Fished a pile that I had put out in July. I fished it throughout the summer and never caught a fish off it until Monday and Tuesday. Fished a few hours both days and pulled 17 one day and 20 the next. Fished 15.5 ft. water, 11-13 ft. down with slim sticks, minnow minders, and beaver tails. Purple/chartreuse, black/chartreuse with an orange or pink head. Water is still a little stained north of Sarge, but about how I like it. The shad are thick enough to walk on and I marked massive schools of sand bass everywhere I went. Also big flocks of pelicans and water turkeys gettin fat on all the shad. Monday I was double dipping 1/8 oz jigs using two rods. Yesterday almost every fish came off a single 1/4 oz jig. Couldn't hardly get a bite on the double rig. Same depth, same color, same line weight. I had the pole with the 1/4 oz in my left hand and the double rig in my right. Final score: Left hand 19. Right hand 1.
Last edited by crapAlicous; 10-29-2014 at 07:21 AM.
Man I have no idea. I would hold the two 1/8 oz jigs as close to the single 1/4 oz without getting the lines tangled and they would hit the 1/4 oz almost every time. I even tried putting some crappie crack (crappie nibble) on the bottom 1/8 oz jig, and they would still hit the 1/4. Don't know if the bigger head was closer to the size of the shad they were eating or what. The day before I wore em out on a 1/8 oz.
If they were hitting you on the fall I would guess that maybe the single jig was falling faster but double dipping I'm guessing not. Crappie are weird.
We won the Midwest Crappie Trail Classic on Kaw last weekend. We had 18.04lbs for a two day total. Pre fished brush on Friday and nothing for tournament fish. Caught our fish on Sarge bridge from 14-24FOW. We used 1/2 jigs with Crappie Pro Wasshoppahs. We strolled the rocks about .2mph and did a method called snap jigging. We would hit the rocks with our heavy jigs and snap them up about 1 to 2 foot. The fish would hit them mostly on the fall back down. We caught them this way on other parts of the lake in rocks. You might want to give this a try as they are feeding heavy and will not be in brush when feeding. Hope this helps.