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Thread: Question for shellcracker pros

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    M R Dux is offline Crappie.com Legend , 2018 Crappie.com Man of the Year * Crappie.com Supporter * Member Sponsor
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    Default Question for shellcracker pros


    I was talking to a biologist today and we were talking shellcracker fishing on KY and Barkley Lakes here in west KY. He told me about seeing a cooler full of 2-3 pound shellcrackers a few years ago that were caught by 2 gentlemen in their 70s on Barkley. These fish were caught in late summer on live bait in 15-20 feet of water. I have ZERO reason to not believe the story. My question is where would you pros start looking for shellcrackers in deep water in the summertime and what type of bottom/structure would you look for? I typically look for 6-10 feet of water in major coves that have creeks entering the lake and sandy/gravel bottoms. These are spawning fish in April-May. The prospect of catching trophy crackers in deep water has gotten my curiosity up, esp. quality fish like those mentioned. I have known for some time that crackers up to nearly 4 pounds can be caught here but they are like 10 pound bass locally. I've never been so lucky. Any ideas or input? Thanks, Doug.
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    Quote Originally Posted by mrdux View Post
    My question is where would you pros start looking for shellcrackers in deep water in the summertime and what type of bottom/structure would you look for? I typically look for 6-10 feet of water in major coves that have creeks entering the lake and sandy/gravel bottoms.
    I think you've got the right idea, but I would move out into deeper water. I wouldn't call myself a shellcracker "pro", but I look for the deepest water I can find near the spawning grounds. I fish much smaller waters than Kentucky Lake, so that usually means a max of 12-15' FOW for me. I have no doubt that a place like Kentucky Lake has huge shellcrackers. But like most places, people just forget about 'em after the spawn.
    Last edited by deathb4disco; 03-19-2008 at 11:20 PM.

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    A 4 pound shellcracker??
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    I am not a pro, but I spend most of my time going after shell cracker and bluegill...

    After the spawn they typically move to deeper water as already has been stated.

    Typically, I look for some kind of transition, like where the bottom of the lake is dropping rapidly at a slew inlet, channel, etc.

    Another thing to keep in mind, althought they eat insects, they prefer aquatic snails (hence the name shell cracker). Typically where there are hard bottoms, rocks, submerged logs, things of that nature have always been more productive for me. In the lake that I spend most of my time on, there is a submerged road bottom that consitently yeilds large shell crackers.

    A 2lb shell is pretty rare in most peoples book. Although I have read about 4 pounders, I have never actually seen one.

    Oscar

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    M R Dux's Avatar
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    Thanks and keep the info coming.

    The worlds record shellcracker is around 5 1/2 pounds. I have mounted some nearly 3 pounds. There was one caught and confirmed on certified scales on KY Lake that was almost 4 pounds a couple of years ago. I have no doubt that there are good numbers of exceptional crackers here if I could just learn to target them. It is a totally untapped resource no doubt.
    Last edited by M R Dux; 03-20-2008 at 01:39 PM.
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    Fish deep water humps in the summer time it works great in our area maybe yours want hurt trying. we fish humps from 10 ft to 25 ft.

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    Has any body tried the 1" plastic crawdad on a small jig for shell crackers,? I've cleaned shell crackers with little craw claws inside them.
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    Steve, that is one huge red ear. Man ,what a fight that must of been.

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    Quote Originally Posted by tinsmith View Post
    Has any body tried the 1" plastic crawdad on a small jig for shell crackers,? I've cleaned shell crackers with little craw claws inside them.
    Not tried those but I have tred the 1" southern pro worms. Pieces of nightcrawlers are better for me. The worms will catch fish but not like real bits of crawlers.......

    Chris

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