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Thread: Summer crappie patterns

  1. #51
    Join Date
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    You can catch nice ones
    Those are just the ones that are hitting the garlands

    Night crawlers would be wild
    Seems that the largest are roaming open water suspended

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  2. #52
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crappie ciller View Post
    Got out on Monday with my middle son, CrappieFool41, and fished thru the heat of the day. We wasted time dipping trees til 2:00 then finally broke down and bought a half pound of Arkansas' Finest and burned thru those in 3 hours. We cleaned 39 up to 12" long, throwing back anything under 11". 10fow still producing best for us and we just keep checking brush at around that depth until we find a pile that looks like Christmas. They will hit a jig now and then but ain't nobody got time for dat- we will be soaking minners til October I imagine. Water temp got up to 89.7 tho later this week it was down to 85. Still good clarity for Oo and still very few thumpers. You need to bring your Jedi senses to catch fish right now. 80% are Hitch Hikers and Jigglers and the other 20% are juvenile delinquents who steal your bait. With the water so clear some weird stuff is showing up.
    CC, how much weight are you using with the minnows? I was using 3/8 but since I went to 1/8 I am much better at detecting the hitch hikers. The heavier weight got down fast and makes it easier to get unhung. My weight is about a foot to 18 inches below the hook. Hook is on a loop knot, thinking of tying direct. I have caught some really nice fish on the timber but they can be spotty. Definitely no hitch hikers, THUMP!

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    Hey, tell me a story!

    Kenny

  3. #53
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    Dec 2011
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    Agreed Coyote- love the THUMP dipping the stumps with big jigs but you gotta open so many oysters to find a pearl that I don't head that way much. I use a half oz. sinker rigged just like yours and for the same reasons- I like to get down there quickly and get out the same way and hardly ever lose my rig with that heavy weight on the end to bounce the hook off the wood. I do use a 1/4 oz split shot above the hook when I'm tied up or otherwise stationary. At those times I'm more of a line watcher and I'm looking for movement sideways or slack when they hit up on it. I think my crappie sense alerts ME most times when I've got a hitchhiker hanging on but when there are neophytes on the boat they are generally pretty mystified by the whole process and I'm thinking that maybe a slip cork might work better for them. Maybe I should try rigging company with that small sinker like you do. Hmmm.
    Likes KCMasterpiece LIKED above post

  4. #54
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    Aug 2015
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    Quote Originally Posted by CrappieWhisperer View Post
    You really know you're addicted to crappie fishing when you fish for them year around. Without a doubt fishing during the summer is the most predictable for me. The way I look at is, how does the weather affect me while I fish. The winter has deadly conditions and is by far the worst conditions that affect how well I can fish. On the other hand the summer is tough too but I can always fish from daylight till noon and be off the water before it gets too hot and I'm totally comfortable while fishing. It's also a lot easier to jump in the water and cool off if I need to. The crappie are really predictable in the summer time too. The crappie want shade and they get that from brush piles and standing timber. I know where my best brush piles or standing timber are and I know they will be there. There are several methods that almost always work and all I have to do is find out what they like best or do several of them at the same time. On a normal summer day I will try to get to my brush pile before the sun comes up. I'll position my boat 10 to 15 yards away from the brush pile and I'll cast a 1/16oz weedless jig past the brush pile and drag the jig as slow as I can back through the pile. I can usually catch the biggest fish off the pile casting because the big crappie rule the pile. Casting usually works for the first 30 minutes to an hour after sunrise. After that I'll move in a little closer and pitch a jig with 10 to 12ft of line out and let it pendulum back to vertical straight under the rod. When the early jig bit slows I'll go to minnows. I set up 3 or 4 rods with a splitshot a foot up from a minnow hook and start at a depth of 8/10ft and fish those straight down. After I have those rigged and in the water I use another rod to drop shot another minnow. I use a small bell sinker and a hook on a 2/3" loop knot 18/24" above the bell sinker. I cast this rig all around the pile and slowly drag it along bottom and let it set for 15 to 30 seconds after each drag. I try to leave enough slack in the line to not spook the fish when they pick it up. Usually during the summer I find it very difficult to fish with this rig because I'm catching so many fish off the other 3 or 4 rods. I usually go through a half a pound of minnows before noon and a normal day would be 30/50 keeper crappie on any given summer day on Oologah. That's why I say the summer is the most predictable time to catch crappie. A rule of thumb I use on my minnow rods set straight down is to change the depth deeper when I haven't had a bite in 15/20 minutes. Dropping the hook down another 2/4" works almost every time. I immediately start getting bites again. The fish move deeper into the pile as the day gets hotter. Fishing with minnows is not as fun as jigs, but at least you can usually catch some on jigs really early in the morning. Also, If you can be lucky enough to be there when a thunderstorm blows in, things can get downright outstanding.
    Thanks Kevin! This is was I needed!

  5. #55
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    Here was Saturday. .
    Backed the boat in the garage at 10:15
    44 is all they wanted to clean

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    Likes coyote, varmithunter, KCMasterpiece LIKED above post

  6. #56
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    Dec 2011
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    For me the summer pattern is really simple- I just wish winter and spring was as consistent! So here it is- find wood in 10-14 fow with fish on it. Drop shot a minnow and pull up crappie. My partner no showed this morning so I bought a 1/2 lb of Arkansas jigs ( from that little honor system bait shop on Hwy. 51 near Coweta in case you don't know about that- 24/7 minnows) and got on the first pile at 7:30am. This brush runs from 9' to 14' and today they lived on the deep end. Caught 54 on that pile then hit the next one maybe 150' away and caught 20 there before TM back to #1 and finishing up there. I started off dropping to the bottom and that's where they were until it got hot and sunny around 11am. When I ran the locator over the brush I noticed that they had moved up and were suspended at 6-9'. As soon as I shortened my drop BAM! And I caught em at 6' in 14fow til I ran out of minners. Quit at 12:30 with 93 on the clicker. Caught the last one on my Oologah Orange hair jig, trying to go for 100, but it took me 10 minutes to get the one jig bite on a pile that was on fire for bait so me and Miss Beazley shut r down. Cleaned 18 and measured and weighed the top 7 . Pretty typical size for summer in my live well except for one 14" fish weighing 1.31 lbs. plus 3 @ 13" and 3 @ 12". Haven't seen a 14" fish since May. Top 7 went 7.01 lbs . The last 4 trips were just over 6 lbs each time so it was a good day on the water with my dog. Now if I could just figure out a winter and spring pattern!
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  7. #57
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    Oh yeah- and bonus points to anyone who can identify what my crappie club is made of.
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  8. #58
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    Mar 2007
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    Walrus?
    Its all about how ya wiggle it!

  9. #59
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    Bois D Arc

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  10. #60
    Redge is offline Crappie.com Legend - 2017 Man Of The Year
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    Default Summer crappie patterns

    Bois D arc is a good one, since Machine took it I am going with crepe myrtle.
    Proud Member of Team Geezer!

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