Seth you are absolutely a gem! there's no one like you on the internet. please don't take any videos down ever! I just found you (and them) and I'm going to watch them all!!!
After watching part 1 and then part 2, I was like damn he sounds like Payton Manning, instead he's talking about fishing and not football. Lol thanks coach 👍👍👍
Man I Love what you are saying...I never keep bedding fish or the huge/large fish of any species...(for that matter I don't keep fish at all unless I am cooking them for my family/friends). Those huge fish breed huge fish. Anyway, I watched your video on 11/07/14, went out and fished off a bridge here and people had left/leaving stating that they weren't biting on the predominate side of the bridge, but the sun had shifted where it had shaded that side of the bridge and we slew them on the opposite side. I don't know if it was because of the water being heated on that side and shaded on the other, or the low light issue, but I was really upset because I had left my lights in the Tahoe at home...lol. Thanks for the teaching moment...I swear I am going to figure it out on the lakes around here.
My big question: I Fish Ohio reservoirs. These reservoirs usually have a main basin next to damn. 25 - 50 FT of water with a causway in middle and then the headwater area up stream usually with 15- to 25 ft basin. well defined creek channel. Will the crappie move from main basin at damn a mile upstream to head water area? Or will you have a main basin population that moves into the adjacent arms and then a population in the head waters area that uses the channel and adjacent creek arms?
I guess what im asking in a nutshell is should a man focus on the main basin movements to creek arms in the spring or head for the main feeder creek of the reservoir in the headwaters section. my guess is that there are populations that do both.
Absolutely Amazing! Most informative video I have seen on crappie behavior!
Seth you are absolutely a gem! there's no one like you on the internet.
please don't take any videos down ever! I just found you (and them) and I'm going to watch them all!!!
I think Seth is everyone's secret :P lol. gold mine right here. got all his DVDs
Everything this guy says is 100% correct. He knows fish.
Most informative video I've seen on crappies. Thank you for this great info !
i caught my first fish at 5yrs old i caught my second at 45yrs old
After watching part 1 and then part 2, I was like damn he sounds like Payton Manning, instead he's talking about fishing and not football. Lol thanks coach 👍👍👍
Man I Love what you are saying...I never keep bedding fish or the huge/large fish of any species...(for that matter I don't keep fish at all unless I am cooking them for my family/friends). Those huge fish breed huge fish. Anyway, I watched your video on 11/07/14, went out and fished off a bridge here and people had left/leaving stating that they weren't biting on the predominate side of the bridge, but the sun had shifted where it had shaded that side of the bridge and we slew them on the opposite side. I don't know if it was because of the water being heated on that side and shaded on the other, or the low light issue, but I was really upset because I had left my lights in the Tahoe at home...lol. Thanks for the teaching moment...I swear I am going to figure it out on the lakes around here.
My big question:
I Fish Ohio reservoirs. These reservoirs usually have a main basin next to damn. 25 - 50 FT of water with a causway in middle and then the headwater area up stream usually with 15- to 25 ft basin. well defined creek channel. Will the crappie move from main basin at damn a mile upstream to head water area? Or will you have a main basin population that moves into the adjacent arms and then a population in the head waters area that uses the channel and adjacent creek arms?
I guess what im asking in a nutshell is should a man focus on the main basin movements to creek arms in the spring or head for the main feeder creek of the reservoir in the headwaters section.
my guess is that there are populations that do both.
"I've had crappie in aquariums..." Tell me your secrets fish!!!