Skip to main content

Paradise for Spring Bluegills

A better understanding of the amazing relationship between bait and jigs makes catches like this more consistent and results more predictable.

Paradise for Spring Bluegills

Bluegills are (finally) prowling through shallow water in the small, local lakes I haunt in spring. When the winds die, and the incessant, ambient conversations of geese, cardinals, and red-wing blackbirds fill the air, it's pleasant, here, on a sunny day.

Paradise for spring bluegills is just that. Paradise for them. They love soft bottoms full of burrowing invertebrates that support weeds full of epiphytes next to rocks covered with tiny crayfish. We just get to find that paradise and participate in the bacchanal. The best time to do that is on the afternoon of a sunny day during a warming trend. They come alive, dimpling the surface as water temperatures broach 50°F. That particular temperature seems to be an important demarcation. For one thing, panfish leeches ball up in temperatures any colder than that, and it's hard to make them do anything else. And bull bluegills love panfish-sized leeches in the spring.

But 50°F also seems to describe the point at which bluegills actually pull the float down. At 48°F the bobber may never move at all when a bull takes jig and all entirely down its throat. When you can find 50°F water in a bay predominantly registering 48°F--you'll find yourself surrounded and circled by Midwestern piranha.

Today we were using Thill Shy Bites and (ironically) Red Wing Blackbird slip floats. The Shy Bite, weighted correctly, goes down before they can swallow the jig, and a good slip float becomes necessary when a slow drift in a slight breeze takes your craft in range of fallen trees. The smaller package pitches into tight spots best, and drops the rigging straight down for better efficiency around branches.

But the Shy Bite was the primary tool today. It was more sensitive and indicated light bites extremely well, but not only that. The big fish were in open water and depth was a fascinating part of the equation today. The porcine warthogs we truly cherish were out on the deep weedlines, outside the dead stands of last hear's cabbage, in 6 to 8 feet of water nowhere near the shallow wood, inside weedlines, and grooves created by wind-driven ice they often inhabit this long after ice-out.

But ice-out came early. This has been a strange and eye-opening spring. The lessons are quite clear. Ice-out, temperature, and stable weather don't determine the timing of early bluegill movements so much as day length--also referred to as photo period. We often dismiss the "pea-sized brains" of fish, but those tiny brains hold an amazing amount of data. Biologists keep discovering parallels between the movements of fish and  the length of time between dawn and sunset. Certainly, nothing the panfish are doing this spring would conflict with those observations.

A better understanding of the amazing relationship between bait and jigs makes catches like this more consistent, and results more predictable. Grist for tomorrow's blog.




GET THE NEWSLETTER Join the List and Never Miss a Thing.

Recommended Articles

Recent Videos

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Gear

Kayak Fishing Fun 2025 with Bailey Eigbrett and Jeff Weakley

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Gear

Ultimate Kayak Motor!

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Learn

MN DNR Fisheries Supervisor Mike Knapp and Walleye Dan Eigen

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Learn

The Greatest Fishing Story Ever Told, Part 9 with Steve Quinn

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Fishing

Afterhours with Ted Stardig and Evan Blakley

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Fishing

Gary Roach – “Mr. Walleye”

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Fishing

Tom Neustrom: The Minnesota Guide Life - Part 2

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Learn

Tom Neustrom: The Minnesota Guide Life - Part 1

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Learn

Summer Walleye Fishing Tips with Captain Ross Robertson

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Fishing

Steve Jonesi – Muskie Legends Never Die

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Fishing

The Minnesota Bait Crisis - with Jason and Tyler Bahr

Lifetime fishing fanatic, Mark Fisher, talks about how fishing has changed over the years, and talks in detail about his...
Fishing

The Greatest Fishing Story Ever Told, Part 7 with Mark Fisher – The Rapala Impact

In-Fisherman Magazine Covers Print and Tablet Versions

GET THE MAGAZINE Subscribe & Save

Digital Now Included!

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Give a Gift   |   Subscriber Services

PREVIEW THIS MONTH'S ISSUE

Buy Digital Single Issues

Magazine App Logo

Don't miss an issue.
Buy single digital issue for your phone or tablet.

Get the In-Fisherman App apple store google play store

Other Magazines

See All Other Magazines

Special Interest Magazines

See All Special Interest Magazines

GET THE NEWSLETTER Join the List and Never Miss a Thing.

Get the top In-Fisherman stories delivered right to your inbox.

Phone Icon

Get Digital Access.

All In-Fisherman subscribers now have digital access to their magazine content. This means you have the option to read your magazine on most popular phones and tablets.

To get started, click the link below to visit mymagnow.com and learn how to access your digital magazine.

Get Digital Access

Not a Subscriber?
Subscribe Now

Enjoying What You're Reading?

Get a Full Year
of Guns & Ammo
& Digital Access.

Offer only for new subscribers.

Subscribe Now

Never Miss a Thing.

Get the Newsletter

Get the top In-Fisherman stories delivered right to your inbox.

By signing up, I acknowledge that my email address is valid, and have read and accept the Terms of Use