October 2012 - Issue #20 C at c h i n g C r a p p i e W h e n L a k e s T u r n Ov er W o r k i n g D oc k s F r o n t t o B a c k I t ’ s All I n Y o u r H e a d a n d How t o V i d e o s w i t h TJ S ta ll i n g s & Pa u l M i c h e l e Content October 2012 Advanced Seasonal Structure - Balls of Baitfish ....4 Balls of Baitfish by Tim Huffman Fall is a time of year when baitfish play a big role in catching crappie. Catching Crappie When Lakes Turn Over....6 by Keith Sutton Tactics, places and baits to try when the frustrating fall turnover period hits. Crappie Basics #39 Setting the Hook....9 Working Docks Front to Back....10 by Vic Attardo A logical approach to dock fishing will give you more crappie on the end of your line. Crappie NOW How to Video....13 Events Calendar....14 Regional Crappie Clubs & Events....15 Vern’s Cooking & Tidbits....19 by Vernon Summerlin Crappie Bake with Cream Cheese It’s All In Your Head....21 By Tim Huffman An introduction to the jighead. An important element of a fun crappie bait. Crappie NOW How to Video....22 Crappie Basics #40 Who Needs a Guide?....23 Crappie NOW How to Video....24 What’s Cooking?....25 Uncle Elmer - Butch, the Game Warden....26 by Bill Braswell Butch was famous for sniffing out squirrels and fish. Here’s the real story. EDITOR/ SR. WRITER Jeff Samsel Vic Attardo Hal Schramm Copyright 2012 Cover Photo Jerry Blake with a nice Arkansas slab. Photo Keith Sutton. Opening Cast Thank goodness for fall weather. The fish get more active and so do we. The break from this year’s long, hot summer is welcomed. Readers often ask how we choose our topics and fishermen. The topics usually come from our writers. For example, if writer Darl Black goes out with a fisherman who has a dynamite way to fish a structure, lake or use particular bait, he will let me know. If it’s a subject we believe you’ll find interesting or educational it will be added to our schedule. We also listen to our readers. In a recent facebook survey, we received good questions, suggestions and hints. We’ll use as many of your suggested topics, places and fishermen as possible. The fishermen featured in our magazine depend upon several factors. The first criteria is that the fisherman, or woman, is knowledgeable about the subject. If it’s an article about bridge pilings it must be someone successful at fishing them. One thing we are proud of at CrappieNow is that you don’t see the same fisherman over and over every issue. That’s on purpose. We want to give you a variety. However, some of the same fishermen will pop up periodically because they are top fishermen. You see the top bass fishermen and Nascar drivers over and over, so it should be no surprise you’ll see the elite crappie fishermen more than others. That’s not a bad thing because they are up to date on the latest gear, tactics and tips. You should want to learn from the best. We thank everyone who responded to our facebook surveys. Our purpose is to provide what you want to see each month so your suggestions and ideas are important. We will be making changes along the way. We’ll include some of the topics you specifically asked us to run. You may email us any time you have a comment. Please check out the political candidates and go vote in November. Your sport, way of life and your country depends upon it. Good fishin’ & God Bless, Tim Huffman, editor 3 Crappie NOW October 2012 Balls of Baitfish The Basics Some fishermen may have a problem identifying balls of shad as structure. By strict definition a school of baitfish isn’t a structure. But for the purpose of catching fish from an identifiable object, we’ll consider the baitfish balls as structure. Where you find these depends upon the lake. In general, the baitfish move up into middepth and shallow water in the fall, but they can suspend over deep water. In the mornings you can often see these bait schools on top of the water. You might see a flicker or you’ll see rippling of the water. As the sun gets up they’ll move down. Finding them requires paying attention, watching the water and watching your locator. Techniques A few different tactics work well for catching fish hanging out under and around the balls of shad. One way is to cast. Something like a Road Runner with a curly tail is a good bait. Be sure to use the one with a silver spinner to closely match the bait. Cast past the school, let the bait fall to where it will be at the bottom of the school and use a slow Side Imaging makes finding schools of baitfish much easier. Notice that along with the ball of baitfish you can see fish moving along with the bait. You’ve got all the information you need; location and depth of the fish. (photo provided by Humminbird) 4 Crappie NOW October 2012 retrieve or a pump-and-pause action. Casting keeps you a distance from the baitfish so they won’t spook as easily. Plus casting, setting the hook and reeling one to the boat is fun. A few fishermen throw crankbaits. The big bulky ones will probably trigger strikes but a long, slender minnow style bait is best. Crappie will hit a surprisingly long minnow like you would throw for bass. The most popular method is to slow troll for the fish. Slow trolling gives you multiple baits so you can vary depths and vary the type of baits you show them. Slow trolling lets you stay with the school as it moves around. This isn’t always easy but a little searching can put you back on them. Also note that sometimes the baitfish scatter and you have to find another school with active fish under them. This is a good time to slow troll with the longest poles you have. Deep baitfish schools are not a problem but get them near the surface and you need all the distance possible between the boat and fish. A silver spinner matched with a curly tail jig is a good bait for casting to fall crappie. off to the side of the boat without having to go over them. You spook less bait and fewer crappie. Factors Sunny/ Cloudy Day: Cloudy days the fish will be scattered and shallower. Sun pushes Electronics fish down. You can see the schools of fish on your Wind: Strong wind makes fish less locator. However, the boat spooks them if you spooky. However, water slaps on the boat and get right on top of the school. So a locator with boat control can be a problem. a super-wide cone angle is preferred. Water Temperature: Look for fish to be in Tip When you’re not finding fish under balls of shad it’s time to change tactics. Continue fishing the same depth as the balls of shad, but move into cover. For example, find brush or stumps on a drop-off the same depth as the baitfish. Crappie will often choose to be tight to cover due to water/weather conditions or light penetration. Crappie still feed on the shad when they swim by but the fish won’t leave the cover to chase the bait. This is one tactic where Side Imaging is a huge advantage. You scan a much wider area on each pass. Also, when you find a school to the side you won’t be spooking them with the boat. Make passes in likely areas. Creeks, middepth water near spring spawning sites, and big flats are a few possible sites to find them. Once found be sure to put your baits near the bottom depth of the school. Sometimes the advantage of Side Imaging is just less time spent scouting. It’s much more important during this time of year. You not only save time but you can locate schools of shad shallower waters when water cools. Fish move in and out a lot in the fall. Strong Front: This bothers the fish and causes a slow bite. Pleasure Boaters: On most lakes traffic greatly decreases. Fishing Pressure: Depends upon the body of water, but a lot of sportsmen are in the woods. 5 Crappie NOW October 2012 - Tim Huffman Story & photos by Keith Sutton Autumn fishing frustrates many crappie anglers. During fall, America’s favorite panfish often are scattered and hard to find. Crappie may be deep one day, shallow the next and suspended at mid-depths the next. Fish may be feed ravenously in the morning and get a bad case of lockjaw in the afternoon. On the lakes and reservoirs targeted by crappie anglers, summer crappie usually stay in or near the thermocline. Shallow-water action might be good during cool, low-light periods, but crappie rarely venture to the “dead zone” below the thermocline. For this reason, pinpointing schools of summer fish is relatively simple; find the cool, oxygen-rich water that forms the thermocline and you’ll find crappie. This changes in fall. Cool weather lowers the surface water temperature. As the upper layer cools, it becomes heavier and sinks. This action forces warmer, lighter water below back to the surface. This water subsequently is cooled and descends as it cools. This mixing or “turnover” continues several weeks until the thermocline disappears, and all water in the lake is roughly the same temperature. This mixing effect also replenishes oxygen in deep water. Fish formerly restricted to narrow bands of acceptable oxygen and temperatures no longer are limited in their movements. Crappie once barred from the coolest depths because of low oxygen levels roam freely to much deeper water. And fish that could not spend extended periods in shallows due to high temperatures and low oxygen now find these areas acceptable. Crappie are deep, shallow and in between. During the fall turnover period, the best fishing Some waters don’t experience turnover because often is in shallow water following they don’t stratify in summer. Rivers are a case several consecutive days of warm in point. So are many large, shallow, windswept weather. lakes. Others are reservoirs with lock-and-dam facilities or hydroelectric generators. In waters where fall turnover does occur, however, the angler must dig deep into his bag of tricks to zero in on crappie schools. And it never hurts to have a few new tricks in your bag. Here are some tricks that could help. Find the Crappies’ Comfort Zones The secret to crappie-fishing success any season is realizing crappie always concentrate in areas providing the most comfortable living conditions and learn how to identify those areas. In fall, conditions are theoretically such that crappie can live anywhere within a lake. Actually, factors such as oxygen content, light penetration and food availability still influence a crappie’s choice of living quarters. Consider, for example, that all the debris and poorly oxygenated water being pushed 6 Crappie NOW October 2012 Catching Crappie When Lakes Turn Over upward from depths when turnover begins temporarily “trashes” the whole system. Crappie respond by seeking good quality water. To find the fish, savvy anglers do likewise. An easy way is working tributaries bringing fresh water into the lake. Another way is looking for areas where turnover has not begun. On some large reservoirs, different arms turn over at different times; anglers can concentrate efforts in areas that aren’t visibly affected. When turnover causes excessive amounts of decaying debris to circulate in the water column, sudden significant drops in oxygen can result. When this happens, crappie must find oxygenated water immediately. They frequently solve the problem by going to the nearest source, which is surface aeration from wind and waves. Consequently, windswept shorelines with shallow cover may be productive crappie-fishing spots. Your first task when fishing during turnover should be finding comfort zones such as those just described and working them systematically to pinpoint crappie. Try Standing Timber Fishing around straight, standing timber in water as deep as 20 or 30 feet is a tactic smart anglers often use to catch October’s turnover slabs. The tactic works where you find “slick” timber much like telephone poles. Bigger crappie seem to like this better because they can move around the brush-free poles better. Crappie a pound or less prefer to have some branches or brush, but larger crappie don’t. A good lure here is a Yum Wooly Beavertail or Yum Wooly Zapper on a 3/16-ounce jighead. Drop the lure next to the timber and hold it as motionless as possible for a minute before you move it. If you don’t have a bite by then, move “A lively minnow is one of the best turnover crappie enticements.” the lure up very slowly. Fish it slowly all the way around the pole, then, if you still don’t catch a fish, move to the next pole. You may have to come back and fish around the same pole five times before a fish Small spoons are great lures for quickly reaching crappie that move deep during the passage of cold fronts or as turnover waters begin to clear. will hit. Crappie sometimes leave their pole to go feed, then return to rest. And after you finally catch one, there may not be another fish on the same pole that day. Bigger baits, slick structure and repeated offerings: those are keys for catching October slabs in tall timber. Dealing with Cold Fronts Successful turnover anglers know how crappie react to changing weather patterns. This season has lots of bumps, starts and backups. Warm trends are interrupted by sudden cold fronts. Crappie migrate from deep water to shallow and back several times before settling into cold-weather patterns. The best fishing is usually after several consecutive warm days, especially if the 7 Crappie NOW October 2012 Lake ForkCrappie Slabs When Lakes Turn Over Catching weather report indicates passage of a coming cold front. During this time, lots of crappie feed heavily on baitfish in the shallows. Therefore, focus fishing efforts on shallow waters where feeding activity is greatest. When a cold front hits, crappie move deeper, holding near bottom structure where light penetration is minimal and cover is abundant. Deep timber along channel edges or underwater humps is a favorite retreat. The more severe the front, the deeper the fish withdraw. If weather remains sunny and begins warming before the passage of another cold front, crappie gradually return to shallow waters. Rainy weather, especially a warm rain, sends them scurrying to shallow reaches. Consider all these factors when selecting areas in which to focus your fishing efforts. And if necessary, keep moving until you find actively feeding fish. Selecting Lures/Baits In fall, as during other seasons, lure selection depends primarily on water and weather conditions, available forage and physical characteristics of the area you’re fishing. Remembering these tips should help you make the best selection. • If visibility is restricted due to circulating debris, crappie rely more on sound, vibrations and odor to find food. Using lures with rattles, flashy spinners, spray-on scents and other attention-getters may improve success. • Because crappie in stained water hold tighter on structure, work jigs and minnows closer than usual to cover in dingy water. Bumping cover may be necessary to elicit strikes. • As turnover waters clear, crappie move deeper. That’s when it’s time to use small baits on light line. Small jigs, spoons, bladebaits and vibrating plugs are among the best. • Don’t depend only on lures. A lively minnow is one of the best turnover crappie enticements. Smart anglers carry a variety of lures and a good supply of minnows when fishing this time of year. In Conclusion The transition from summer to autumn is jolting for fish and fishermen. Crappie find their once secure world turned over on them. Anglers find their quarry more unpredictable than ever. Overcoming this seasonal nemesis will require all the skill, knowledge and patience you can muster. But when you finally zero in on a school of hefty autumn crappie, you’ll find the rewards make the extra effort worthwhile. “During autumn, crappie schools often hunt shad on big flats. On breezy days, I catch them by ‘sailing,’ placing sixteen 8- to 16-foot B’n’M rods in Driftmaster T-Bar holders and letting the wind blow me across these flats. My lures—1/8- to 1/16-ounce leadheads with Road Runner bodies—are set from 8 to 15 feet deep until I determine the depth where crappie are feeding. As I drift, I use a Humminbird 787 sonar/GPS combo to mark my path. This allows me to retrace a path when I start catching crappie, using my trolling motor to keep me on course. If it’s extremely windy, I put out one or two MinnKota drift socks to slow the boat to 1.6 mph or slower. This is one of the best ways I know to find and catch crappie this time of year.” --Tennessee fishing guide Jim Duckworth, www.jimduckworth.com 8 Crappie NOW October 2012 - Keith Sutton Crappie Basics Crappie Basics #39 Setting the Hook Last issue we had a good show-and-tell on setting a hook with a long pole. Some fishermen say that not getting a good hookset is the number one reason for losing a big fish. “Getting a hook through the lip of big crappie can be difficult. A 1.75 pounder or larger has a tough mouth. Most people are too easy on them.” So what does this mean? A limber pole with monofilament line means getting serious with the snap when setting the hook. You want it to penetrate a big crappie’s upper lip. Set a little lighter when using a stiffer pole and/or braided line. –T.H. 9 Crappie NOW October 2012 Story & photos by Vic Attardo The sailboat was stationary. Moored between two wooden docks, a web of lines extended from the boat’s bow, sides and stern, to cleats on the slated platforms. The lines were so entwined, it didn’t seem as if a fly could escape the web, let alone have a weighted jig and bait successfully placed into the crisscross of openings. But that’s what Chesapeake Bay captain, Bob Couch, managed. With a deft underhand flip, he sent the jig and crappie chunk through the first knotting of moorings to the dock’s outer edge near the sailboat’s stern. The jig with a balsa float above it, dropped like a feather. In seconds, the float stood up, indicating that the jig had descended the full length of leader and wasn’t hung on the bottom, or elsewhere. Couch gave the float a slight forward twitch and the indicator sunk out of sight. After a brief fight a beefy crappie was pulled up and out. But unfortunately success breeds competition. Two or three docks away, a not-very considerate angler pulled in on a moored powerboat in an adjoining slip. The other angler barreled to a gliding stop, dropped his trolling motor with a splashing kerplunk – everything that Couch hadn’t done – and proceeded to cast deep into the dock’s recess, bumping into the front pillars as he did. I watched, through a camera lens, from the stern of Couch’s Ranger. In short order, my boat leader lifted another puffy white crappie from the first shadow near the stern. When he hooked the fish, Couch escorted it quickly into open water ahead of the pilings. The other angler pulled an equally nice crappie from the rear of his dock. But unlike Couch’s, the crappie on a longer line dove down into the back end and this angler had to use his trolling motor to get further along the dock to lift it up. I think he hit every pillar on the way. Over the course of the next fifteen to twenty minutes, my guy pulled out more crappie from The benefits of working a dock front to back. the front of the dock, proceeded to work an Lshaped turn on the platform where he produced another two fish, and then hit a mini-jack pot by catching three or four crappie along the bulwark and the bow of the sailer that was parked frontin. While the space two docks over was equally adjacent to a marina channel, had deep water in the front of the platform and deeper water in the back by the bulwark, the noisy, aggressive angler managed just one more crappie. Throughout it all, Couch just smiled. Eventually the other angler went away. “Thirsty?” asked Couch when he finished 10 Crappie NOW October 2012 Working Docks Front to Back scouring his dock. “Sure,” I said. “Well, let’s drift off and take a break.” If you haven’t figured out where this is going, let me get to the heart. Our break lasted on the long side of ten minutes, then Couch went to the dock the other angler had vacated. He began working the outside shadows, the front part of the dock. Going further and further along the powerboat he proceeded to catch – if recall serves me – at least a half-dozen crappie from this slip: a half-dozen crappie that the angler who banged his way around and worked back to front, never had a chance on. “You have to work front to back,” Couch said later -- when I had a notebook and not a camera in my hands. “There’re going to be fish at the back of the dock but if you go in and disturb everything along the way, you’re lessening your chances of a big catch.” Attention to detail is the hallmark of all successful fishing and fishing docks is no exception. Few shore-based docks have the same depth along their entire length. Most likely the front of the dock will be deeper than the back, especially if a long platform leads to the moored boat. The platform tells you the dock “I’ll have two to four rods rigged owner had to extend the planks to cross shallow water. However, if the platform is short or if there is a high vertical bulwark at the back, chances are there is deep water in the rear of the dock as well. When working front to back, adjustments will probably need to be made. The most important adjustment is a lengthening or shortening of the line below the float. The adjustment corresponds to the changing depths along the dock. 11 Crappie NOW Steve Reese is a New York angler who works the scattered docks and marinas of Oneida Lake and others. “Adjacent bank contours are very Angler casts to front edge of dock. important,” said Reese. “The back end that is in a foot or less of water is probably not a hotspot, but if the back of the dock contains several feet of water, then you have to play it as if it holds big crappie.” Marina slips that have boats moored to a central dock are probably the same depth at least along the length of the boat but marina slips often have the added feature of current passing along or through. In angler adjustments, changes in current translate in changes and ready.” in the weight of the offering or the speed in which it’s retrieved. Reese will keep a couple of rods rigged with slightly different weight jigs or varying weights of shot attached to a number of lines. “I don’t want to be fussing with rigs while I’m fishing, so depending on what I think I’ll be doing and where I’m going, I’ll have two to four rods rigged and ready.” Reese often casts a one-sixteenth ounce jig with the added bulk of a one-inch Yum October 2012 Working Docks Front to Back Delicately working a marina slip. Beavertail but he has another rod rigged with a one-eighth ounce, or a Road Runner, for deeper water or more current. “In many New York lakes currents pop up with the wind or the opening of gates. These currents are here one minute and gone the next. When they’re active, they turn the fish on so you have to watch and be ready.” Changing lake currents mean that what was the “front” of a dock can suddenly be the “back” of the dock, Reese explained. Yet his pattern still goes front to back. He never travels over the water to reach one end without first working the area closest to his boat position. “Current passes under open marinas in all sorts of ways and it’s necessary to work down to about a foot above the bottom. The once constant in all these situations is that you cast at the current and retrieve the jig back with it.” One afternoon I was with Reese when he carefully circled the end of a dock that showed a distinct current. He kept away from the dock and cast to the side where the current pushed his float and jig to the outer edge. At this front part it was grabbed by a two-pounder. “Just like it’s supposed to happen,” he smiled. Working docks carefully is an important part of the crappie game. Being a bull in a china shop certainly is not the way to go and wherever possible you should go through the front door and work your way to the back. Now is Good With falling water temperatures, crappie are on the feed in many Northeastern waters. From the brackish rivers that lead into the upper Chesapeake Bay and the lakes of New York, Pennsylvania and Connecticut, top crappie waters will produce fish from now until the ice forms. Isolated docks near deep water and collective docks in marinas will play a key role for crappie anglers. Be sure to work from front-to-back. - Vic Attardo 12 Crappie NOW October 2012 Vern’s Cooking & Tidbits How To? Story & Photos by Jeff Samsel Crappie NOW - Barbed heads with TJ Stallings ER P ” U “S JIGS 870-935-4914 or 888-935-0189 MA RS STE MIDSOUTH TACKLE www.midsouthtackle.com 128 CR 108 Jonesboro, Arkansas 72404 Manufacture of quality tube skirts for over 30 years. Tip of the month - Double-Hook Jig Rig By Jackie Vancleave Double-hook rigs have been around for years. My partner and I decided we wanted something a little different. We use a 1/16-ounce on top, a 1/4-ounce sinker, and a 1/8-ounce jig on bottom. The rig will work whether moving or stopped. Also, it’s good in stumpy lakes because it will bump around them where minnows hang up. Our jig bodies are Strike King Slab Hammer tube jigs. We tip with minnows, wax worms or Crappie Nibbles; whatever it takes. One other thing that helps when spider rigging is to have individual rod holders (not all holders on the same rack). When we get a bite or when we move a pole the other poles aren’t bothered. That’s important to getting more bites and seeing more bites. We use the Driftmaster Crappie Stalkers. They are very easy to adjust while fishing. Jackie VanCleave is a crappie fishing guide on Reelfoot Lake, TN. 731-5382547; [email protected]. Sponsors include: BnM Poles; Strike King; Driftmaster; Vicious Line 13 Crappie NOW Ocotober 2012 NATIONAL EVENTS Crappie Masters www.crappiemasters.net Paul Alpers, Pres 573-280-8020 | Bobby Brown, Vice-Pres 417-532-0244 >Truman Lake, Aug 25th. David Cox and Steve Hocket won the tournament with 9.14 pounds. They fished the Osage Arm using their own chartreuse/green jigs tipped with minnows. They caught some of their fish in 3 feet of water and other in 10 to 20 feet. They won $4000 and prizes. Second place went to Travis and Charles Bunting with 9.00. They spider rigged and jigged. They caught fish both from wood and from Porcupine Fish Attractors. Third place was Kevin Pipes and Jason Meacham with 8.86. Top male-female team was Dianne and Lonnie Stevens with 8.08 and they had big fish with a 1.72. Top adult-youth was Bob and Douglas Blum with 6.84. Missouri State Champions. Truman Lake was the third leg for a battle for the state championship. Jim Dant and Donnie Zuffall won with the most combined points from tournaments on Ozarks, Mark Twain and Truman Lake. They finished fifth at Truman wrapping up the points needed for the title of Missouri Champions for 2012; and $1600 in prize money. >Crappie Masters National Championship Classic will be held October 5-6 on Tom-Bigbee Waterway at Columbus, MS. Crappie USA www.crappieusa.com [email protected] 270-395-4204 Darrell Van Vactor, Pres. [email protected] >Cabela’s Classic will be held October 24-27th on Kentucky/Barkley Lakes. 14 Crappie NOW October 2012 EVENTS CALENDAR Columbus, MS Berlin Lake Wolf Lake High Rock, NC Paint Creek Shelbyville Grenada, MS Dillon Open Holt Mark Twain KY/Barkley, KY CLASSIC club club club classic open qualifier open club club CLASSIC November Events 3 Southern 8-9 Slab Masters 10 Magnolia 10 West AL 17 Southern Jordan, NC Oconee; Sinclair Barnett, MS McConn/Forkland Oconee/SC/GA club club club club club 15 Crappie NOW October 2012 Oct. - Nov. 2012 Calendar October Events 3-6 Crappie Masters 6 NE Ohio 13 Magnolia 13 Southern 13 Buckeye Challenge 13 Springfield 19-20Crappie Masters 20 E. Buckeye 20 West AL 21 Springfield 24-27Crappie USA REGIONAL CRAPPIE CLUBS REGIONAL CRAPPIE CLUBS (Note that club news and results are taken from websites around the 5th of each month. Only those who provide information through their website or by email will have updated information and results included.) Clubs AL- Shoals Area Crappie Association www.shoalscrappie.com [email protected] Keith Dodd 256-679-1826 keithsguideservice@ yahoo.com AL- West Alabama Crappie Association westalabamacrappie.com pres: Jesse Wright 205-932-3997 crappie1@ centurytel.net vice-pres: Steve Minor 205-932-5257 AZ- Arizona Crappie Association www.azcrappie.com Bill (Piscolli) Eveland [email protected] GA- Slab Masters Tournament Trail www.slabmasterstournamenttrail.net [email protected] Dan [email protected] 478-214-3207; Jamie Moore 478-230-7703 tourn. dir. IL- Springfield Crappie Club www.springfieldcrappieclub.com Jerry Jallas [email protected] MS- Magnolia Crappie Club www.magnoliacrappieclub.com Paul Johnson, Pres. 601-624-0359 dipnet@ comcast.net MS- Fruit Jar www.crappie.com MS Tommy O’Keefe 601-941-0059 Open to anyone; $60 each. See calendar for schedule. MO- Eastern Missouri Crappie Club www.easternmocrappie.com [email protected] John Martens, 314-221-0004 OH- Eastern Buckeye Crappie Club [email protected] 16 Crappie NOW October 2012 REGIONALCRAPPIE CRAPPIECLUBS CLUBS REGIONAL With An Unfair Advantage. F G I N B N M F I S G M N B H CRAPPIE! #2 B’N’M PRO STAFF FISHING /)141-2'4/(.4%2.1044$-1 03..2%2&"4(04(#3.4 $/ +-142&3'4204(!4-4,/0&+4%/. 1(.344 +2142,10.(&02/,-)42'3/ 13.231413014-4$+/)34,3$ 10-,'-.'4%/.4.-!!23421+2,*" !(002,*4/(42,40+3413-04$20+ 0+3431042,40+34(12,31144 # $%%%#!% FISHING TIPS SERIES - NO. 2 H ER EV ER FI SH ING TA K E S Y O U , B N M HA E S B EN T “The Difference” by Roger Gant, In A New Size! (.4&(10/#3.14)2340+214./'41/4#(&+40+3.34-12,* %/.4#/.3441/4$3.34*22,*40+3#4-,/0+3.4%//040/43,/ $20+4-4%//04#/'3)44+30+3.41!2'3.4.2**2,*"402*+0 )2,2,*"4/.412'34!())2,*"4# $ !""#%#%$$%# $%" #$# #! #-314-))4 4404-)1/4#-314 -4*.3-041!2,,2,*4./'4-,'4214%-,0-102&4%/.4'33!4$-03. 2**2,*42,402*+04-.3-1"4/.4$-'3%21+2,* ITEM LGTH. PC. GUIDES 4444444444444444 44 4444444444444444 44 4444444444444 444 PA- North East Ice Tour www.northeasticetour.com Bryon Eckardt Byron@ northeasticefisherman.com H W PA- Keystone Crappie Club www.keystonecrappie.com [email protected] Check crappie.com under the Pennsylvania board for postings. S N AnyTime, Any Place, In Any Water CRAPPIE NUMBER TWO! I ANYTIME, ANY PLACE, IN ANY WATER E. 2012 ER for OH- Northeast Ohio Crappie Club www. northeastohiocrappieclub. com northeastohiocrappieclub@ gmail.com Dan Elko 412-721-0372 SC- Southern Crappie Association www.southerncrappie.com Melissa Hinson 803-4324342; 803-572-1558 melissamoments@yahoo. com TOOLSOFTHE TRADE It’s How The Professionals Fish I OH- Buckeye Crappie Challenge www. buckeyecrappiechallenge. com buckeye@ buckeyecrappiechallenge. com Jeff 419-305-8762 H Tim 740-658-3782 evenings # $%$%!%"%!#%!$%# $% %!"$!#$% !#"!% !" $%$%# "%$%!%# $%#$ "$ "#%$"$%%#%"%# $%#"#$ FISHING B’n’M Pole Company P.O. Box 231, West Point, Mississippi 39773 www.bnmpoles.com • 800-647-6363 New BnM Sunvisors '(10-)3"4/,3123 %201-))4&/,10.(&02/,"4 -,'4#-&+2,34 $-1+-)3"40// +.33413 4&/)/.41&+3#31 !! ! !! Celebrating Our 75th Year And Third Generation Of Quality, Value & Service To Crappie Anglers. !!! TN- Middle Tennessee Crappie Club [email protected] Tracy Farmer 931-652-9638 farmertracy21@yahoo. com TN- West Tennessee Crappie Club www.westtncrappie.com George Pruitt 731-267-2322 georgespruitt@yahoo. com 17 Crappie NOW October 2012 REGIONAL CRAPPIE CLUBS REGIONAL CRAPPIE CLUBS TX- Crappie Anglers of Texas (CAT) www.crappieanglersoftexas.com [email protected] Events/Tournaments/Other Contacts (see calendar for event dates) IBBFA ifbba.com 704-784-4348 Authur Bronson [email protected] MS- NWSCC Loyd Gibson 662-526-1875; Holiday Landing 662-526-5392 18 Crappie NOW October 2012 Crappie Bake with Cream Cheese Cream cheese is a soft, sweet, mild-tasting, white cheese with a high fat content and a slight tang. The only cheese I would eat as a child. Traditionally, it is made from un-skimmed milk enriched with more cream. According to Kraft Foods, the first American cream cheese was made in Chester, New York in 1872 by dairyman William Lawrence. In 1880, Philadelphia was taken as the brand name, after the city that was considered (at the time) to be home of top quality food in the USA. A cheese distributor soon commissioned the dairyman to produce the cream cheese in volume under the trade name Philadelphia Brand. The company was eventually bought by Kraft Foods in 1928, and remains the most widely-recognized brand of cream cheese in the United States. Cream cheese is similar to French Neufchatel in that it is made from cow’s milk, but differs in that it is un-ripened and often contains emulsifiers to lend firmness and lengthen shelf-life. USDA law requires standard cream cheese must contain at least 33 percent fat and no more than 55 percent water, although there are low-fat and nonfat varieties now on the market. There are references to cream cheese in England as early as 1583 and in France as early as 1651. Recipes are recorded soon after 1754, particularly from Lincolnshire and the southwest of England. The technique is known to have been in use in Normandy since the 1850s, producing cheeses with higher fat content than the US model, and Philadelphia cream cheese has been suggested as a substitute when petit Suisse is not available. Following successful marketing by Kraft Foods in Spain, some people there refer to “queso filadelfia” instead of “queso crema” or “queso cremoso” (whatever that means). Try this recipe with crappie you’ve cooked until flaky in a microwave. 1 3-ounce package cream cheese 1 cup dry macaroni 1 10-ounce can condensed cream of mushroom soup 1 1/2 cup cooked, flaked crappie 1/4 cup chopped onion 1/4 cup chopped green pepper 2 tablespoon prepared mustard 1/4 teaspoon salt 1/4 cup milk Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Allow cream cheese to soften at room temperature. Prepare macaroni according to package directions. Drain. Blend soup and cream cheese with an electric mixer. Stir in macaroni, fish, onion, green pepper, mustard, salt, and milk. Place mixture in a 1 1/2-quart dish. Sprinkle with Corn Flake crumbs. Bake for 20 19 Crappie NOW October 2012 Vern’s Cooking & Tidbits to 25 minutes. Makes 4 servings. Vern’s Tomato Pie 9-inch piecrust 2 to 4 tomatoes Dash seasoning 1/2 teaspoon basil 1/8 cup chopped fresh chives 1/4 cup mayonnaise 1 cup cheddar cheese Heat piecrust to 425 degrees for 5 minutes. Slice thickly tomatoes to cover bottom of piecrust and sprinkle with Dash seasoning. Sprinkle basil and chives over tomatoes. Mix mayonnaise with cheddar cheese spread over the top to seal tomatoes. Put in oven for 30 to 35 minutes at 400 degrees. 20 Crappie NOW October 2012 Jigs are both fun and productive. When crappie are banging a jig you can catch two fish in the time it takes to catch one fish on a minnow. The jig is faster because you don’t have to pause to re-bait every time you get a bite. Also, the jig can get into and out of places a minnow won’t go. Here are the basics. By Tim Huffman Use Your Head A jighead does two basic functions. The first and most important is to add weight so the bait sinks to whatever depth you’re fishing. The second function is to properly hold and present a jig body. That’s why it has the 90-degree hook and different type collars. Heads vary in looks and design. For most stained and muddy waters the shape does not matter. In the clearest waters it might make a difference because crappie can closely examine the bait. The biggest way to visually enhance a head is with paint. For example, an orange head in very stained water can be outstanding. Eyes on a bait look good but I do not know of a study that proves better catches due to jig eyes. You can have weedguards, bent hooks for weedless rigging, and a variety of other configurations. Use them where they work for your fishing situations. If they are not needed, you are better off with a standard round jighead. A tiny sampling of the many different type jigheads. You can match the best heads with the type bodies you use. A key factor is jig weight. There are very few totally right or totally wrong guidelines. Some fishermen like a lighter jig while other fishermen prefer a heavy jig. The number one rule is that you must use a heavy enough jig to get to the strike zone. Depth, current, speed, wind and other factors determine the weight you need. 1/32-ounce. This is considered light although some anglers, especially ice fishermen, will go lighter. A 1/32 is a light jig weight that will let you stay high in the water while trolling or casting/retrieving. Its slow fall is perfect for a natural presentation when vertical jigging 21 Crappie NOW October 2012 It’s All In Your Head relatively shallow water. Or, when shooting docks. You must watch your line for bites when using lightweight jigheads. You’ll see more bites than you feel. 1/16-ounce. This is the most popular size. It’s a good all-around head with average characteristics. It’s in-between a 1/32 and 1/8-ounce. 1/8-ounce. An important head for jigging, trolling and casting because it lets you get to greater depths. It also allows maximum feel of the bait because it keeps the line tight. You feel bottom, limbs and bites. 1/4-ounce. A decade ago you seldom heard a 1/4-ounce mentioned for crappie fishing but it has become more popular. A big crappie can easily eat it. The big weight gets down deep and keep lines straighter when trolling. Hooks Many fishermen accept whatever hook size and type that’s on the shelf at the bait shop. There’s a little more to it. Here are a few tips. A hook should be thin wire if you intend to try to bend it to get it off of a hang-up. However, they are not so thin that the weight of a crappie will bend it. So for recreational fishing, you should stick with a thin wire jig hook. Size is important. Unless you’re fishing a lake loaded with very small crappie, stick with bigger hooks. For example, a 1/32-ounce jig may have a #6 or #8 hook. Look until you find one with at least a #4. You get a better catch ratio with larger crappie. As you go up in weight your hooks should increase in size, too. Does hook color matter? Sometimes. A lot of fishermen like gold color in clear water. Red can be good in any color water. You have bronze, black, gold, red and maybe others. Your best bet is to try different ones to see which you like best. Collars Your jighead can have a plain hook for solid plastic bodies. It can have a collar that is barbed, double-barbed, ribbed or other design. Match the collar to your body. It should hold a body without tearing it. Closing Your jighead doesn’t have to be expensive but it must be proper size, with thin wire, and have a sharp hook. Pick the right weight and you’re in the business of jig fishing. We’ll cover advanced jigheads in a future CrappieNow issue. We’ll also discuss some of the types of bodies you need. - Tim Huffman 22 Crappie NOW October 2012 Crappie Basics Crappie Basics #40 Who Needs a Guide? I’ve heard people say, “I’m not going to pay a guide $200-$300 to fish.” Every day a guide must clean and prepare his boat. He often has to fight cold, heat, wind and rain. He has the cost of keeping up a good boat. He has other expenses for equipment. I won’t even question if a good guide earns his money. But is it worth the cost to the fisherman? Here are two good examples. You fish less than a week a year. The upkeep of the boat, batteries, license and insurance plus the time of doing repairs can be costly. Also, if you don’t fish often, you’ll likely not find and catch fish when you go. Hiring a guide several days a year will increase your chances of catching fish, let you enjoy your time off and probably won’t cost a lot more than the upkeep of a boat and equipment. You own a boat. You and a buddy are headed for four days of fishing on Slab Lake where you’ve never been fishing. Invest in a guide the first day. Tell him what you are doing and let him know you won’t steal his holes. However, you do want him to teach you the pattern and general areas to fish. You can have a good day with the guide and then three more days on your own catching fish instead of struggling. –T.H. 23 Crappie NOW October 2012 How To? Crappie NOW - Navioncs with Paul Michele If You’re Not Using Driftmaster; good luck! .COM MADE IN USA ROD HOLDERS & TROLLING SYSTEMS BLACK RIVER TOOLS INC. 24 Crappie NOW October 2012 803-473-4927 What’s Cooking? Baked CRAPPIE Filets w /RIVERIA SAUCE on Grilled BAGUETTES By: Gene Westbrook @www.magnoliacollectionrecipes.com - An Online Cookbook 4 to 6 fish filets Salted and freshly ground black pepper (for the fish) 3 T. real butter 1 tsp. cornstarch 2/3-cup milk ¼ tsp. freshly ground black pepper ¼ tsp. garlic powder 2 T. finely-chopped, oil-packed sundried tomatoes 2 T. drained capers 1 Baguette loaf, cut into 4 portions Salt and pepper the fish filets on both sides and place into a spray-oiled glass-baking dish. In a small saucepan over low heat, melt the butter; then stir in the cornstarch, milk, pepper, and garlic powder. Bring the mixture to a boil and whisk for 1 minute; then reduce heat to medium, and whisk until sauce has slightly thickened. Stir in the sun-dried tomatoes and capers to blend. Cover the tops of the fish filets evenly with sauce and bake, uncovered, at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes. Fish cooks quickly so do not overcook. It is cooked when the fish color changes from translucent to white, and the fish is flaky when lifted with a fork. Spray a large skillet with olive oil and slowly grill the inside of the opened Baguette portion until very lightly browned. To serve, place a fish filet with the sauce on top across the opened, grilled Baguette like an open-faced sandwich. Repeat with the other fish fillets. Makes: 4 to 6 servings. 25 Crappie NOW October 2012 Another character that was ever constant in Uncle Elmer’s life was Butch, the state game warden assigned to the county. Butch and Uncle Elmer were good friends and both seemed to have an equal respect for each other. It was with this respect that Uncle Elmer helped Butch earn the legendary status as a most feared fish and wildlife crime fighter. Uncle Elmer was fed up with all the talk going around the neighborhood about the Looney brothers catching and keeping undersize largemouth bass from the river. It was time to get Butch involved and see what could be done about these two outlaws. Uncle Elmer agreed to accompany Butch since he was more familiar with the area many times but he didn’t remember this of the river where the brothers might be particular incident the brothers were talking located. about.) This conversation was suddenly Sure enough, late one night Uncle interrupted when one of the brothers caught Elmer and Butch observed the Looney a largemouth bass about 10 inches long, 2 Brothers and four of their friends fishing inches shy of the legal limit of 12 inches. along the bank of the river. Butch advised They proceeded to put the undersize fish Uncle Elmer that on a rope stringer they would sneak up and walked about close to the outlaws Butch couldn’t smell a skunk if he tripped 20 yards down the and observe their bank and hid the over one. activity for a while. fish from plain view. He wanted to be After a few minutes sure each one was two more undersize actually involved in the act of fishing before fish were added to the stringer. It was time confronting them. to confront the fish poaching outlaws. As both of our crime fighting hero’s sat Uncle Elmer had an idea and watching the fishermen, both were shocked whispered his plan to Butch. What was when all of a sudden one of the Looney to follow would make the warden a legend brothers began talking about Butch. “Yeah, among poachers around the campfire. They that guy would arrest his own mother”. then proceeded to approach the fishermen The other said, “I know some fellows and Butch asked to see their fishing license. that he caught with 20 squirrels over the Surprisingly, the Looney brothers did have limit”. a fishing license, but two of their friends did “They had those squirrels hid at their not. He then inquired if the anglers had had campsite and Butch smelled them out”. any luck this evening. They all responded (Butch later stated that he had caught that they had not caught anything. Butch hunters with over the limit of squirrels began writing a citation to each of the two 26 Crappie NOW Ocotober 2012 without a fishing license. Suddenly, Butch stopped writing and began to “sniff” the air around him. “Are you sure you boys hadn’t caught anything this evening”? “No”, replied the anglers. He continued writing only to stop again a few minutes later and sniff the air again. “I smell fish. I think you boys are lying to me”. Butch continued sniffing the air as he walked the 20 yards down the bank and found the stringer of illegal fish. The fishermen were stunned. Butch asked, “Who caught these”? The fishermen all sat in silence. He then ordered all of the fishermen to stand up and hold out their hands as he began to sniff each of the angler’s hands. This was Uncle Elmer’s plan and it was working beautifully. Butch then picked out the three fishermen that he and Uncle Elmer had actually seen catch the three fish and announced that he had smelled the fish on their hands and therefore they were guilty. The fishermen were totally convinced they had been discovered by this bloodhound sniffing game warden. This incident took place many years ago and has since been retold and exaggerated each time by the fishermen involved. They were so impressed with Butch that their participation in the incident was looked at as a badge of honor. Butch on the other hand never denied that he smelled those fish. He only confided to his close friends that his smoking habit ruined his sense of smell and he couldn’t smell a skunk if he tripped over one. Uncle Elmer again pulled one over on the Looney brothers and the talk in the neighborhood of the Looney brothers taking illegal fish soon stopped. 27 Crappie NOW October 2012
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