Location: Cedar Creek Reservoir - Alabama
Time: 8:30 AM - 1:00 PM
Air Temperature: 44 degrees AM, high of 70
Water Temperature: 65 - 67 degrees
Lake Level: 580.69’ - 6-8 inches lower that I like, but not bad.
Weather Conditions: 6 mph North, North-West. Much more manageable than yesterday.
Today was really a repeat of yesterday. Same tactics, same locations. Only difference is the air temp is about 10 degrees warmer and the wind isn't a factor.
The bay by the pump house was a bust entirely. I quickly moved over the the bushes by the levee and pick up 2-3. I then moved over to the blown down tree top I've been having good luck with and pulled out another 4-5. I then moved upstream to the new blow down I found in the channel bend over deep water and picked up another 3-4. I then ran up to Lost Creek to the boat houses but that was a bust today too. I ran quickly back over all my spots again after lunch, but the bite had turned off. Much like yesterday, fish were scattered and driven deeper. Ended up catching 12 crappie and 7 were big enough to keep. Also caught 3 largemouth and yellow bass. Females were again deeper than males, but of the couple females I cleaned, one had eggs ready to lay. This is the first one I've seen that has been ready to spawn.
Crappie hit about equally well on minnows under a bobber and vertical jigging a red and chartreuse tube jig. 3-8 FOW. Going to give it a few days break since another storm front is moving through tomorrow and bring in several days of cold weather. I will plan on trying again on Friday.
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Friday, April 10, 2020
Cold Front Crappie
Location: Cedar Creek Reservoir - Alabama
Time: 7:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Air Temperature: 44 degrees AM, high of 60
Water Temperature: 66 - 68 degrees
Lake Level: 580.93’ - 6-8 inches lower that I like, but not bad.
Weather Conditions: Terribly windy. 12 mph North, North-West. Gusts of 20 mph. Very cold wind chill effect.
A storm moved through on Thursday morning and brought a serious cold front with it that settled over us Thursday night. This made for a chilly start of the morning with an air temp of 44 degrees and a wind chill of about 39 degrees. The north wind was very cold and made fishing some of my favorite spots too rough to stay in place and be able to fish bobbers or vertical jig.
I tried my typical spots, but the pump house bay didn't produce at all and the bushes by the levee only had a few stray fish in there. I couldn't stay in place over my tree top where I had good luck on Monday and struggled to pull a couple crappie out of it.
I knew if I were to have any luck at all, I needed to focus on the north banks where I was protected from the wind. I also decided to explore some of the far east portions of the lake that I had never visited before.
I found a nice bay around the bend and set up with my bobber and minnow setup and picked up a couple decent largemouth and a single crappie. Then I found a very large deep water blow down tree top in the bend a little further upstream. Here jigging worked better with my red and chartreuse tube jig. I pulled 3-4 out of this area.
I repeated all my spots and only picked up a stray crappie or two along the way before deciding to go up to Lost Creek and try some spots I had good luck with in 2018. No luck at all in the small inlets on the east side of Lost Creek bay, so I rode over to the boat docks on the west side. The boat dock owners had sank several Christmas trees around the boat docks and I managed to pull 2-3 out of here. I then went back and repeated all my morning locations with no more luck.
In summary, the cold front seems to have scattered the fish and driven the females deeper. I caught 13 total with 8 large enough to keep, but these fish were hard to come by and definitely very scattered. Hoping to try again tomorrow morning and see if conditions stabilize and I can do a little better. It is supposed to be slightly better conditions.
Time: 7:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Air Temperature: 44 degrees AM, high of 60
Water Temperature: 66 - 68 degrees
Lake Level: 580.93’ - 6-8 inches lower that I like, but not bad.
Weather Conditions: Terribly windy. 12 mph North, North-West. Gusts of 20 mph. Very cold wind chill effect.
A storm moved through on Thursday morning and brought a serious cold front with it that settled over us Thursday night. This made for a chilly start of the morning with an air temp of 44 degrees and a wind chill of about 39 degrees. The north wind was very cold and made fishing some of my favorite spots too rough to stay in place and be able to fish bobbers or vertical jig.
I tried my typical spots, but the pump house bay didn't produce at all and the bushes by the levee only had a few stray fish in there. I couldn't stay in place over my tree top where I had good luck on Monday and struggled to pull a couple crappie out of it.
I knew if I were to have any luck at all, I needed to focus on the north banks where I was protected from the wind. I also decided to explore some of the far east portions of the lake that I had never visited before.
I found a nice bay around the bend and set up with my bobber and minnow setup and picked up a couple decent largemouth and a single crappie. Then I found a very large deep water blow down tree top in the bend a little further upstream. Here jigging worked better with my red and chartreuse tube jig. I pulled 3-4 out of this area.
I repeated all my spots and only picked up a stray crappie or two along the way before deciding to go up to Lost Creek and try some spots I had good luck with in 2018. No luck at all in the small inlets on the east side of Lost Creek bay, so I rode over to the boat docks on the west side. The boat dock owners had sank several Christmas trees around the boat docks and I managed to pull 2-3 out of here. I then went back and repeated all my morning locations with no more luck.
In summary, the cold front seems to have scattered the fish and driven the females deeper. I caught 13 total with 8 large enough to keep, but these fish were hard to come by and definitely very scattered. Hoping to try again tomorrow morning and see if conditions stabilize and I can do a little better. It is supposed to be slightly better conditions.
Monday, April 6, 2020
A Change in Tactics Pays Dividends
Location: Cedar Creek Reservoir - Alabama
Time: 10:30 AM - 4:00 PM
Air Temperature: 83 degrees high.
Water Temperature: 68 - 72.5 degrees
Lake Level: 581.76’ - Perfect level and conditions.
Weather Conditions: Calm. Sunny.
Time: 10:30 AM - 4:00 PM
Air Temperature: 83 degrees high.
Water Temperature: 68 - 72.5 degrees
Lake Level: 581.76’ - Perfect level and conditions.
Weather Conditions: Calm. Sunny.
Got a late start and didn't get to the lake until mid morning. Fished mostly around the Britton Bridge area today. Concentrated on the bay by the pump house, cyprus trees, some bushes on the east side of the road way levee, and a tree top in a southern inlet to the east of the bridge.
I started my morning in with minnows under a slip bobber in the cyprus trees, but only caught one. Fishing was slow. I moved to a tree top in an inlet and caught one more. At this point, about an hour and a half had passed and I decided to swap tactics entirely. Conditions were perfect, so I had to find something that the crappie liked.
I swapped over to my 11' jig pole and tied on a 1/8 oz jig head with a red and chartreuse tube skirt. I was trying to go ultralight so it would fall slowly and be more sensitive. I begin vertical jigging with this single pole, single jig in the tree top and... SUCCESS! I immediately began getting strong hits in 3-5 FOW and started hauling the crappie in. I proceeded to catch about 10-12 out of the same tree top.
After this area slowed, I moved down to some bushes on the east side of the road way where I had success in 2018. Immediately, they began pounding the jig and I pulled 5-6 more out of this bush. I then moved over to the pump house bay and jigged the log jams. Same successful results as I pulled another 6-8 out of this area.
After the pump house bay, I went back to the tree tops and started over. About 2:00, overcast conditions began to blow in and the fishing shut off like a light switch. I tried switching back to the minnows and went down to the dam end of the lake, but nothing work. The day was done.
I ended the day having exclusively caught crappie. I pulled 27 out of the water but only 19 were big enough to keep. I'll take it! Overall, this was an excellent day and showed that sometimes a change in tactics really pays off. I cleaned the fish and they dressed to about 4 lbs. About 60% were males, but this was an improvement that suggested more females were beginning to move into the shallows compared to the prior week.
We made fish tacos for dinner!
I started my morning in with minnows under a slip bobber in the cyprus trees, but only caught one. Fishing was slow. I moved to a tree top in an inlet and caught one more. At this point, about an hour and a half had passed and I decided to swap tactics entirely. Conditions were perfect, so I had to find something that the crappie liked.
I swapped over to my 11' jig pole and tied on a 1/8 oz jig head with a red and chartreuse tube skirt. I was trying to go ultralight so it would fall slowly and be more sensitive. I begin vertical jigging with this single pole, single jig in the tree top and... SUCCESS! I immediately began getting strong hits in 3-5 FOW and started hauling the crappie in. I proceeded to catch about 10-12 out of the same tree top.
After this area slowed, I moved down to some bushes on the east side of the road way where I had success in 2018. Immediately, they began pounding the jig and I pulled 5-6 more out of this bush. I then moved over to the pump house bay and jigged the log jams. Same successful results as I pulled another 6-8 out of this area.
After the pump house bay, I went back to the tree tops and started over. About 2:00, overcast conditions began to blow in and the fishing shut off like a light switch. I tried switching back to the minnows and went down to the dam end of the lake, but nothing work. The day was done.
I ended the day having exclusively caught crappie. I pulled 27 out of the water but only 19 were big enough to keep. I'll take it! Overall, this was an excellent day and showed that sometimes a change in tactics really pays off. I cleaned the fish and they dressed to about 4 lbs. About 60% were males, but this was an improvement that suggested more females were beginning to move into the shallows compared to the prior week.
We made fish tacos for dinner!
Sunday, April 5, 2020
Thomas's First Time on the Water and Daddy's First Trotlines in nearly 20 years
Location: Wheeler Lake - Cowford/Swan Creek Area - Alabama
Time: 7:00 AM - 8:30 PM
Air Temperature: 58 degrees AM
Water Temperature: 62 - 67 degrees
Lake Level: 554.91' - 97,667 cfps - A little heavy on current, but level is correct for this time of year.
Weather Conditions: Calm. Sunny.
Decided to take the 50+ 2-3" bluegill I caught this week in minnow traps and do a trial run of my new trotlines with nothing but live bait. Jessica and Thomas helped me to put a 50 hook line just east of the Cowford boat launch in about 9-10 FOW. We put the line between the channel and the feeding flats in hopes of targeting flathead catfish with the live bait. We placed it about 6 pm on Saturday and ran the line out and came back to bait it in the water. This was Thomas's first time out on the water!
I came back out this morning (Sunday) by myself to run the line. On hook number 2, I had my first fish! Although I didn't catch any flatheads, I did haul in 4 channels and one nice blue. My line did get snagged on something pretty solid around 20 hooks in. I did have to cut and re-tie, but that is just part of it. Hooks 20-30 seemed to do the best. Lots of empty hooks. I think the bluegill got off the line rather than catfish throwing the hooks. I think I ended up with about 20 lbs of fish. They made a nice mess once filleted!. These new lines are nice and I can't wait to run them again.
Time: 7:00 AM - 8:30 PM
Air Temperature: 58 degrees AM
Water Temperature: 62 - 67 degrees
Lake Level: 554.91' - 97,667 cfps - A little heavy on current, but level is correct for this time of year.
Weather Conditions: Calm. Sunny.
Decided to take the 50+ 2-3" bluegill I caught this week in minnow traps and do a trial run of my new trotlines with nothing but live bait. Jessica and Thomas helped me to put a 50 hook line just east of the Cowford boat launch in about 9-10 FOW. We put the line between the channel and the feeding flats in hopes of targeting flathead catfish with the live bait. We placed it about 6 pm on Saturday and ran the line out and came back to bait it in the water. This was Thomas's first time out on the water!
I came back out this morning (Sunday) by myself to run the line. On hook number 2, I had my first fish! Although I didn't catch any flatheads, I did haul in 4 channels and one nice blue. My line did get snagged on something pretty solid around 20 hooks in. I did have to cut and re-tie, but that is just part of it. Hooks 20-30 seemed to do the best. Lots of empty hooks. I think the bluegill got off the line rather than catfish throwing the hooks. I think I ended up with about 20 lbs of fish. They made a nice mess once filleted!. These new lines are nice and I can't wait to run them again.
Friday, April 3, 2020
COVID Crappie
Location: Cedar Creek Reservoir - Alabama
Time: 7:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Air Temperature: 58 degrees AM - 75 degrees afternoon
Water Temperature: 62 - 67 degrees
Lake Level: 582.63' - Very high for conditions, starting to clear.
Weather Conditions: Light winds to Calm. Sunny.
Time: 7:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Air Temperature: 58 degrees AM - 75 degrees afternoon
Water Temperature: 62 - 67 degrees
Lake Level: 582.63' - Very high for conditions, starting to clear.
Weather Conditions: Light winds to Calm. Sunny.
Day two of my 2020 COVID crappie season 😂. I ran minnow traps all week to try to stock up bait just in case. I tried several creeks around the house and even let the traps soak for a couple days in the swampy pond beside my work location in Hartselle. Only caught 4-5 creek chubs, but caught 50+ small bluegill around 2-3" long. Also caught two crawfish and one bullhead catfish. After all the effort, I was able to buy minnows in Hartselle on Thursday afternoon. I think the bluegill are a little big for the crappie, so I will save them for a trotline.
I fished bushes exclusively with minnows under a bobber. The lake was very busy, but most people were spider rigging. Fishing was slower that my last trip. I only caught 3 crappie, but all were big enough to keep. I caught 5 largemouth and 1 yellow bass. Going to let it settle down a couple days and see if the water will drop a little. I will try again on Monday.
Saturday, March 28, 2020
Kicking Off 2020 Spring Crappie Season
Location: Cedar Creek Reservoir - Alabama
Time: 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Air Temperature: 70 degrees AM - 82 degrees afternoon
Water Temperature: 68 - 72 degrees
Lake Level: 582.12' - Very high for conditions and muddy.
Weather Conditions: Moderate Winds from South,SW 10-16 MPH . Sunny to overcast.
Today was my first day on the water for spring crappie. I figured it may be a bit early but the 80+ degree weather this week had me itching to give it a try. I launched at Britton Bridge and fished log jams, tree tops, cyprus trees, and bushes all in about 3ft to 8ft of water. My main goal today was to see if the fish had moved into the bushes.
I picked up a good mixed bag today with 1 white bass, 7 yellow bass, 6 largemouth bass, and 6 crappie. Only 3 of the crappie were big enough to keep. All fish were caught on minnows under a bobber. My first crappie of the season was a beautiful black nose.
It seems all but one of the crappie were males and were just beginning to move up in the shallows. I think we are a week plus before the shallow fishing gets good. The surprise of the day was finding the live cyprus trees in 3-5ft of water and finding fish holding to them on the north bank east of Britton bridge. I will definitely be back to this area.
I cleaned the 3 keeper crappie and we ate them for dinner. Sure was nice to enjoy fresh fish again!
Time: 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Air Temperature: 70 degrees AM - 82 degrees afternoon
Water Temperature: 68 - 72 degrees
Lake Level: 582.12' - Very high for conditions and muddy.
Weather Conditions: Moderate Winds from South,SW 10-16 MPH . Sunny to overcast.
Today was my first day on the water for spring crappie. I figured it may be a bit early but the 80+ degree weather this week had me itching to give it a try. I launched at Britton Bridge and fished log jams, tree tops, cyprus trees, and bushes all in about 3ft to 8ft of water. My main goal today was to see if the fish had moved into the bushes.
I picked up a good mixed bag today with 1 white bass, 7 yellow bass, 6 largemouth bass, and 6 crappie. Only 3 of the crappie were big enough to keep. All fish were caught on minnows under a bobber. My first crappie of the season was a beautiful black nose.
It seems all but one of the crappie were males and were just beginning to move up in the shallows. I think we are a week plus before the shallow fishing gets good. The surprise of the day was finding the live cyprus trees in 3-5ft of water and finding fish holding to them on the north bank east of Britton bridge. I will definitely be back to this area.
I cleaned the 3 keeper crappie and we ate them for dinner. Sure was nice to enjoy fresh fish again!
Sunday, March 22, 2020
Lazy Jugs...
Location: Wheeler Lake
Time: 11:00 AM - 3 PM
I've been gearing up for spring fishing season. I took all my crappie rods apart and lubed them and soaked the spools in hot water to release line memory. I needed to retie all the lines and figured I might as well launch the boat at the house and float some jugs while I drifted along tying rods.
I didn't catch but one catfish, but sure did enjoy floating around and I did get all my crappie rods tied and ready to go.
Time: 11:00 AM - 3 PM
I've been gearing up for spring fishing season. I took all my crappie rods apart and lubed them and soaked the spools in hot water to release line memory. I needed to retie all the lines and figured I might as well launch the boat at the house and float some jugs while I drifted along tying rods.
I didn't catch but one catfish, but sure did enjoy floating around and I did get all my crappie rods tied and ready to go.
Thursday, March 19, 2020
Sunday, March 15, 2020
BUILDING NEW TROTLINES FROM SCRATCH!
March 1st - 15th, 2020
BUILDING NEW TROTLINES FROM SCRATCH!
Some time around 1978, my dad, Ronny Watkins, picked up a Memphis Net & Twine catalog, ordered supplies, and built a set of trotlines with a couple of friends. I have great memories from when I was a kid running those same lines. This month, Doug, Douglas, Daniel, and my Dad helped me assemble four new lines that I too ordered supplies from Memphis Net & Twine. We had a great time assembling these and truly respect this as a lost art. My boy even got in on the action! Looking forward to many years and memories with these new lines.
BUILDING NEW TROTLINES FROM SCRATCH!
Some time around 1978, my dad, Ronny Watkins, picked up a Memphis Net & Twine catalog, ordered supplies, and built a set of trotlines with a couple of friends. I have great memories from when I was a kid running those same lines. This month, Doug, Douglas, Daniel, and my Dad helped me assemble four new lines that I too ordered supplies from Memphis Net & Twine. We had a great time assembling these and truly respect this as a lost art. My boy even got in on the action! Looking forward to many years and memories with these new lines.
If you are in the market for supplies, check out Memphis Net & Twine.
Below is a list of supplies and techniques we used. This was enough material for 4 new lines (two 50 hook lines and two 100 hook lines):
- 12 Spools of TWB-60 Braided Nylon Twine Size 60
- 1 Spool of TWB-12 Braided Nylon Twine Size 12
- 2 CSW - 6/0 Champion Swivels, 12 count per bag (24 total purchased)
- 4 CSW - 1/0 Champion Swivels, 100 count per bag (400 total purchased)
- 7 - L198 - 5/0 Eagle Claw Lazer Sharp Big Eye offset trotline hooks, 50 count per box (350 total purchased)
- 34 SB5 PVC Sponge Floats 3-1/2" Dia x 1-1/2 thick.
- Custom made dog tags for line identifications (Amazon)
- 5 jump boxes - 16" x 16" x 5-1/2" deep. Constructed from poplar 1 x 6 board for sides and 1/4" maple plywood for bottoms. Stained and triple coated with clear coat.
6/0 swivels used for each free end and for joining ends together when splicing main line. 1/0 swivels used for hook float and hook stagings. Size 60 twine used for main line. Size 12 twine used for float and hook stagings. Floats at the beginning and end of the line and after every 10 hooks. Hook stagings cut to 20" to give approximately 10" of drop when tied. Float stagings cut to 56" to give about 24" of height when tied. Approximately 20 feet of free line on each end. Hooks staged about 8-9 feet apart. 100 hook lines end up being about 950 feet long and 50 hook lines end up being about 500 feet long
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