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Lake of the Ozarks Fall Slabs PDF Print E-mail
Written by John Neporadny Jr.   

 Noted for its fall festivals, the Missouri Ozarks also entertains
anglers with excellent crappie  fishing at the largest lake in this
region.  
 
 While festival visitors devour  snacks at these  special events,
crappie  gorge on baitfish in their version of a fall feast at Lake
 of the Ozarks in central Missouri.  This 58,000-acre lake runs 92
miles and offers anglers more than 1,000 miles of shoreline and deep-water
structure to fish. Although younger reservoirs with flooded timber
and undeveloped shorelines look more appealing to a crappie angler,
 Lake of the Ozarks entices with its hidden charms.  Even though the
lake lost most of its natural wood cover when standing timber was
cleared before the  reservoir formed in 1931, the Lake of the Ozarks
has regained cover over the years as dock owners and anglers have
 sunk brush piles throughout  the impoundment.  Fed by the Osage,
Niangua and Little  Niangua  rivers, the massive reservoir offers
crappie plenty of attractive structure such as steep bluffs, chunk-rock
banks, and river and creek channel drops.
The lake's abundant habitat holds   numerous crappie. "The population
of crappie on the Lake of the Ozarks is fantastic," says Bruce Gier,
owner of Gier's Bass Pro Shop in Eldon, Mo., and a former guide at
the lake.   
 "It's very possible to catch a limit of decent-size crappie  (10
inches)  on this lake in the fall," says guide Terry Blankenship of
Lake Ozark, Mo. He notes crappie in the 12- to 14-inch range are also
frequently caught. "You may not catch that size every time you go
out but  they are out there."
 
 Fall becomes a prime time to catch crappie on Lake of the Ozarks
because the fish prepare for winter by gorging on the massive summer
hatch of shad "They'll start feeding pretty aggressively especially
in the early part of September," says Blankenship. "Every year I notice
 early September is better than late September  and the when it gets
into October  it starts slowing dow n a little bit. October is one
of the tougher months in the fall, then it starts picking up again
in November,   and  December can be real good for good-size fish."
 
 During the summer, crappie seek refuge  in the deep water along the
numerous miles of river and creek channels, where it  becomes  difficult
to catch  them because of heavy recreational boat traffic.  "So consequently
when fall comes and the lake calms down, there are more fish available
to catch on the lake of the Ozarks," says Guy Winters, a veteran crappie angler from Camdenton, Mo. 
The  lake  settles down after the Labor Day holiday when boat traffic
diminishes.   "The weekends can still be pretty  rough on this lake
 up until the middle or end of October,"  Blankenship advises. 
 
 Another fall phenomenon, the lake's winter drawdown, also improves
the crappie fishing. The power company controlling the lake level,
AmerenUE,  begins the drawdown  process during the fall,  which
tends to congregate  fish. "If you take out 6 feet around  more than
1,000  miles of shoreline, now all of a sudden you've concentrated
those fish  because there is less water for them to be  in," says
Winters. "So it eliminates a lot of places you have to look for them."
 
 Each angler has his favorite arm of the lake that he concentrates
on during the fall.  "You can catch crappie anywhere on the lake,"
says Gier, who prefers to fish the  North Shore  near the dam and
the Gravois arm because those areas are close to home. "There's not
one arm of the lake any better than the other for crappie fishing."
Blankenship favors one of the lake's tributaries for his fall crappie
fishing.  "The (Grand) Glaize is one of the biggest feeder creeks
in our area and fish tend to start migrating towards the cooler water
 in this creek," he says.  Winters selects the Niangua and Linn Creek
arms because the shallow waters of these two tributaries cool down
faster in early autumn.  When the water turns colder in late fall,
 he targets  the Osage arm  because it has more structure for crappie
migrating to deeper water.
 
 In the shallow waters of the upper Glaize, Blankenship finds fall
crappie in brush piles or stake beds  along flats  next to channel
breaks.  "It's not exceptionally deep up there so the crappie  want
to stay near the deepest water," says Blankenship.
 
 The easiest way to locate crappie beds on the Lake of the Ozarks
is to fish around the reservoir's numerous  boat docks. However, 
the Glaize arm lacks docks since a majority of the land lies in the
Lake of the Ozarks State Park, so anglers have to search elsewhere
for brush.   "Points are always real good places to start looking
for brush piles," suggest Blankenship.  Other good spots to check
during the fall are brush in the backs of coves or bluffs, which offers
both wood and rock cover.     "It's always better if you can find
 a bluff that has some type of brush on it," advises Blankenship. 
"Bluff fishing  can be real good and a lot of times  you'll catch
big black crappie off of them."
 
 The depth Blankenship catches his fish during fall varies with the
conditions. After a fall rain, he can catch crappie on a jig and bobber
as shallow as 1 foot in runoff areas.  In clearer water, he finds
crappie anywhere from  8  to 25 feet depending on the weather and
boat  traffic,  which tends to drive crappie deeper.
 
 The guide's favorite lure for this area is a plastic tube body hooked
on a 1/16-ounce horsehead jig with a spinner. He prefers this type
of jighead because the spinner gives his lure more flash and better
imitates the actions of threadfin shad, the resident baitfish crappie
feed on heavily during the fall. Blankenship  selects natural colors
for his tube bodies such as smoke or shad when fishing clear water,
but he switches to orange, chartreuse or red-and-chartreuse for dingier
water.  During the toughest conditions, Blankenship tips his jig with
a minnow or Berkley Crappie Nibbles.
 
 On the Niangua and Linn Creek arms, Winters finds crappie in deep
brush  during September and then the fish start moving  into the creek
channels throughout October. Winters  notices he catches  fall crappie
in the same locations he finds pre-spawn fish in the spring (brush
piles 4 to 6 feet deep in the coves).  Another favorite  target for
Winters is a boat dock with sunken brush piles placed down the side
of the dock from the deep to the shallow end. "Those kinds of docks
are very  productive in the fall," says Winters, who notes crappie
use these brush piles to move from deep water to feed in the shallows.
 
 For most of the fall crappie remain in the 6- to 8-  foot depths,
but when the water temperature drops into the 50-degree range, they
will move as shallow as 2 to 3 feet deep  for feeding forays. "As
the temperature starts to come down, if it doesn't change real fast
 crappie will continue on that pattern  until the water  reaches about
45 degrees," says Winters. The the crappie start a gradual migration
back to deeper water.  Winters estimates the fish move 2 to 3 feet
deeper with each two-degree drop in water temperature during this
time. By November, the fish relate to structure more and suspend over
break lines.
 
 Throughout the fall,  Winters selects subtle-action, slow-falling
lures such as  1 1/2- to 2-inch tube jigs, or  Laker  Lures Paddlebugs
and Curlybugs. A 1/32-ounce jighead works best for Winters when the
crappie are in the shallows or suspended in deeper water. He switches
 to a 1/16-ounce head when the fish hold in  the 8- to 10-foot range.
The water is usually stained in the early fall, so he relies on colors
such as chartreuse-glitter or red-and-chartreuse. If the water is
clear, he selects red-and-pearl, blue-and-pearl or pink-and-pearl
color combinations.
 
 Gier's home part of the lake contains hundreds of docks and brush
piles where crappie congregate and ambush shad during autumn.  "In
the fall,  crappie can be suspended about 2 feet deep  under boat
hoists in the shady parts of the dock," says Gier. The fish also move
into the shallow brush piles near the dock where they can be taken
with a bobber and jig. Since this section of the lake has the clearest
water, Gier recommends staying away from the brush  or docks and make
long casts with 4-  to 6-pound line to prevent spooking those shallow
fish.
 
 A 1/16-ounce tube jig is Gier's favorite lure for fall crappie on
the Gravois and North Shore.  "I very seldom use a minnow  just because
I don't have to," he says. Since he mainly fishes clear water, Gier
 favors tube jigs with white tails or transparent colors.  If the
water turns murky, he opts for a yellow or chartreuse tube jig.
 
 When  Ozark fall festivals  begin,  visit the Lake of the Ozarks
for the annual crappie harvest.  The lake has  a multitude of motels
and family resorts  open-year round  and numerous private campground
sites spread throughout the area. For information on lodging and other facilities
at the Lake of the Ozarks or to receive a free 152-page  vacation guide, call the
Lake of the Ozarks Convention & Visitors Bureau at 1-800-FUN-LAKE or visit the Lake of the Ozarks Convention
and Visitors Bureau web site at funlake.com.  
 

 Copies of John Neporadny's book, "THE Lake of the Ozarks Fishing Guide" are available by calling 573/365-4296 or visiting the web site  www.jnoutdoors.com.

 
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