Any of you boys going out to Rosy or Alamo for night time crappie bite yet?
I'm thinking about hitting Rosy or maybe Alamo for the night bite next week or two after getting my engine Power Pack replace.
Meriwether and I are headed out to Rosey tonight. I'll let you know the score upon our return.
YL
Good luck out there, wishing my boat was here now, not in 6 weeks.....
Do indeed let us know afterward, YL.
Good luck!
Sorry. Bloody tired yesterday...never got online.
My brother and I fished all night...literally. We launched at the Badger ramp...I think it was the Badger ramp...dunno all the names, anyroad...we launched at 7PM as the sun left. Puttered around in that cove next to Windy Hill for a while as we rigged and adjusted. Eric caught one as we drifted around...in about 35' of water about 6' down. He had a double rig with a BBC at the terminal tipped with a minnow, then a plain hooked minnow about 18" up...crappie hit the jig...small female.
So we let the wind push us around that cove...then went a trolled the cliffs for a bit....fished with a floating light...not one other bite.
We motored over to Sally Mae...I guess it was around 11PM...I don't wear a watch when I'm fishing. About 9 boats spread out in various areas in the cove. We staked a spot...anchored...put out the floating light. We had one of the biggest balls of minnows and shad I've ever seen...and I'd watch them pulse, then disappear...and I knew there was a predator about. With 4 rods out and 6 hooks in the water all night, I was only able to catch one more small female. I'd fish for 20 or 30min and then switch a jig body, or depth, or placement, etc. Could never get on the pattern. 2 Crappie...the whole go.
Left the cove about 9AM after a coupla hours sleep. I'm really starting to wonder if I know what I'm doing. I really thought we were gonna get into some fish this time...especially with E catching one so quickly.
Both small females were full of eggs. Eric's fish was very aggressive..., but I had to be right on mine. Caught her on a jig tipped with a minnow at about 6' under a bobber. The take was VERY slight.
If any of y'all see the big flaw in my technique, please feel free to warn me.
YL
you may of done everything right :dontknow: some nights you go out fishing and it is on fire the next night same place and nothing :dontknow: some of the guys from the club fished two nights up at rosy last week before the SCF one night was great the next night it was slow?
did you see or hear anyone else in the group in salome catching fish? Keep trying you will hit it right :headbang:
We're you trying different depths? Sometimes they'll be just under the lights or they will be deep. 10 - 12' is we're I catch most of my fish.
Yukon,
I hear you. I have struggled with crappie at Roosevelt the last several years. I would have done the same thing you did man, and had the same results. Sounds like you tried everything other than changing the depths (maybe). I also wonder if the large amount of shad present at the lake (never seen so many balls of shad as I have this year) is affecting the bite. Some guys have done well it seems, but just not seeing the large amount of reports I guess I was expecting to see this year out of Roosevelt.
I did try different depths, but I probably didn't try enough.
I betcha they were below the baitfish. I'm really not accustomed to fishing in water that deep...gotta figure that out.
I didn't hear or see anybody else catching any. That doesn't mean anything. Everybody we talked to had either not caught any, or they were fishing for bass...or both.
Well, I appreciate the feedback. I'm almost sure they were deeper than I was fishing. Hindsight being what it is.
Thanks! Good luck out there!
-YL
I have been out on Rosy with excellent shad balls around us and no bites. My buddy threw a cast net to get some shad one time and up comes a crappie. Sometimes the shad will work better that the minnows if you can catch them.
+ 1 with the shad, it is a way superior bait. I also do very well working a jig around the lights when they r actively feeding.
Sometimes when night fishing with a minnow under a bobber the Crappie will pick the bait up. So if your split shot is above the hook (where else would it be?) your bobber will never lay over or go down. Next time (I'm assuming your using a hook, shot, bobber rig) try using a 1/32 oz jig head instead of a hook and shot. that way if they pick the bait up, your bobber will lay over.
Wild Willie and Bob M have really cool rigs they use for situations like this. You might PM them. Sometimes the night bite can be so delicate, a lot of guys won't even know when they get hit.
Personally I like to swim a Slab Daddy jig at night right at the edge of the light. A 10 to 12' light rod is perfect for doing this. You can measure how much line to let out for different depths by using the rod as a measuring stick. And you can hold the jig just outside of the light without casting or having slack line.
But Fishless is right, sometimes you eat the bear, sometimes the bear eats you.
Interesting info guys.
The way I fish at night for crappie, I usually fly-line the bait out with the lightest split shot weight possible so the minnow will fall slowly down as it swim. I just keep on releasing the line out or until it hit bottom depending on the depth range. If there's no take when the minnow hit bottom, I will reel up a few feet and let it sit or reel it up to the depth range where I think the fish are and wait.
This technique works exceptionally well in almost all condition when I fish with live baits day or night.
fishing can be tough this time of year. Some of the things that work for me during night fishing is to anchor up in about 25 - 30 foot of water. It takes a little bit of time for the bait to show up and pull the bigger fish to them as a result. The bite is off and on most of the night with out a moon. Keep patient and they will come. Fly-line minnows is an excellent way to catch the lots of fish. Bass and crappie both. Fish outside the light at different distances to find the right pattern. If you have to put on a small spit shot, know it will sink, pulling down your minnow and eventually out of the strike zone. But, I have done well with a couple cranks of the reel handle just to get the minnow off the bottom.
I like the tonto arm more then the salt just as a matter of preference, but have done good and bad on both ends. Crappie can be hard until you figure out the pattern, then its just a matter of applying the same pattern/style until they stop biting.
Keep the faith and fish hard while experimenting for good catches.
Daytime, I've been fishing between the dam and Batchlor cove on the steep banks for decent catches, not always big, but lots of fun.
I have had a lot of success using just a #8 hook with no snell, with a small splitshot a few feet from the hook. After you get the fish under your boat, drop a minnow below the school and make your minnow rise towards the surface extreamly slowly! Crank your reel as slow as you can stand it in a continuous motion with out stopping. This drives the crappie crazy and entises them to slowly follow the minnow up and gently put their mouth around it. I've killed them using this technique. Seems to work best over about 30' of water near areas that you found fish on the graph. Usually the fish are hooked around 3 or 4' of water. It doesn't always work, but when it does you will catch a ton!
2naFish or any other:
"Fly-line minnows is an excellent way to catch the lots of fish. Bass and crappie both. Fish outside the light at different distances to find the right pattern. "
What is: "Fly-line minnows"?
Thanks
2naFish or any other:
"Fly-line minnows is an excellent way to catch the lots of fish. Bass and crappie both. Fish outside the light at different distances to find the right pattern. "
What is: "Fly-line minnows"?
"Fly-Line" is a term used to identify a method of fishing. Using light line, Fluorocarbon leader, and NO weight. Choosing a minnow that is "lively" (this is key) and allowing it to swim freely while pinned to a small shank hook (minimal intrusion). It works well, I've stuck some nice fish that would not bite other presentations. . Just another presentation for your tool box. Get the bait in the strike zone and it's deadly for catching semi-active fish.
thanks,
I have fished a number of different species with different baits that way --- but had never heard it called Fly Line -- guess I'm still learning :D
Its a Westcoast term.