Sweeping the Basin For Crappies

Without question, October is Gord's favourite time of year to catch crappie.

Oh, my, you have to love autumn in Northern Ontario because there is a never-ending list of exciting things to do in such splendid surroundings.

In just the last four days, for example, I've gone grouse hunting with my grandson, spent time with him in the bear blind, set up some new deer stands, gone puddle jump shooting for ducks and geese, caught smallmouth bass and walleyes, and swept the basin clean for crappies.

I get tired just thinking about it all, but it highlights the fact that when fall rolls around, there aren't enough hours in a typical Northern Ontario day.

And I wouldn't have it any other way.

Speaking about crappies, they are one of my much-loved fish and the month of October is without question my favourite time of the year to catch them.

I got onto an amazing pattern the other day, something I've been refining for several years now, and it was out-of-this-world good. So spectacular, in fact, that had we been fishing together, I wouldn't have let you pinch me, because if this was a dream, I didn't want to wake up.

I call it sweeping the basin, and I guarantee the tactic will work for you wherever you fish for plate-size slabs in the northern part of the province.

What I did after launching the boat on one of my favourite Sunset Country lakes was to slowly motor around while I monitored my sonar unit and looked for fish. A big mistake many anglers make is arriving at the lake or river so excited at the prospect of fishing that they drop down their lines before they've found anything to catch. Resist the urge to do it and spend more time early in the day searching for fish.

gord pyzer holding ontario black crappie
As Gord Pyzer explains, when you use your trolling motor to sweep the basin, the results can be impressive. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

Once I found them, as I suspected and is usually the case in the early to mid-autumn period, the crappies were spread out along the bottom, hanging a foot or two above it, loosely bunched up. In a couple of more weeks, they will drop down closer to the basin and congregate in much denser schools, but right now, they are still strung out in loosey-goosey pods.

So, parking your boat over top of the fish and presenting a vertical bait or lure to them is much less productive than trolling.

But there was a catch, or a detail, that mattered immensely. While the crappies definitely wanted my bait to be swimming, they didn't want it to be moving quickly. In fact, they were so particular about only hitting it at the proper speed that I was reminded of Muhammad Ali when he was asked how he was going to beat Sonny Liston. The champ replied that he was going to...float like a butterfly, and sting like a bee!

Thank you, Mohammad, because that is exactly how the crappies wanted me to present the jig!

I should mention, too, that I was using a short-shanked 1/16th-ounce blue and white Reel Bait Flasher jig with a tiny willowleaf blade beneath the head and a 3-inch soft plastic minnow pinned to the hook.

If I dropped the combination straight down over the side of the boat, in front of a crappies' nose, I couldn't get the fish to bump it. But if I floated it like a butterfly, I'd sting it like a bee.

ontario black crappie
When the black crappies start suspending near the bottom it is time to use a 1/16th-ounce Reel Bait Flasher jig and 3-inch soft plastic minnow to sweep them up. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

What I did, in fact, every time I spotted a strung-out school of crappies was to pop my 20 HP Mercury outboard into reverse and backtroll at the slowest possible speed. Then, as soon as I noticed on the sonar screen that I was moving at .8 miles an hour, I'd pop the motor into neutral and let the boat come to a complete stop.

Visualizing what was happening, I am certain that as I slowly backtrolled into the wind, my jig was pulled up off the bottom, well above the fish. But then, when I popped the motor into neutral, with the lure at its apex, it floated like a butterfly back down to the bottom. And that is when every single crappie ate the bait.

gord pyzer ontario black crappie fishing
When you find crappies strung out in loose pods, Gord Pyzer says it is more productive to troll for them rather than sit over top and make a vertical presentation. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

In fact, if it wasn't floating precisely this way -- think how you'd sweep the kitchen floor with a broom -- the crappies wouldn't touch it. But as soon as I slowly pulled it away from them, they'd watch it drift up. And then, when I stopped the boat and allowed the jig to float back down, in an arc, like a butterfly, it was lights out, game on, hand-to-hand combat.

Lord, I wish there were more than 24 hours on a typical Northern Ontario autumn day.

About Gord Pyzer

Gord Pyzer is the fishing editor of Outdoor Canada magazine and field editor of In-Fisherman magazine. He is the co-host of the Real Fishing Radio Show and host of Fish Talk With The Doc.

Recommended Articles

Pat’s Muskie Academy

Nik learns the art of trolling for giant muskie on the French River and Lake Nipissing

The Other Mighty Mighty

Brookies on the Nipigon River

A Fitting Final Fling

First days of spring present us with some of the best fishing.

Brook Trout Fishing at Dunlop Lake Lodge

Brook Trout Fishing 15 km of Elliot Lake, Ontario

Lake of the Muskies: An Angler's Paradise in Northwest Ontario

It’s not a question of will you catch a musky, but of how many.

Paradise Cove Resorts

On the hunt for Musky in Ontario's Sunset Country

Shallow Water Fishing in Sunset Country

Fish are still in shallow water—and up here in Northwestern Ontario, they’re more than willing to bite.

Forget Skinny Smallmouth

Chiblow Lake Lodge offers an all-inclusive experience on a smallmouth factory famous for 5-pound-plus bass.

Topwater Bass

Targeting Spring Bass at Dog Lake Resort

Catch, photo, release

Save Your Fishing Memories With These Photo Tips

Pine Sunset Lodge

Walleyes and slabs of Dinorwic Lake

World Class Walleye Fishing at Vermilion Bay Lodge

Eagle Lake has over 68,000 acres of clear Canadian Shield waters with world-class walleye and muskie.

Trophy Pike & Ribs

Fishing at Kesagami Wilderness Lodge

Easy Pickin's for Northern Ontario Panfish

Ice fishing for crappies on a lake in Northwestern Ontario.

Big Water, Big Fish

Chinook fishing on the Nipigon River

Casting and Blasting at Temple Bay Lodge

A grouse hunt & trophy fish paradise.

Salmon Fishing

The Michipicoten River is a Sleeper for Chinook

Green Wilderness Lodge

Fishing on Lake Mattagami

Extreme Weather Walleye

Red Pine Lodge located on Ivanhoe Lake and is full of walleye.

Cedar Lake Showdown

Cedar Lake, like so many other Ontario waters, is loaded with muskies.