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Frisch: Chase crappies on the first trip

Mike Frisch gives his tips for fishing for crappies early in the season

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Mike Frisch with a crappie that ate a Shoo Shiner Jig
Contributed photo by Mike Frisch

ALEXANDRIA — For many anglers, the first fishing trip of the open water season is for crappies. In some areas, fishing season for walleyes and bass and such is not yet open, but regulations permit us to chase crappies.

In other areas, crappies are just accessible early in the fishing season. They can be caught from boats, but they can also be caught from docks or the shoreline. Crappies can be easy to catch this time of year, they’re abundant in many areas across North America, and they’re great on a plate. For many reasons, you should be chasing crappies right now. Here’s how.

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First, just like any other time of the year, you’ve got to find the fish. Crappies will be around stuff: That stuff might be reeds or a downed tree or a dock.

Next, early in the year, you want to find the warmest water. Find warm water with a cover that’s near deep water, and you’ll probably have crappies within casting range — crappies like to have access to deep water. If the weather turns cold, they like to be able to move quickly to the deeper water.

So, now that we know where they are, we need to put a bait where they are. Several presentations will work, but probably the most popular and effective, when done properly, is to suspend a jig or a basic split-shot weight and hook under a slip-bobber. Slip-bobbers allow an angler to cast easily and present a bait right in the crappie’s face.

Start with a sixteenth-ounce jig. I had the chance to sample the new Mr. Crappie Shoo Shiner Jig last fall and am eager to put it to use this spring. It is a hand-tied feather jig that crappies like! If the crappies won’t eat a sixteenth-ounce jig, go smaller. Color is one of the things you’ll need to experiment with, as sometimes the crappies can be very selective. Some very successful crappie catchers like a black jig or jig with some black in it because many of the bugs being hatched early in the year are black. These anglers like to “match the hatch.”

However, I’ve seen many instances when a pink, chartreuse or orange jig is very productive early in the year, and there aren’t very many pink, chartreuse or orange bugs in the water. Keep trying different colors until the fish show you what they want.

The Shoo Shiner often gets bit when fished alone, but small minnows will also work well on the jig if the fish are very finicky.

A key consideration is where you set the bobber stop. It is very important to suspend your bait just a tad above the fish. If you think the fish are four feet below the surface, set your bobber so it is about three and a half feet below the surface. You don’t want the bait below the fish. Fish of any species are more likely to go up for bait than down.

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If the bite is really slow, tie on a plain hook with a couple of split shot above. Even the most finicky crappie will usually hit this set-up.

Crappie action can be very good right now. Keep a couple for supper and put the rest back. By doing so, we’ll be able to enjoy this early season action for a long time. As always, remember to include a youngster in your next outdoors adventure.

To see all the newest episodes of Fishing the Midwest television, visit . Join us on Facebook.com/fishingthemidwest.

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