Had we taken our own, we would have had a larger size. The fish we caught on jighead/minnow, were more prone to hitting the larger sized minnows ... with Bluegill, Drum, Cats, & Yellow Bass seemingly more interested in the smaller ones :o 















