The Ontario Fall Crappie Hunt

Autumn is here, folks!

Ontario is such an incredible place to fish, not only because it offers the adventurous angler over 400,000 lakes of every imaginable size, shape, and depth but also because of the variety of species you can target. Two days ago, for example, I was chasing mammoth muskies in Lake of the Woods, where there are over 14,000 picture-postcard islands, scattered amongst one million acres of water. Then, yesterday, I decided to catch black crappies in a much more modest hideaway, where I was serenaded in the evening by a lonely timber wolf howling to the moon on shore. Talk about the big and the small of it all.

Gotta confess too, that crappies and muskies are at the top of my fall fishing agenda because with both species, it’s a hide-and-seek hunting game to pinpoint them. Especially, crappies that you can find in so many dissimilar type lakes from Southeastern Ontario clear across to the Northwestern part of the province.

angler fishing crappie

Gord Pyzer found this beautiful crappie relating to a weedline point.

During the late summer months and into early autumn, for example, crappies are social animals that school up in large groups and move around together. This can make for feast or famine fishing: once you find a tightly bunched-up batch it is like picking plump juicy grapes from a vine.

angler fishing crappie

Two of the most important things I’ve also noticed about locating crappies, in my Northwestern Ontario, Sunset Country part of the province, is that the schools at this time of the year like to cluster in deeper water. And they are typically moving around slowly.

But—and this is an extremely important part of the location puzzle—there is almost always something that is attracting and holding the group of fish together, like the tip of an underwater point, a pile of rocks, or even something as subtle as a submerged log or tree lying on the bottom.

sonar

 Black crappies are social animals, so when you find one, you can bet there is more.

When I find one of these bunched-up schools that is ripe for the picking, I like to back away from the fish if it’s relatively shallow and calm and cast a baby finger-size swimbait like a Z-Man Micro Finesse Shad FryZ or small rattling bait like a Rapala Ultra Light Rippin Rap. If I find the fish in deeper water, or if it is wavy, on the other hand, I’ll get right over top of the school and hang a small jig tipped with a 2 1/4-inch Mister Twister Sassy Stingum in front of their noses. This is probably the most effective method but be aware that your presence can alert the crappies and cause them to shift their position. You need to move along with them when the bite starts to slow down.

angler fishing crappie

If you’re fishing a relatively shallow featureless crappie lake — especially common in the southern parts of the province — you will find the fish relating to clumps of cabbage and distinct weed lines. They’ll often spread out a little more than the deeper water fish, but you will still find small clusters of crappies associating with weedy points and anywhere that a rock, boulder, clay, or sand bottom creates a tiny opening-like oasis in the vegetation.

angler fishing crappie

Crappies are attracted to anything on the bottom, like a sunken log or pile of boulders.

I was fishing a weedline like this the other day and found the slabs a short cast away from the string-like strands of grass. I picked off the easy fish first pitching the Z-Man paddletail up to the scrawny vegetation and swimming it back to the boat. Then, when the fish got wise to the moving bait, I floated the Sassy Stingum beneath a slip float and mopped up dinner.

anglers fishing black crappie ontario

I was using a 7 1/2-foot-long medium light action spinning rod spooled with a 4-pound test Sufix Nanobraid and a two-foot Maxima fluorocarbon leader. I attached a bobber stop to the line, slid on a slip float and then tied on a 1/16-ounce Moon Eye Jig and tipped it with the Sassy Stingum. The key to the presentation was not moving the bait at all, but rather, letting the float dangle it in front of the crappies’ eyes. It is always important, too, not to set the hook hard and rip the little jig out of a crappie’s soft mouth. So, when you see your float go down, just tighten up on the line and you’ve got him.

Autumn is here, folks, and the Ontario fall crappie hunt is in full swing.

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

Ontario Fly Fishing Hotspots

The Top 10 List

Fly-in Fishing with Glassy Bay Outfitters

Wilderness and walleye await with this Northern Ontario experience.

Eating Northern Pike

The Best Recipe to Cook This Fish

The Spin on Early Season Walleye

Depending on where you are walleye fishing in Ontario, the conditions range from early spring to near summer-like.

Top 5 Musky Destinations in Ontario

The Musky Hunter shows you where to land the best musky in Ontario waters.

Don't Forget The Umbrella

It's raining smallmouth bass, walleye, and northern pike here in Northern Ontario

3 Secret Tips for Landing Ontario Muskies

Muskies aren’t easy to catch. So here’s a simple formula to change that.

Fishing On The French

Fish TV Stay At Bears Den Lodge

Top 5 Wet flies for Brook Trout

Fly Fishers describe their favourite brookie flies.

Spring Walleye

Try These Tips on Your Next Ontario Walleye Fishing Trip

The Tigers of Sunset Country

The most picturesque of all freshwater fish.

Summer Smallmouth

Bass Techniques to Help You Catch a Trophy

Beaverland Bass on Marten River

In search of smallmouth bass at a traditional Northern Ontario fishing camp.

The Best Brook Trout Fishing

Discover world class fishing in Northern Ontario—home of the world record brook trout!

Year Round Fishing in Ontario

Who Says You Can’t Fish All Year in Ontario?

The Lake of Many Bays

Fly-in Fishing at Pine Portage Lodge

True Colours

How important is your lure colour when selecting a bait?

Speck-Tacular

The Dotted Love Affair with Ontario's Brook Trout

St. Francis Titans

Fishing the Original Muskie Capital of the World

Structure or Cover?

Learn the Difference to Catch More Fish