CrashVector Posted April 16, 2022 Posted April 16, 2022 Tonight is the first full moon of the spring...you guys know what that means: bream spawn time! 1 3 Quote
Super User N Florida Mike Posted April 16, 2022 Super User Posted April 16, 2022 especially shellcrackers ( redears ) 2 Quote
Super User LrgmouthShad Posted April 16, 2022 Super User Posted April 16, 2022 That's right! @A-Jay, be on the lookout for those bream spawning through the ice! 1 7 Quote
Super User GaryH Posted April 16, 2022 Super User Posted April 16, 2022 26 minutes ago, LrgmouthShad said: That's right! @A-Jay, be on the lookout for those bream spawning through the ice! Thats mean…. 3 Quote
Super User LrgmouthShad Posted April 16, 2022 Super User Posted April 16, 2022 8 minutes ago, GaryH said: Thats mean…. I joke knowing that I'd be going crazy waiting this long for open water. There will be something mighty warm and fuzzy seeing A-Jay catch the first few stout brown bass after a long winter ? 2 Quote
Super User Jig Man Posted April 16, 2022 Super User Posted April 16, 2022 I was planning my first night trip buy the windy rainy weather is keeping me home. Quote
Global Moderator TnRiver46 Posted April 17, 2022 Global Moderator Posted April 17, 2022 Just took the boat out a little while ago, did catch lots of panfish and a couple bass. Moon was very cool 2 Quote
Super User DitchPanda Posted April 17, 2022 Super User Posted April 17, 2022 No bream spawn going on here...waters about 40ish 2 1 Quote
Global Moderator TnRiver46 Posted April 17, 2022 Global Moderator Posted April 17, 2022 1 minute ago, DitchPanda said: No bream spawn going on here...waters about 40ish Gonna be a minute…… hahaha 1 Quote
Super User WRB Posted April 17, 2022 Super User Posted April 17, 2022 Bream spawn follows the bass spawn, about 70-75 degrees water temps. Tom 3 Quote
Super User DitchPanda Posted April 17, 2022 Super User Posted April 17, 2022 11 minutes ago, TnRiver46 said: Gonna be a minute…… hahaha I'm struggling to catch fish waters so cold...so yes spawn may be a minute 1 Quote
papajoe222 Posted April 17, 2022 Posted April 17, 2022 The water temp. at my home lake was 42 when I hit the water yesterday. A fella seeing me load my boat asked how I did. I told him I caught one decent bass and a couple of crappie. He told me the bass were building nests and likely would spawn during this full moon. 2 Quote
CrashVector Posted April 17, 2022 Author Posted April 17, 2022 1 hour ago, WRB said: Bream spawn follows the bass spawn, about 70-75 degrees water temps. Tom Exactly. The bass have been hanging around the perimeter of bream making nests here. Find a bunch of bream on nests...cast to the nearest bunch of submerged hydrilla. Money in the bank. Quote
CrashVector Posted April 17, 2022 Author Posted April 17, 2022 1 hour ago, WRB said: Bream spawn follows the bass spawn, about 70-75 degrees water temps. Tom Bass spawn here in mid-late Feb thru the middle of March. 1 Quote
Super User WRB Posted April 17, 2022 Super User Posted April 17, 2022 2 hours ago, CrashVector said: Bass spawn here in mid-late Feb thru the middle of March. Only if the the water is between 60-67 degrees, our calendar means nothing to bass. Tom Quote
Super User Catt Posted April 17, 2022 Super User Posted April 17, 2022 Here we go again! Every spring the same questions! Yes bass will spawn in water temperatures way lower than 60-67, at depths greater than you would imagine, & earlier in the year than you think. Think @Glenn has a video! 2 Quote
Global Moderator TnRiver46 Posted April 17, 2022 Global Moderator Posted April 17, 2022 7 hours ago, papajoe222 said: The water temp. at my home lake was 42 when I hit the water yesterday. A fella seeing me load my boat asked how I did. I told him I caught one decent bass and a couple of crappie. He told me the bass were building nests and likely would spawn during this full moon. Hahaha! I feel your pain, drives me crazy. People are obsessed with fish (an other animals too) spawning. They can’t even talk fishing without mentioning it Quote
CrashVector Posted April 17, 2022 Author Posted April 17, 2022 1 hour ago, Catt said: Here we go again! Every spring the same questions! Yes bass will spawn in water temperatures way lower than 60-67, at depths greater than you would imagine, & earlier in the year than you think. Think @Glenn has a video! Yep. Last year's bass spawn, they were right up next to the bank in about a foot of water. This year for some reason, they were much farther out in about 4-5 feet. Went several places trying to catch the post-spawners, but I kept finding beds out in the deeper water. 5 hours ago, WRB said: Only if the the water is between 60-67 degrees, our calendar means nothing to bass. Tom Not necessarily. It's more on the daylight hours than hard temps. 1 Quote
garroyo130 Posted April 17, 2022 Posted April 17, 2022 Those panfish will wear themselves out too ... after spawn season, its not uncommon to see a worn out fish kinda just floating near shore. You can poke them with your rod and get little reaction. 1 Quote
Super User WRB Posted April 17, 2022 Super User Posted April 17, 2022 When discussing the bass spawn you can’t lump all the bass population into 1 spawn cycle, bass are individuals. You can group into a majority. We can agree that the sun warms the air, the air warms the water normally. The exceptions are thermal springs and power plant warm water discharge. Where I live and bass fish there are 5 lakes I fish. Big Bear is 130 miles south at 7,200 elevation. The bass spawn when the water reaches about 60 degrees in lake May or early June, depending on the weather. Lake Pyramid is 65 miles north at 3,500 elevation. The bass spawn late April, water temps about 60 degrees. Lake Castiac is 45 miles north at 1500 elevation. The bass spawn in March early April. Water temps at 60 degrees. Lake Casitas is 50 miles north west at 330 elevation and close to the ocean. Bass spawn in early March, when the water are 60 degrees. Lake Cachuma is 75 miles north west at 1500 elevation. Bass spawn when the water is 60 degrees. If latitude with longer sun light photo period was the driver then Big Bear lake would spawn first, but the climate is cold, the lake freezes so the water warm later. Climate and sun light to warm the air is critical to cold blooded bass spawn. Cold water under 55 degrees the eggs take weeks to hatch, water over 70 degrees the eggs hatch in days. The problem with warmer water is egg eating crap, bluegill and sunfish overwhelm the bass beds. Tom 1 Quote
Super User king fisher Posted April 18, 2022 Super User Posted April 18, 2022 I fished a lake this weekend, that the water temp. was 76 degrees. From what I can tell the bass spawn was at it's peak. I don't think this lake ever gets below 62 degrees, and probably doesn't ever get higher than 80. I don't know why they waited until this weekend to spawn, but it will be interesting to see if it is at the same time next year. Bluegill weren't spawning, but Tilapia were. Quote
Super User WRB Posted April 18, 2022 Super User Posted April 18, 2022 >>>>April 16<<<< Full Moon Quote
Clumsy fisherman Posted April 18, 2022 Posted April 18, 2022 On 4/16/2022 at 10:29 PM, TnRiver46 said: Just took the boat out a little while ago, did catch lots of panfish and a couple bass. Moon was very cool Where did you fish, i.e., which lake? Quote
Global Moderator TnRiver46 Posted April 18, 2022 Global Moderator Posted April 18, 2022 14 minutes ago, Clumsy fisherman said: Where did you fish, i.e., which lake? Little river Friday, tellico Saturday, French broad Sunday Quote
Super User ATA Posted April 18, 2022 Super User Posted April 18, 2022 I was fishing from Saturday 5PM to Sunday 3PM. I slept three hours(2AM to 5AM). Unfortunately I was fishing for trout and got nothing(you imagine how I felt), Anyways I catch a bass and a catfish while fishing for trout ? Quote
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