Ohioguy25 Posted March 14, 2024 Posted March 14, 2024 Water is 53 degrees where I’m at, just coming down from a blowout. Visibility less than 6”. My gut tells me they probably wouldn’t be as aggressive as they would be in these conditions under normal circumstances (once actively feeding) to the point that I could have a good day on a spinnerbait. Do you believe muddy, cold water is generally bad and if so what is the threshold for “cold?” Quote
Super User TOXIC Posted March 14, 2024 Super User Posted March 14, 2024 Cold is dependent on where you are located. For me anything under 50 is cold. As far as mud, I have 2 rules. 1. Mud will push them to the bank normally and 2. They normally have lockjaw for 3 days after an event that muddies the water. After 3 days they gotta eat. 2 Quote
Global Moderator TnRiver46 Posted March 14, 2024 Global Moderator Posted March 14, 2024 Below 48 or so and muddy is really tough fishing. 3 Quote
Woody B Posted March 14, 2024 Posted March 14, 2024 I believe there's a bunch of factors in play......and yes I struggle in muddy cold water. The other factors? Pretty much everytime I was out in muddy sub 50 degree water the wind was HOWLING. Bass (especially Largemouth) are ambush predators. When its muddy they hang right next to cover. Even if they aren't actively feeding I believe they might hit the right lure when it comes right by them. The problem the last Winter, at least for me I believe was the howling wind. 20 mph winds make it really hard to make accurate casts, especially to Bass in shallow cover. Most of the muddy cold Bass I caught this year were Spots (active hunters instead of ambush predators) and were on some kind of deep structure I could get a lure to. As always, I'm not an expert. 1 Quote
Susky River Rat Posted March 14, 2024 Posted March 14, 2024 I had probably 8” of visibility on the susky and they were crushing cranks being burned today. Water temps were 50 3 Quote
DennyB Posted March 14, 2024 Posted March 14, 2024 I've found in cold water that muddies up, the sun seems to heat the sediment up faster than clear water. Shallow water heats up faster than deeper water. Warmer water more fish near the bank. I catch more when the water is stained. Quote
Super User Munkin Posted March 15, 2024 Super User Posted March 15, 2024 Cold , muddy, falling water is the worst conditions I can think of to fish the river. Generally if these are the conditions I will hit a local lake . Allen 1 Quote
Ohioguy25 Posted March 15, 2024 Author Posted March 15, 2024 5 hours ago, Munkin said: Cold , muddy, falling water is the worst conditions I can think of to fish the river. Generally if these are the conditions I will hit a local lake . Allen Where do you rate cold? Quote
Susky River Rat Posted March 15, 2024 Posted March 15, 2024 6 hours ago, Munkin said: Cold , muddy, falling water is the worst conditions I can think of to fish the river. Generally if these are the conditions I will hit a local lake . Allen That’s interesting. I love and gene really do my best during that time. Cold or warm water. Quote
PaulVE64 Posted April 10, 2024 Posted April 10, 2024 My conditions arent typical but I do have an opinion. At this time of year in my waters the temp is +50 in the creeks and clear. The river is mid 40s and clear. If we get a deluge of rain in the watershed then it's a blowout. I never bother fishing the river in a blowout in spring. Our bass dont come into season until early July 1 Quote
Jeff Zurawski Posted April 12, 2024 Posted April 12, 2024 I have a hard time catching them until water temps start to hit 50 or better. If it's been consistently hitting the low 50s, I'll fish in muddy/stained conditions. Not muddy like solid chocolate milk, zero visibility, but 6-8" visibility yes. I do better with big black jignpigs worked slow in eddies than with spinnerbaits when it's like that. 1 Quote
IcatchDinks Posted April 12, 2024 Posted April 12, 2024 On 3/14/2024 at 1:08 PM, TOXIC said: They normally have lockjaw for 3 days after an event that muddies the water. This has also been my experience. Always seems to take a few days after a big blowout for the fish to start biting again. Could be I'm just fishing them wrong, but I always struggle finding bites after an event like that. Quote
Super User J Francho Posted April 12, 2024 Super User Posted April 12, 2024 Any kind of unstable environment can make fishing really tough to read any pattern that will hold up. 3 Quote
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