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Piscolli
May 13th, 2007, 11:28 AM
That in the south post-spawn crappie fishing is very slow and out here they are aggressive? Experience tells me that after watching beds for several days the males are hungry and hit like bass but in the south post-spawn is concidered the "dog days".

Fish Hawk
May 14th, 2007, 03:48 PM
Why is it?

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That in the south post-spawn crappie fishing is very slow and out here they are aggressive? Experience tells me that after watching beds for several days the males are hungry and hit like bass but in the south post-spawn is concidered the "dog days".



1. south post-spawn crappie fishing is very slow
THEIR BLACK CRAPPIE YOU KNOW

2. out here they are aggressive?
OUT HERE THEIR TWEEKERS. THATS WHY THE SPAWN LAST SO LONG

3. Experience tells me that after watching beds for several days
THAT TELLS ME YOUR TWEEKEN TOO.


4. the males are hungry and hit like bass
AFTER TWEEKEN AND F#$%EN FOR WEEKS, YOU'D BE HUNGRY AND HIT LIKE A BASS TOO.


5. in the south post-spawn is concidered the "dog days".
SEE NOTE #1

can you tell i don't feel like working today

Fast Rod
May 14th, 2007, 11:17 PM
Bill, I fished Crappie at Toledo Bend, the lake was full , but the trees were still standing, and we caught a ton of them, fishing straight down with minnows, and I thought they were very aggressive. Maybe we were on the Texas side and they were trying to get back to the other side.

kpangler
May 15th, 2007, 09:38 AM
Fast Rod:

Have you ever fished the Sabine River which feeds into Toledo Bend? I fished there a few years ago with my family and wife's uncle, and we filled the livewell with white and yellow bass, catfish, and a few crappie. What a great fishery!

KP

BASSRO
May 15th, 2007, 06:20 PM
Why is it?

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

That in the south post-spawn crappie fishing is very slow and out here they are aggressive? Experience tells me that after watching beds for several days the males are hungry and hit like bass but in the south post-spawn is concidered the "dog days".



1. south post-spawn crappie fishing is very slow
THEIR BLACK CRAPPIE YOU KNOW

2. out here they are aggressive?
OUT HERE THEIR TWEEKERS. THATS WHY THE SPAWN LAST SO LONG

3. Experience tells me that after watching beds for several days
THAT TELLS ME YOUR TWEEKEN TOO.


4. the males are hungry and hit like bass
AFTER TWEEKEN AND F#$%EN FOR WEEKS, YOU'D BE HUNGRY AND HIT LIKE A BASS TOO.


5. in the south post-spawn is concidered the "dog days".
SEE NOTE #1

can you tell i don't feel like working today

Now that is funny s**t there lmao

Woefman
May 15th, 2007, 08:57 PM
Maybe you guys have heard of the Crappie in Mississippi....a Buddy of my Brother, says they go down there every year and fish them with Cane Poles, somthing about the tree cover is so thick (not thickets but big standing trees bunched up) you have to use cane poles.

Wish I knew the Name , i will try to remember to ask my Brother.

The dude told me these Crappie There are Real Giants,

Fast Rod
May 15th, 2007, 10:42 PM
K P
I never got the chance to fish up there, or I just didn't take it. I was working offshore in Brazil at the time 28 on and 28 at home, fly in they called it. We had 4 kids at the time and I needed to stay home and help Mama and entertain the kids a little. Me and a friend fished trotlines for cat in the bayous also yo yo's, had a ball. A lot of crappie were caught in the rice field irrigation canals. We would float some and fish all along with fly rods, don't ever let anyone tell you a crappie won't hit a poppin bug. This was around Lake Charles and Sulphur and a little north.
Kim