Bluegill - Big Bluegill

Do you love big bluegill?

The scenario.....

20' of water, stained pea soup green.

Gills suspended at 5-10'.

The bite was varied to say the least, catch a few in several minutes, then nothing.

Bite was orange (size unknown, but not large) jig head tipped with gulp fry (tan).

so with that, what spoon, and presentation would be best to attempt?

Thanks,
Alex

Views: 100

Replies to This Discussion

12th oz. spoon tipped with Nightcrawler or worm pieces is what I would have casted and slow trolled... heavier if windy.What was the wind like? I often opt for small spinners if water is really muddy but the worm scent still works incredibly in off colored water I'm just finding out.
wind was varied, when it blew, it drifted us about 1-2 mph.
Hey Alex, You might try a 1/16 or 1/8 oz metallic gold spoon (as John commented 1/12 ozs is a nice option too) fished on braided line tipped with small piece of gulp red worm jigged along the deep weed edge either cast with slow steady retrieve or jigged vertically up and down. You will have to experiment with spoon size as the rate of fall is very important and Gills may Not hit a heavy spoon falling too fast through the strike zone! Reasoning for the above scenario: 1) You want a bright colored lure that Gills can see in the murky water 2) Braided line will telegraph even the most sensitive bites in deep, murky water where you will not be able to sight fish the Gills, also due to the pea soup colored water the thicker braid will not spook line shy Gills as it might in gin clear water 3) the piece of red Gulp worm will add scent as well as visibility to your spoon which the Gills will more readily see and smell and will cause less negative cues. 4) The larger Gills will most likely be deep and hidden along the Deeper Weed Edge (remember they are GIANT size and have no fear of being eaten by any of the Tertiary Line Predators of your Pond or Lake--except for the occasional Trophy Flathead Catfish, Trophy Northern Pike, or Trophy Striped Bass--and therefore will be located in many of the same areas that these predators inhabit: The DEEP WEED EDGE!!! Hope this is helpful!!!!
Alex, the pea soup effect I would suspect as an algae bloom....most blooms only effect the top few feet of surface water, however with the fish suspending that shallow I would throw a 1/10 oz Swede, or 1/12 oz Kastmaster....tip the single hook with a small tube bait like a squirmin squirt or any small panfish tube with a loud color like orange/chartreuse...allow it to fall on a tight line to no more than a 6 count and start your retrieve.....let the spoon stall or flutter back several times throughout the retrieve.
Thanks for the info, I'll have to give it a shot next time I'm out that way. I'll have to go get some of the "louder" color tubes.

Bill, you are absolutely right about the algae bloom, the weed line has just about disappeared and begun to die off quickly.

RSS

Latest Activity

John Sheehan commented on John Sheehan's status
"We are exploring/learning the three permit lakes late in life. Today was Canistear Reservoir. Hot…"
6 hours ago
John Sheehan posted a status
"Just dink smallmouths and Largemouth Bass for Greg and I, fishing a third Reservoir this year."
6 hours ago
John Sheehan posted photos
15 hours ago
Bruce Tomaselli commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Sunrise Shellcracker…..7/23/2025

"I love your kind of fishing!"
Sunday
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Sunrise Shellcracker…..7/23/2025

"I’m very fortunate that the fishing  in coastal North Carolina is so great and most…"
Sunday
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

JULYWP

"Summer colors on this white perch!"
Sunday
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

JULYP

"Nice Yellow John….good colors"
Sunday
Jeffrey D. Abney replied to Jeffrey D. Abney's discussion Panfish Species of North America- Which Ones Have You Caught?
"Often bass fisherman will catch Warmouth on 9” worms……..they. don’t fight…"
Sunday
Jeffrey D. Abney replied to Jeffrey D. Abney's discussion Panfish Species of North America- Which Ones Have You Caught?
"This is a great comparison John…..I added another photo to give perspective….."
Sunday
Bruce Tomaselli commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Sunrise Shellcracker…..7/23/2025

"I sure envy you, enjoy!"
Sunday
John Sheehan replied to Jeffrey D. Abney's discussion Panfish Species of North America- Which Ones Have You Caught?
"Hey Jeffrey! Does the Warmouth have about the same sized Mouth as a Black Crappie of equal size, or…"
Saturday
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Jul 23
Jeffrey D. Abney replied to Jeffrey D. Abney's discussion Panfish Species of North America- Which Ones Have You Caught?
"Some quality Warmouth I caught in my early years on the Albemarle….."
Jul 23
Jeffrey D. Abney replied to Jeffrey D. Abney's discussion Panfish Species of North America- Which Ones Have You Caught?
Jul 23
Jeffrey D. Abney replied to Jeffrey D. Abney's discussion Panfish Species of North America- Which Ones Have You Caught?
Jul 23
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Jul 23
Jeffrey D. Abney replied to Jeffrey D. Abney's discussion Panfish Species of North America- Which Ones Have You Caught?
"Thanks for sharing John……you have patterned your available species pretty good over…"
Jul 23
John Sheehan replied to Jeffrey D. Abney's discussion Panfish Species of North America- Which Ones Have You Caught?
"Only caught five of these Species up here in New Jersey. Bluegill, Pumpkinseed, Red Breasted…"
Jul 23
Jeffrey D. Abney posted a photo

Crackers Saved This Morning Behind A Cold Front…..7/23/2025

If I get out the remainder of July it will probably be a crappie stalk on the coastal marsh……
Jul 23
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Jul 23

© 2025   Created by Bluegill.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service