throttleplate Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 caught this at 10:00pm sunday and couldnt tell if it was a crappie or rock bass, i am going with rock bass what do you all think it is? It slammed the el- choppo and headed for the weeds and i thought i had a big bass since i had to drag the little tough guy out. 3 Quote
Bubba 460 Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 Looks like a warmouth, sunfish family. Aggressive with a large mouth. I have found them to be a rare catch in most lakes, I only catch 2 or 3 a year. Good fighters for their size but so are bluegill. I always said that if a bluegill weighed 10 pounds you'd never get him in. Quote
throttleplate Posted June 14, 2021 Author Posted June 14, 2021 7 minutes ago, Bubba 460 said: Looks like a warmouth, sunfish family. Aggressive with a large mouth. I have found them to be a rare catch in most lakes, I only catch 2 or 3 a year. Good fighters for their size but so are bluegill. I always said that if a bluegill weighed 10 pounds you'd never get him in. its mouth was just like a crappies, it just didnt look like a crappie colorwise. It came out of the water when it hit the lure and it really pulled hard into the weeds. Quote
Super User bulldog1935 Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 Ambloplites rupestris Northern rock bass; Redeye; Redeye bass; Rock bass 5 1 Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted June 14, 2021 Global Moderator Posted June 14, 2021 Yep, that's a rock bass. 3 hours ago, Bubba 460 said: Looks like a warmouth, sunfish family. Aggressive with a large mouth. I have found them to be a rare catch in most lakes, I only catch 2 or 3 a year. Good fighters for their size but so are bluegill. I always said that if a bluegill weighed 10 pounds you'd never get him in. Warmouth only have 3 spines on the anal fin whereas rock bass have 6, like the one in the OP's picture. 2 Quote
Super User Spankey Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 Plenty of them out here in rivers and lakes in PA. You are right they hit real hard. The bite is way bigger than they are. But once they are hooked they flounder out to nothing. No fight is them at all. Nice fish. 1 Quote
GTN-NY Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 18 minutes ago, Spankey said: Plenty of them out here in rivers and lakes in PA. You are right they hit real hard. The bite is way bigger than they are. But once they are hooked they flounder out to nothing. No fight is them at all. Nice fish. Totally different here. A 10” rock bass here fights to the death and you’d swear you hooked a 2lb bass 6 Quote
Super User Spankey Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 3 minutes ago, GTN-NY said: Totally different here. A 10” rock bass here fights to the death and you’d swear you hooked a 2lb bass Most of the ones I catch here are while Trout fishing in streams. They will hammer the heck out of a Panther Martin or Mepps. The rock bass bite generally starts a few weeks into the season or a streams warm. They seem non existent in real cold water. 10” is nice size for a fish like that. They are a really nice looking fish also. 1 Quote
Buzzbaiter Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 Definitely a rock bass, not a crappie, warmouth, or green sunfish. Light green body, dark green stripes, and red eyes give it away 2 Quote
Bubba 460 Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 1 hour ago, Bluebasser86 said: Yep, that's a rock bass. Warmouth only have 3 spines on the anal fin whereas rock bass have 6, like the one in the OP's picture. Rock bass it is then~ can't argue with science. 1 Quote
Super User Bird Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 Our river is full of Rock bass and inline spinners will keep you busy all day. 1 Quote
Super User gim Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 Ah yes, the infamous Rocky. The distant, ugly cousin of the bass family that no one wants to associate with. 3 Quote
heyitskirby Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 14 minutes ago, gimruis said: Ah yes, the infamous Rocky. The distant, ugly cousin of the bass family that no one wants to associate with. Oddly enough, scientifically speaking, they are all part of the sunfish family. 2 Quote
Super User bulldog1935 Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 These photos were well-received on another thread. Different Ambloplites sp. rock bass in my home tailwater (took a red thread midge) - the cold tailwater is the only place I catch these. Lepomis sp. warmouth munched a buddy's popper in the Guadalupe headwaters. they definitely prefer warmer, stiller water. since I'm here, another bud's piggy warmouth farther down the Guadalupe ate a pistol pete 5 Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted June 14, 2021 Global Moderator Posted June 14, 2021 I almost, might have, broke the state record for Warmouth in Kansas a few years ago. My cheap Berkley scale said I was 2oz off, it was about 1/4" shorter than the current record, but real fat. Caught it flipping grass clumps with a RI Sweet Beaver. 6 Quote
galyonj Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 2 hours ago, GTN-NY said: Totally different here. A 10” rock bass here fights to the death and you’d swear you hooked a 2lb bass Similar here. The ones I've caught were pretty fierce for their size. Meatballs are fun little fish to hook into. 2 Quote
throttleplate Posted June 14, 2021 Author Posted June 14, 2021 5 hours ago, GTN-NY said: Totally different here. A 10” rock bass here fights to the death and you’d swear you hooked a 2lb bass yeah i tell ya it came out of the water when it hit and the splash it made and then the pull to the weeds made me think i had a big bass. It fought as hard as the 3 lbers i caught earlier. Then i had to pull it out of the weeds and when reeling it in it jumped and i was still convinced i had a big bass. It was now dark out and when i finally pulled it out i was surprised how small it was and started laughing because i was all jacked up thinkin i had a monster 7 pounder. 1 2 Quote
Super User Ratherbfishing Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 Rock bass. And a nice one, too. 2 Quote
Vilas15 Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 I caught a big rock bass on a wiggle wart the other weekend. Those things will kamikaze musky baits too. No regard for their own lives. 2 Quote
desmobob Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 10 hours ago, GTN-NY said: Totally different here. A 10” rock bass here fights to the death and you’d swear you hooked a 2lb bass I've read that enough times that I don't doubt it, but here in Northeastern NY, they hit almost any lure, fight like crazy for about five seconds, then come dragging in on the surface with their mouth open, scooping water. If they didn't have their mouth open creating that extra drag, you'd think they got off... Quote
BigAngus752 Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 10 hours ago, Bubba 460 said: Rock bass it is then~ can't argue with science. Oh, these days yes you absolutely CAN argue with science. Just go to a school board meeting. 3 2 1 Quote
Super User MN Fisher Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 Just now, BigAngus752 said: Oh, these days yes you absolutely CAN argue with science. Just go to a school board meeting. That'd be funny if it wasn't so horribly true... 4 Quote
Super User J Francho Posted June 14, 2021 Super User Posted June 14, 2021 51 minutes ago, desmobob said: I've read that enough times that I don't doubt it, but here in Northeastern NY, they hit almost any lure, fight like crazy for about five seconds, then come dragging in on the surface with their mouth open, scooping water. If they didn't have their mouth open creating that extra drag, you'd think they got off... they're all bite and no fight here too 1 Quote
Bubba 460 Posted June 14, 2021 Posted June 14, 2021 1 minute ago, BigAngus752 said: Oh, these days yes you absolutely CAN argue with science. Just go to a school board meeting. Apparently there are two kinds if science nowadays. 1 Quote
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