I might add that weather and lake conditions play a big part in the size of lure and depth of water that you are fishing. Seasoned anglers already know this but I am trying to help those less experienced fishermen.
Presentations are as varied as the many colors of plastic lures are on the market and figuring out what it takes to fool a crappie into biting something that isn’t alive is the fun part of fishing for me.
Figure out the depth of the fish first and then count down your lures to that depth before beginning your presentations. Watch the line like a hawk if you can because many times a crappie will bite a lure as it is falling and sometimes you can’t feel that bite. You just see your line go slack like it has hit the bottom.
Some retrieve techniques: Slow steady retrieve and no jigging. Slow steady retrieve with occasional twitches with a “palsy” twitch which is just a slight twitch not really a jigging motion. Lift and drop, lift and drop with twitches. Slow steady and suddenly stop and let the jig fall. Faster steady retrieve for the rare times when crappie are super active and chasing bait. Cast, let bait go to the bottom, retrieve slightly and then dead stick which means do nothing to move the jig at all. I catch a lot of crappie when they are deep with this particular presentation. Many think that crappie don’t feed on the bottom and pass up so many fish because of that myth. On a rare day, it takes a violent jig of the lure a couple of feet and let it drop back down to trigger a reaction bite. This happens more than you think. Hang up on a stump, brush or rock sometimes and pop the jig free and see how many crappie will nail it when it pops off suddenly. Amazing


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Livescope is no replacement for knowledge. Good write up. Thanks for sharing
















