What he said,they don't all spawn at once and it's over,it's an ongoing event throughout the springSpawning = laying and fertilizing of the eggs. Just because a fish is caught shallow and its full of eggs doesn't mean it was spawning. The females spend very little time near the actual bed and really just go in and lay the eggs and have the male fertilize the eggs and then they guard them. The female is gone after that. Most of the fish are males that are caught in really shallow water that are guarding or building the nest before the female gets there. That is a good point made about a woman being 7 months pregnant actually but not all fish are ready to lay eggs at the same time. Crappie on a lake like D'arbonne may lay eggs as early as February and some may even go into late April. This is nature's way of keeping the species going. If every crappie spawned on say March 1 and some sudden drought/flood/natural disater was to happen, then that whole age class would go away, or if they all laid on Feb 15 and a freeze came along that would wipe that class out. Also, there are always fish that 'move up' when water temps warm up but doesn't mean they are laying eggs or nest building. They just want to get in that warmer water. A 3 foot flat at 63 degrees in January beats staying in a 25' hole that is 50 degrees! This is why you see people catching crappie on yoyos in 2 feet of water in the middle of January. A few warm days in January/February will have the fish in either shallower water or way up in the water column. Even a really warm day in say December will have em coming way up. It seems like just last year or the year before there were people catching crappie shallow in Larto in January.
You can even see this in saltwater fish escpecially speckled trout. In the wintertime when the air temp is cold early and then warms up in the day, the fish get real shallow at times. You start out catching them in the deep holes and as the day progresses the fish move onto the flats and some days even in December/January you can catch trout on topwater baits in less than 3' of water
release in the grease


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