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His hometown, Lawrence, may be better
known for the University of Kansas and college basketball, but it
also is the capital of the state’s crappie fishing, Martin
will tell you.
And when you love to catch crappies as much as Martin does, that
puts you in the right neighborhood.
"I have five lakes I can get to within an hour -- Perry, Clinton,
Hillsdale, Melvern and Pomona," said Martin, a crappie fishing
guide. "Those are some of the best lakes Kansas has to offer.
They’re all known for their crappie fishing.
"So I have a lot of options at this time of the year. If the
crappies aren’t biting at one lake, I can usually find another
option."
Martin was testing those options the first week of May.
He started by guiding two fishermen to an outstanding day of fishing
at Perry Lake.
The next day, he hopped to Clinton and found even better success.
He started by searching for spawning fish in the coves of the Wakarusa
arm. That met with only minimal success.
But when he moved to the shallows off a main-lake point -- a rocky
area that had some brush -- he sampled the type of fishing that
has given Kansas fame.
Slowly retrieving a tube jig under a bobber, he watched as the float
twitched slightly.
When he set the hook, he felt the heavy tug of a big crappie.
"I’ve been crappie fishing in Kansas for a long time,
but I still get a thrill over feeling that little tap," Martin
said as he tossed the 13-inch fish in the live well of his boat.
"I fish for crappies year-round. But I never get tired of it.
"I just love fishing for them."
Martin has plenty of company during May in Kansas.
That’s the month when spring fever hits its peak in the Sunflower
State. That’s when the crappies leave their deepwater haunts
and head for the shallows to spawn.
Once the water temperature gets into the 60s, the fish will congregate
along the banks. And that can result in some of the best fishing
of the year.
Martin proved that on a recent outing. After he used his trolling
motor to maneuver his boat through some flooded timber and into
the shallows, he located every crappie fisherman’s dream --
a school of big fish.
He and two fishing partners -- Bob Roberts of Salina and I -- spent
more than an hour catching keeper crappies at Clinton. By late morning,
Martin estimated his group had caught more than 50 crappies, many
of them the large fish that everyone seeks.
An unusual day? Nah. Martin is accustomed to such success at this
time of the year.
"When the fish are in and the spawn is at its peak, it’s
not unusual for a boat to catch 50 to 75 crappies," he said.
"And with the females full of eggs, this is the time when you
have a shot at a trophy fish."
Martin can offer proof. He remembers a spring day at Council Grove
Lake when he landed two 3-pound crappies within five minutes of
each other.
"The fish that weighed 3.2 pounds is the biggest I’ve
ever taken in Kansas," he said.
Fish like that, of course, are rare. But Martin knows the Kansas
reservoirs are loaded with crappies in the three-quarters to 1-pound
range. And that’s what he’s searching for on warm spring
days.
"Cold fronts are the biggest problem in the spring. They will
back crappies off the banks for a while," Martin said. "And
the wind can cause problems, too.
"But when you have some warm, stable weather, the fish will
stay in the shallows and you can really catch them."
So why are the eastern-Kansas reservoirs so good? Fisheries biologists
cite the fact that they’re fertile, they have thriving shad
populations and they have good spawning habitat in the form of gravel
and rocky banks.
After almost 25 years of fishing Kansas reservoirs, Martin has devised
some reliable methods to catch those spawning crappies.
He often positions his boat so he is within casting distance of
the first dropoff. Then he will slowly work a tube jig under a slip
bobber along cover.
"The bobber allows you to keep that jig in front of the fish
longer," he said.
Martin also will use a long pole and slowly troll along the banks.
He will use a bobber stop as a marker for how much line to have
in the water.
"That way, I can cover a lot of water," he said.
But Martin knows each day can be different at this time of the year.
A depth or a lure color that worked one day might not the next.
So Martin starts by trying to determine a pattern. Once he determines
what depth the fish are holding at and what color they prefer, he
applies it to other banks he fishes.
And more often than not, that results in success.
With the erratic weather, Martin has found inconsistent fishing
this spring. A cold front last week backed the crappies off the
bank and made the fishing tougher. But with warm weather expected
this week, Martin looks for the crappies to be back in the shallows.
"I think we still have some good fishing ahead of us,"
he said. "May is always a good month in Kansas."
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