February 2016 Marsh & Bayou | Page 33

C rappies gather in schools to feed before a peak spawning time, often when the full moon takes place or a stretch of warm weather hits. Schools of fish congregate near drop-offs, breaks, and other bottom structures to feed. Finding the schools requires patience and a collection of bottom hugging baits. Lead jigs with plastic trailers, Rat-LTraps, and live shiners under a cork are baits that cover water quickly Hard to beat when and hover near the bottom in the targetting larger strike zone. This is the time of year fish, see local to check deep tree tops, humps, tackle dealer for the popular colors. and ledges for big schools of fish. Search an area until you locate a school of crappie and the depths Try natural colors for where the fish are suspended. clear water and brighter colors when water was Lures like Rat-L-Traps and jigs stained or muddy. are tools for catching fish. The angler should learn how to use these lures just as a carpenter learns how to use a saw and hammer. Banks with drops in depth from two feet to six feet are superb places to begin Great for searching. Learning to reel slowly suspended crappie in open enough to keep the lure off the botwater as well as tom as it falls down the break is a those holding tight to brush. vital part of the technique; however, an occasional contact with the bottom is normal and often needed to Just slip a head inside the tube trigger a strike. Understanding the or rig it on a jig head, it’s hard to fish spawn and staging cycle helps deone wrong! termine which areas to search. In the early stages of spawning, male crappies prepare the beds. After the males have established an area, the big females move shallow to spawn. The first gathering takes place in water depths of six to eight feet in most rivers around Lake Pontchartrain. As the water warms and the moon fills, the fish travel from the deeper drops to the shallow-water beds. Anglers who fish shallow miss staging fish. Early spring is a great time to catch big fish before the spawn takes place. The first fish to stage are bigger and more abundant than bedding fish because they have not been picked over by other anglers. Banks with heavy shallow water cover and deep breaks are great places to start. Canals and bayous with deep curves or banks are another area to search. Since deep is a relative term, any break of one foot or more is a possible hot spot. Cover is not always a needed part of the equation. Use tiny Rat-L-Traps or horsehead jigs to travel over a spot quickly but effectively. The first fish is the hardest to find, but it signals a school is near this time of year. Slow down and concentrate the hunt in the zone w \