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-   -   Ready for Crappie (http://www.fishingtn.com/showthread.php?t=8252)

TNBronzeback 02-26-2014 11:01 AM

Ready for Crappie
 
Well i got my fish attractors made saturday and put them in the water on sunday. Hopefully they will work out as well as im hoping they will. with the lake at winter pool now, they are in water ranging from 4ft-14ft, so hopefully come summer pool, that will make them in the 8/10-18/20ft range. so with any luck, they see my attractors in the next few weeks and decide to take up residence, then follow them right out to deep water for a nice summer home! LOL...
after loading the boat with 20 of them, i could easily make another 20, and just build on what i have out there, and would still want another 20 added to that creating a nice fish haven (in theory) and will be able to catch fish off them all year long due to thier placement in the lake.
it was nice on sunday just to get the boat wet for an hour or so after a month of sitting in the garage collecting dust.

jaycee 02-26-2014 11:07 AM

What type of material did you use to construct the attractors?

XxthejuicexX 02-26-2014 11:19 AM

GPS locations or it did not Happen :D

TNBronzeback 02-26-2014 11:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by XxthejuicexX (Post 46705)
GPS locations or it did not Happen :D

ive got no problem trading spots. LOL...ofcourse a trade would require 2 people sharing equally good information. :D

TNBronzeback 02-26-2014 11:51 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by jaycee (Post 46704)
What type of material did you use to construct the attractors?

i used a combination of treated lumber, rusty metal, rubber tires and old haz-mat barrels. Just kidding. LOL.
I used dollar store plastic easter buckets, 30 minute sakcrete and kiln dried hardwood sticks. they stand about 4-4 1/2ft. tall and are about 30" wide at the top. im hoping they will be more snag-less then a brush pile, but will still be attractive enough once moss and such starts growing on them to bring in the food chain. i guess realistically they could get moved in the warm summer months as well. dive down, hook them up and pull them aboard to be moved to another location. i would think that hardwood should last quite a few years. so i guess i have a stake-bed style attractor but in deeper than a few feet of water.
and just a heads-up for anybody, i believe the 30 minute concrete dry time, starts the minute you buy that stuff, i barely got it mixed in 1/4 bag batches and it was getting set up.
my intent was to rig up a system where i could lower them down slowly on a rope of sort and "un-hook" them once they were on bottom and standing up right, but after fighting concrete, wind blowing my buckets over and breaking screws, it was all i could muster just to get them on boat without smashing them all in a fit of rage! LOL
Im actually kind of curious how they would show up on a good down or side imaging sonar unit.

Jdkxtreme 02-26-2014 11:55 AM

I just got my permit back a day or so ago so I am going to be putting out about 10 Christmas trees in buckets with concrete.

TNBronzeback 02-26-2014 11:59 AM

yeah i missed the boat on the Christmas trees this year, thats what i really wanted to do. maybe next year i wont lolly gag and start driving around the subdivisions Sanford and Son style picking up tree's! lol

TroutFiend 02-26-2014 12:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TNBronzeback (Post 46711)
yeah i missed the boat on the Christmas trees this year, thats what i really wanted to do. maybe next year i wont lolly gag and start driving around the subdivisions Sanford and Son style picking up tree's! lol


That deserves "Tip of the week"




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XxthejuicexX 02-26-2014 12:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TNBronzeback (Post 46707)
ive got no problem trading spots. LOL...ofcourse a trade would require 2 people sharing equally good information. :D


I am willing to trade whatever info you want. I have a great chicken salad recipe :D, I also have some fishing locations for various species.

jaycee 02-26-2014 12:41 PM

Those look really good. Should produce soon. Christmas trees and limb rot away rather quickly. A small bottle tied on top will keep most upright.

jaycee 02-26-2014 12:45 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Attachment 4900here are some I put out in sept and oct.

TNBronzeback 02-26-2014 01:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jaycee (Post 46718)
Those look really good. Should produce soon. Christmas trees and limb rot away rather quickly. A small bottle tied on top will keep most upright.

Thanks! if i had a larger boat/pontoon boat, it would be alot easier to make larger/fuller attractors, but that little 15ft flat bottom i got was loaded down with them things.
i can get some bamboo like yours, but its not that tall, cause that was my first idea. i would think bamboo would last quite a while.
i placed mine in a fence-row pattern almost. drop 2-3 in 5ft of water close to each other, then slide out to 7-8ft and drop a few more, go a little deeper and throw a few more, ect, then i went aobut 12ft deep on that original string and went perpendicular with some more.
my thought is crappier are fairly easy to pin-point in the spring, and they arent going to travel too too far for thier summer locations, so if i can provide both with one shot, well that will save me on gas.

nailman_83 02-26-2014 01:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jdkxtreme (Post 46709)
I just got my permit back a day or so ago so I am going to be putting out about 10 Christmas trees in buckets with concrete.

I have been trying to figure out the permits for Old Hickory, but I haven't been able to get a hold of anyone with the TVA. They have the one for Priest online. Is there one for Old Hickory?

jad2t 02-26-2014 01:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TNBronzeback (Post 46708)

Im actually kind of curious how they would show up on a good down or side imaging sonar unit.

I'll let you know when I find them with mine and catch all your crappie!

Alphahawk 02-26-2014 02:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TNBronzeback (Post 46708)
i used a combination of treated lumber, rusty metal, rubber tires and old haz-mat barrels. Just kidding. LOL.
I used dollar store plastic easter buckets, 30 minute sakcrete and kiln dried hardwood sticks. they stand about 4-4 1/2ft. tall and are about 30" wide at the top. im hoping they will be more snag-less then a brush pile, but will still be attractive enough once moss and such starts growing on them to bring in the food chain. i guess realistically they could get moved in the warm summer months as well. dive down, hook them up and pull them aboard to be moved to another location. i would think that hardwood should last quite a few years. so i guess i have a stake-bed style attractor but in deeper than a few feet of water.
and just a heads-up for anybody, i believe the 30 minute concrete dry time, starts the minute you buy that stuff, i barely got it mixed in 1/4 bag batches and it was getting set up.
my intent was to rig up a system where i could lower them down slowly on a rope of sort and "un-hook" them once they were on bottom and standing up right, but after fighting concrete, wind blowing my buckets over and breaking screws, it was all i could muster just to get them on boat without smashing them all in a fit of rage! LOL
Im actually kind of curious how they would show up on a good down or side imaging sonar unit.


They will show up very well. When you can cover a couple hundred feet out it doesn't take long to find cover. I am so pumped to get out and try mine out. I don't have any problems catching crappie but it will open up so much more water for me. It is tough at times fishing blind out of a kayak.


Regards


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