You are not logged in or registered. Please login or register to use the full functionality of this board...

Post Reply 
Fall Catfishing?
11-09-2012, 06:56 PM (This post was last modified: 11-09-2012 08:34 PM by Giuga10.)
Post: #1
Fall Catfishing?
I took my brother out today for some Bass fishing and ended up skunked. He was pretty bummed so I promised him I would take him Catfishing at a local stormwater retention pond tomorrow.

I was wondering if I made a mistake promising him that.

I know the fishing has slowed down since the summer and was wondering if Catfish take a break when it gets cold.

Pretty much what I'm asking is are they biting in this cold weather?

Thanks,
Giuga10
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
11-09-2012, 08:36 PM
Post: #2
RE: Fall Catfishing?
you just gotta keeping moving

Try different techniques...

You Witnessed how long it took for us to produce a catfish last weekend.
I Think It was the presentation of the drop shot minnow on one line, with a floating worm on another line directly above that produced that one catfish....

It Is what it is, unless you find out what works for you, it Will always be a mystery...

Keep Fishing Swan Lake....
you'll get on it....

~Jeremy.

Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
11-09-2012, 10:46 PM
Post: #3
RE: Fall Catfishing?
I've been told that you can fish for catfish as long as the water temp is about 50 degrees.

I tried once this fall in Ottawa and got skunked.
Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
11-10-2012, 12:54 PM
Post: #4
RE: Fall Catfishing?
There are several reasons why fall time shore fishing is less productive in the shallows.

1) Temperature change is more significant in the shallows. The water can be cool from evening to morning hours, but rises from mid-morning to late afternoon. This fluctuation in temperature can be quite significant. Any rainfall can also significantly cool the shallows. Fish prefers more stable temperatures, so as the weather cools and become unstable with more rainfall, fish moves for deeper water.

2) With decreasing daylight, weeds begin to die as early as mid-September. This not only remove fish habitat in the shallows, but it also depletes the oxygen level in the shallows as the weeds rot (bacteria consumes the oxygen). This pushes fish to areas where there is sufficient levels of oxygen, either other areas with green weeds, or to deeper water where oxygen level is higher and more stable.

3) With the approach of winter, fish knows that shallow areas will soon be frozen. Various fish species will move out to deeper water for that reason as well.

Notice the point here...deeper water!

This is even true for icefishing. Early in the season during first ice, you can often find fish on "shallow" flats and weedlines where there are healthy green weeds. During mid-ice season, snow cover over the ice kills a lot of the remaining vegetation in shallow water and fish will push deeper. Once late-ice approach and spring is around the corner, fish will once again move toward the shallows again. This is very evident for anyone who has fished Lake Simcoe in the winter. Perch schools are often in 6-8 FOW on first ice, then move deeper and deeper as deep as 70 FOW (I've even caught some in over 100FOW) during mid-Feb, then these fish will once again move shallower in mid-March to stage for the spring spawn. This is true for pike, walleye, and surprisingly even for whitefish (sightfishing for whitefish in less than 20 FOW is super rad!!!

Try casting to deeper water where it is close to shallow habitat where fish can move up onto the flats occassionally, but retreat to deep water when weather and temperature changes.

Also...you want to target catfish...try night time. When Michael and I took the trip a couple of weeks ago, fishing for catfish was very slow during the day. Once it got dark, it was like a switch that went off and the kitties came out to play. Wink

Malama o ke kai

Caution - Objects in picture are smaller than they appear. I am genetically predisposed to make fish look bigger.

Life List: 577 species and counting (2016: 91 new species)
http://muskiebaitadventures.blogspot.ca/...-list.html
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
[-] The following 2 users say Thank You to MuskieBait for this post:
Giuga10 (11-10-2012), MichaelAngelo (11-10-2012)
11-10-2012, 11:45 PM
Post: #5
RE: Fall Catfishing?
I agree, night time seems to be the catfish ticket. I've yet to find a fish-able population of big catfish close by... that would be really nice!!!

We both know that worm on the bottom in any of the dirty ponds (Mount Joy... Milne... LOL) will produce nonstop bullheads in the summer. Just proof that fishing changes with the seasons Smile

[Image: logobgs.png]
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
11-11-2012, 09:55 AM
Post: #6
RE: Fall Catfishing?
Keating channel has a catfish population of decent size, but they are also the Fugliest looking fish you have EVER seen....!

http://www.fishingtoronto.com
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
11-16-2012, 09:19 AM (This post was last modified: 11-16-2012 09:19 AM by MichaelAngelo.)
Post: #7
RE: Fall Catfishing?
(11-11-2012 09:55 AM)MikeH Wrote:  Keating channel has a catfish population of decent size, but they are also the Fugliest looking fish you have EVER seen....!

The waters I cringe at every time I make my way downtown on the DVP Tongue. Yuck!

[Image: logobgs.png]
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
11-16-2012, 09:28 AM (This post was last modified: 11-16-2012 09:28 AM by MikeH.)
Post: #8
RE: Fall Catfishing?
(11-16-2012 09:19 AM)MichaelAngelo Wrote:  
(11-11-2012 09:55 AM)MikeH Wrote:  Keating channel has a catfish population of decent size, but they are also the Fugliest looking fish you have EVER seen....!

The waters I cringe at every time I make my way downtown on the DVP Tongue. Yuck!

LOL...thats the one! When February comes thats the place you can catch big Carp, due to the water being so much warmer than the harbour.

http://www.fishingtoronto.com
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
[-] The following 1 user says Thank You to MikeH for this post:
MichaelAngelo (11-16-2012)
Post Reply 


Related Threads
Thread: Author Replies: Views: Last Post
  Fall Fishing WELibby 3 1,824 09-05-2019 07:25 PM
Last Post: Maleku
  Catfishing Alvin123 4 1,855 06-25-2017 09:56 AM
Last Post: Alvin123
  Late fall night fishing spots on Simcoe/Grand river? Mdt 0 1,226 11-09-2016 03:22 PM
Last Post: Mdt
  Fall salmon Fishing AlPelatts 4 2,708 09-15-2015 10:17 PM
Last Post: MuskieBait
  Kawarthas Fall from Shore Rayomatic 3 1,615 11-11-2014 03:08 PM
Last Post: Rayomatic
  Where to look for bass in the Fall? MichaelAngelo 10 4,568 11-02-2013 09:21 PM
Last Post: Fishchaser67
  Catfishing Dilema zippyFX 16 6,025 08-25-2013 08:40 PM
Last Post: MichaelAngelo
  Salmon this past fall anyone? BarracudaBoy 14 6,758 03-16-2012 12:29 AM
Last Post: MichaelAngelo

Forum Jump:


User(s) browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)

[-]
Shout: -
Options
Loading...
Smilies
Popup Shoutbox

Return to TopReturn to Content