How to catch crappie on Lake Fork




Seventeen people attended the July Williams Creek Crappie Club meeting, a relatively new group dedicated to promoting the art of catching crappie on Lake Fork. John Bordas and George Durham signed on as new members. Gary Breedlove signed up at the July Swap meet. Pro crappie guide, Brad Williams shared some of his fishing secrets. Williams Creek Crappie Club just formed this year and has 24 members. "We are not pros or anything, just fishermen," says Danny Kemp, club president. "There are a lot of guys who like to crappie fish, but they don't know how to catch them all year. They think the only time you can catch crappie is in the spring." Crappie can be caught right now in the heat of the summer if you know where to look and how to fish for them. Kemp says on Lake Fork the fish are in anywhere from 17 -25 ft. of water. "Action can be slow because of the heat," cautions Kemp. "The majority of the crappie anglers now are using minnows because of the swelter, but there are some anglers using jigs." Is the size of the minnow important? Not really, according to Kemp. "Size of the minnows really plays to where we buy our minnows, what they have. Right now they have smaller minnows. Last Sunday we went out and caught 20 crappie, the biggest fish measuring 14 inches in length. The fish now are averaging anywhere from 10 to 14 inches." You can fish the trees at this time of the year and get maybe one or two fish off each tree, but you can catch more fish if you can find a brush pile. Next Williams Creek Crappie Club meeting is Aug. 10 at the Oak Ridge Restaurant. Guest speaker will be Mathew Carroll from Jigum Jigs. "At some time we will have crappie tournaments, but the goal now is to educate anglers how to catch the fish. A Crappie Academy is on the calendar for November, a 3 day event including taking new anglers out on the water and teaching them how catch crappie in the winter. For more information go to the Club's website, williamscreekcrappieclub.com. Photo: The Williams Creek Crappie Club signed up two new members at the July meeting.




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Lake Fork Current Weather Alerts

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Lake Fork Weather Forecast

Friday

Mostly Sunny

Hi: 91

Friday Night

Mostly Clear

Lo: 73

Saturday

Mostly Sunny

Hi: 93

Saturday Night

Mostly Clear

Lo: 73

Sunday

Mostly Sunny

Hi: 93

Sunday Night

Mostly Clear

Lo: 73

Monday

Partly Sunny

Hi: 95

Monday Night

Partly Cloudy

Lo: 71


Lake Fork Water Level (last 30 days)


Water Level on 8/22: 402.44 (-0.56)



Lake Fork

Fishing Report from TPWD (Aug. 20)

GOOD. Water cloudy to clear; 86-95 degrees; 0.49 feet below pool. Bass can be caught mid morning in 5-7 feet on the first drop-off, tree line or point. Square bill crankbaits are good in 2.5 bream patterns. Carolina rigs are good midday on points and road beds in 15-18 feet. Deep crankbaits are good in the same areas and deeper in 22-25 feet deep in staging areas. Report by Marc Mitchell, Mitchell's Guide Service. Short early and late topwater bite around grass lines near ledges, creek channels and points. Try frog and mouse patterns for topwater. Bream are shallow, wooly buggers are producing good fish. Brush piles are the key to big bass. Report by Guide Alex Guthrie, Fly Fish Fork Guide Service. Lake Fork crappie fishing has been tough this summer. We are seeing huge schools of black crappie loaded up on brush piles, laydowns, tire reefs and underwater bridges. These fish are very finicky and hard to get to bite. Small minnows, small hand tied jigs and small plastics may help get the bites. You may also need to weed through numbers of short fish to get some keeper crappie. The white crappie are on timber and some brush in 12-40 feet but you have to cover water and find the right areas holding fish. Some of those fish will bite better and some will not bite at all. We should see the bite getting better when the water and air temps begin to cool down in September and October. Report by Jacky Wiggins, Jacky Wiggins Guide Service.

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