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New Technology Changes Anglers' Perspectives on Fish Activity

crappie

As the sun starts to rise, Joe Allen Dunn baits his hooks for a morning of crappie fishing with the latest in fish-finding technology. Photo by David Rainer

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

While perusing social media during this seemingly endless summer, I kept seeing photos of slab crappie that were coming from the 黑料天堂 River.

Wait, I thought those slabs were caught in the spring when the crappie are spawning or in the fall when the weather and water temperatures have considerably cooled.

Turns out, these anglers were taking advantage of the latest technology to defy the common theory that big crappie are hard to catch during the dog days of summer, which appear set to last into October this year.

I remember well the first Humminbird flasher my late father installed on his boat and how it helped him locate his favorite structure. It was a big deal way back then.

Considering we hold far more computer power in our hands when we are using our smartphones than the entire Apollo space program had during their trips to the moon, it shouldn鈥檛 be a surprise that the latest fish-finding technology could change the way anglers approach a day on the water.

When I asked Joe Allen Dunn how in the world they were catching those slab crappie, he responded, 鈥淵ou need to come see for yourself.鈥

That鈥檚 exactly what happened. While other anglers are using the Humminbird HELIX and Lowrance HDS, Dunn and Brent Crow, a bass-fishing guide and tournament angler on the Tennessee River, opted to go with the Garmin Panoptix with LiveScope.

When Dunn eased his boat into one of the many flats off the main 黑料天堂 River at Millers Ferry, I couldn鈥檛 imagine crappie of any size would be anywhere but deep water during this oppressive stretch of hot weather.

I was wrong, completely. Over went the trolling motor and Dunn began scanning for the structure that are typically crappie havens during cooler weather, or so I thought.

Rigged with 16-foot poles and spinning reels, we attached minnows to the double-hook rigs with either bare hooks, jigs with curly-tail plastic baits or Road Runner lures.

We dropped the bait about 8 feet down and started easing toward the structure as Dunn eyed the screen.

While I watched the rod tips on my side, Dunn watched the screen as we approached the structure.

Suddenly, a rod tip flexed and the hook was set on a nice crappie.

On the next approach, Dunn said, 鈥淵ou can even see your minnows, look here.鈥 I looked at the screen and, sure enough, I could see the minnows dangling above the structure.

Then I saw something that I never expected. I saw a swirl in the structure and the fish came up and grabbed the bait. 鈥淗oly mackerel鈥 was my response as I set the hook.

We started our venture at first light because of the heat and called it a day 4 hours later with 10 nice crappie in the livewell. About twice that many had been caught and released.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been trolling for a long time,鈥 Dunn said. 鈥淓verybody thinks the slough fish or shallow-water fish are gone or they don鈥檛 bite anymore. We proved today that the fish are still there, and they will bite. A lot of people don鈥檛 get in the sloughs this time of year and look for structure. Live bait is a big factor until it cools off.鈥

Dunn said before he was introduced to the new technology, the traditional way to catch crappie was to hit the deep river ledges, bouncing baits off the bottom when power production from the dam created current.

鈥淚t all revolved around when they were pulling water,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or river fish, you have to have that moving water. It keeps them tight to the wood, and you can do better.

鈥淭his new technology is not going to make fish magically appear in front of you. You鈥檝e still got to work to find the fish. The down- and side-imaging helps you locate these fish. But you had to fish so hard to find them.

鈥淣ow, I can hit the GPS and mark it. I can drop a buoy and get the boat situated to face into the wind, and then you use the LiveScope to move back and forth on the structure. You don鈥檛 have to troll all over the place to find it. It keeps you from disturbing the fish. That鈥檚 the key to it. You can keep your bait in the strike zone all the time now.鈥

Dunn learned about the technology from James 鈥淏ig Daddy鈥 Lawler, who had been out on crappie guide Gerald Overstreet鈥檚 boat equipped with technology.

鈥淚鈥檝e been fishing for crappie for 32 years, and I鈥檝e never seen anything like it,鈥 Lawler said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 totally changed the way I look at crappie fishing. I went into Pine Barren Creek and caught fish in 5 feet of water. I never would have believed that.鈥

The targeted structure lights up on the screen with the latest technology that can show fish swimming. Photo by David Rainer

Dunn said crappie anglers don鈥檛 have to adopt the new technology and will continue to catch fish, but it certainly has changed his thought process.

鈥淯sed to, we would just give up on these fish when it鈥檚 hot,鈥 Dunn said. 鈥淲e wouldn鈥檛 go into these sloughs and work to find them. Now I will.

鈥淭his is all new to me. Each phase of the season will be a new learning experience. Once the water temperature changes and the fish move around, I鈥檒l have to use this to see where they go.鈥

Typically, Dunn said when temperatures drop in the fall, crappie anglers are hitting river ledges that are 18 to 20 feet deep. He can鈥檛 wait to find out if that pattern is the only way to catch fish when fall finally arrives.

鈥淭hese fish in the sloughs and creeks, I don鈥檛 know what they鈥檙e going to do,鈥 Dunn said. 鈥淭hey might not even move until it鈥檚 time to spawn.鈥

In the lakes in north 黑料天堂, Crow obviously targets black bass, largemouths and smallmouths.

鈥淲hen you see a fish within 30 feet of the boat, you can see his tail and fins as he swims with LiveScope,鈥 Crow said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been running Panoptix and LiveScope for three years. I can鈥檛 fish without it. It鈥檚 not just seeing fish. It also shows you stumps, grass, drop-offs and ledges. You know exactly where you sit. It eliminates a lot of the guesswork in positioning your boat.

鈥淔or suspended fish, it鈥檚 just remarkable. I have caught so many fish that I would never have thrown at without it. I would never have had a clue those fish were there. But even at places that are shallow, like Guntersville, it鈥檒l show you the eel grass. You see the edges or isolated clumps of grass. You don鈥檛 have to guess.鈥

Crow said there are limitations for this technology during certain times of the year.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e not going to see them if they鈥檙e spawning in 3 feet of water,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ny other time 鈥 the summer, winter and fall 鈥 it works. At Smith Lake or Lake Martin, you pull up on a point and look with the LiveScope. If there鈥檚 not any fish there, you don鈥檛 have to spend 15 minutes casting to find that out. You can see it in 30 seconds. It makes you way more efficient.

鈥淵ou can learn about fish behavior too. They don鈥檛 necessarily sit still. You can catch one and see that all the rest of them have moved. Sometimes it鈥檚 frustrating because you can watch a fish follow your bait to the boat and never bite. It鈥檚 an eye-opening deal. If I get in somebody鈥檚 boat that doesn鈥檛 have it, I feel like I don鈥檛 have a chance. I鈥檓 kind of lost.鈥

Crow said the technology is especially impressive when he鈥檚 casting surface lures.

鈥淲hen I鈥檓 fishing topwater, you can see your bait on the surface, and then you see the fish come straight up and eat it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 awesome. When I鈥檓 guiding, I鈥檒l watch the client鈥檚 bait and see the fish coming. I tell them, 鈥楬e鈥檚 fixing to get it.鈥 They set the hook and say, 鈥楬ow鈥檇 you know that?鈥

鈥淚 had one guy who told me, 鈥楧on鈥檛 tell me that. I jerk too quick.鈥欌

Of course, the new technology is not for everybody. It鈥檚 expensive, but that seldom stops anglers. Crow recommends a graph with at least a 9-inch screen, which will cost you about $1,000. The LiveScope tacks on another $1,500. For Crow, he says the benefits far outweigh the cost.

Crow said he also found out the technology works in muddy water after a tournament on Toledo Bend on the Louisiana-Texas border.

鈥淭he water looked like chocolate milk,鈥 he said. 鈥淓very fish I caught during the tournament I saw on the graph. It gives you so much of an advantage over somebody who doesn鈥檛 have it, it鈥檚 unreal.鈥

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Joe Allen Dunn shows off a couple of nice crappie that were caught in a slough off the river in the late summer heat. Photo by David Rainer