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| You Are Here: | Game & Fish >> Louisiana >> Fishing >> Crappie & Panfish Fishing | ||||
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Cajun Country Crappie Outlook
With few exceptions, the Bayou State looks to encounter another prime sac-à-lait season in 2009. Here's your guide to making the most of our state's crappie opportunities. (March 2009)
In most years, the crappie forecast for the Sportsman's Paradise is almost entirely optimistic. Fortunately, 2009 shouldn't deviate from that theme. Louisiana anglers have more than enough reasons to grab a cane pole or ultralight spinning rig, some minnows or jigs and an empty fish basket . . . and go crappie fishing, of course! That's because when it comes to fishing for sac-à-laits, few states can match Cajun Country in its sheer volume of really good crappie waters. Need a place to start? Then throw a dart onto a map of the Bayou State. Odds are your dart won't land far from good water. From Caddo Lake to Toledo Bend, from Caney Lake to D'Arbonne Lake to Lake Bistineau, Louisiana has no shortage of good places to wet a line. Add in False River, Old River, Catahoula Lake, and, well, I think you'll begin to get the picture -- the Sportsman's Paradise is, in fact, a crappie angler's paradise! According to Gary Tilyou, the inland fisheries administrator for the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, one of the best spots to start crappie fishing this year might be on Toledo Bend Reservoir, the 181,600-acre Sabine River impoundment in western Louisiana. "We've got a pretty good water event going on at Toledo Bend," Tilyou said. "That should be good for the fish, and we would expect the fishing to be fantastic this year, perhaps the start of a few great crappie years (in a row)." Another one of the state's crappie hotspots is the 2,700-acre Poverty Point Reservoir near Delhi. Annually one of the top crappie producers, Poverty Point should be primed again this year. "Poverty Point has been very good (lately)," Tilyou said. "For (the best) crappie (fishing of the year), it would be more of when you would expect it -- in January and February." In other words, get the fishing gear ready -- after you finish reading this story, of course -- and head for the water! Perhaps one of the state's few exceptions in what is expected to be a phenomenal sac-à-lait year, southern Louisiana's sprawling Atchafalaya Basin complex appears to be on a bit of downturn. As Louisianans will recall from 2008, big saltwater storm surges rolled into the Basin late last summer, thanks to Hurricane Gustav, and to a lesser degree, Hurricane Ike. And that saltwater intrusion wasn't good for the Basin's freshwater fish species. "In the Atchafalaya Basin, we did have some major fish kills that occurred," Tilyou conceded. The top Louisiana inland fisheries biologist said that the storm surge rolled up the main river stem itself, into some of the region's tributaries, and into some interior lakes that have served as refuges for freshwater fish in past storms. "It was very similar to what happened after Hurricane Andrew if somebody is going to go back and compare what Gustav did," Tilyou said. "Gustav was not quite as bad as Andrew was, but it was almost as bad in the Atchafalaya Basin, since both storms went right up the basin, basically. "The storm affected all species with an indiscriminate fish kill," Tilyou continued. "Everything that was in the bad waters died and we did lose a lot of game fish, a lot of bass, crappie, bluegills." |
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