How To Catch Channel Catfish In Early Spring
As soon as my line swings tight in the current a nice one nails the bait and is landed.
How to catch channel catfish in early spring. You can catch more fish by using light-colored lures or live bait to attract the fish regardless of how dense the water beneath seems. How do you go about catching channel cats during the spring. Catfish like warm water During the spring the water temperature in the river rises.
Spinning reels with a bait-runner feature or casting reels with a clicker are ideal as they allow big cats to run. In spring catfish actively begins to catch after warming up to 9-11 degrees. Shallow muddy flats are known to warm up faster than the surrounding waters so this is the prime spot to look.
No matter what the time of year catfish do most of their feeding within inches of the rocks mud and gravel bottoms of lakes ponds and rivers. These areas like in the earlier part of spring can warm up just a degree or two and increase the metabolism just enough to spur that feeding frenzy. LOCATING EARLY SPRING CHANNEL CATFISH Look for temp changes in shallow coves.
Try drifting with live bait off a bottom rig or anchor up and fish dip bait in the deepest portions of the bend. Start of catfish activity. Before the water temperature reaches 60 degrees areas receiving the most sun during the day can be advantageous to catching these pre-spawn fish.
Also is a float rig better than a bottom rig when using one rod. During the spring active catfish tend to spread out on the shallower mud flats above and below the hole. Spring In the springtime many anglers like to fish ponds for channel catfish.
This is a great time to go catfishing. The channel catfish action on our catfish guide trips is red hot during the summer months. The other way is much less time consuming than trying to locate a winter hole.