Here is a good site with a lot of information about crawdads and their various coloration and how to match them. More than I need to know, but interesting. It also has a lot of information on bait fish, frogs, and worms etc.
http://www.pixelpayback.com/craws/hoverbox/index.html
You typed the URL in wrong.
http://www.pixelpayback.com/craws/hoverbox/index.html
Many crawdads also change color as the water temp changes. From the usual dark brown, red, whatever to a more purplish or dark with blue areas.
Thanks Hamby I tried to copy and paste that
Yeah you hit a couple of wrong buttons, that's all.
The best color for crawfish is a bright red.
Right after they stop cooking and you pull them out of the pot!!!!!! ;D ;D ;D
Soooo... basicaly any color is the right color?
I see those pics are geared towards luremakers. I'll stick with blacknblue, pb&j, rusty, and their variations.
Well I understand now why pumpkin and watermelon and green pumpkin are such good all around colors.
I had no idea that there were so many different colors for crawfish
There's 330+ species of crayfish in this country. Lots of colors and shapes there.
The key is to find out what the predominant species is in the body of water you are fishing. Also their seasonal coloring.
Yes and that is not always easy to do, I am still trying to figure which ones are in my waters. I know there are some sites on line that will give information about that but sometimes it is just not specific enough.
There are leucistic crawdads? Thats wild! I can't imagine they make it to adulthood very often.
QuoteYes and that is not always easy to do, I am still trying to figure which ones are in my waters. I know there are some sites on line that will give information about that but sometimes it is just not specific enough.
Just trap some during different seasons. Seasonal colors should be more important than the exact species.
QuoteYes and that is not always easy to do, I am still trying to figure which ones are in my waters. I know there are some sites on line that will give information about that but sometimes it is just not specific enough.
The local fisheries biologists should be able to help ya out. THats how I do it. They are state or county employee's and usually eager to talk about it.
Oh....yeah or make a simple phone call haha.
Actually guys there are around 530 species of crawfish around the world with 400 species in the USA.
Slonezp and Bluestreak hit the nail on the head regarding colors.
So don't go nuts over matching the exact crawfish colors. It is more important to mimic a crawfish with your jig and pig or moving bait since the colors change and some disappear totally underwater.
But a beautiful red crawfish, hot and steaming out of the pot is still the best color for the mudbugs. Yum!
species and habitat make it a bit eaiser.
For instance, in the same lake dads that burrow in clay will come out with the red tint from wintering there once it is around bass spawn temps and will gradually change- dads on the same lake that live in the rocks will be closer to the browns we all know.
Course they dont read what we do and it all changes
Don 't bother too much with the "match the hatch", match the behavior not the colors.
QuoteDon 't bother too much with the "match the hatch", match the behavior not the colors.
That's the gospel truth right there!
I may use a total of 5 different craw colors as far as plastics and jigs and could probably get away with only 2 on my home lake (black and blue and green pumpkin). I believe presentation is key to catching big bass. My biggest bass I've caught on a jig was by dragging a jig extremely slow on the bottom with extended pauses. A very natural presentation.
QuoteDon 't bother too much with the "match the hatch", match the behavior not the colors.
Black-N-Blue, Black Neon, & Black-Brown-Amber
QuoteQuoteDon 't bother too much with the "match the hatch", match the behavior not the colors.Black-N-Blue, Black Neon, & Black-Brown-Amber
You too, huh ?
Man, you are soooo predictable. ;D
QuoteQuoteQuoteDon 't bother too much with the "match the hatch", match the behavior not the colors.Black-N-Blue, Black Neon, & Black-Brown-Amber
You too, huh ?
Man, you are soooo predictable. ;D
If it aint broke don't try to fix it
"Matching the hatch" may have some validity in the fly fishing arena, but, in my opinion, not with bass. If a bass sees something eatable - a bit smaller than itself - it's going to eat....period.
Depth and speed control is much more important to hooking up. Color being the very last factor I would ever consider in any technique or presentation.
Think about this, why would a bass hit a pink Fluke? But they do!
Looking over every Dad on that first page, I'd pick this one.... A nice little small-clawed female
in about a 2 1/2" size... nose hooked, and live lined
Whoo Hooo ! Live dads are SOOOO much fun
Fish
[quote author=5667706661797C7B706727252522150
Think about this, why would a bass hit a pink Fluke? But they do!
As much as science can study it I don't think we will ever know if or how a bass sees colors.
I'm going to talk a bit about their larger brethren, Homarus Americanus. They also have color variations which some attribute to diet. But I noticed slight, but distinct differences in color from one area to the next.
Some had a bit more red. Some were brighter while others tended to be more of an olive drab in their green coloration. Some had bright red edges on their claws, others cream color and offshore lobsters had more of a tan edge to them. Yet others were darker on the claw edges.
The color differences seemed to be more related to bottom coloration particularly the resident lobsters. This tells me that they have a chameleon-like quality to them in order to blend into their surroundings.
I have caught blue lobsters which, according to biologists, lack certain pigments in their shell.
I've also caught a lobster that was bright yellow with brown/black polka dots. It was of legal size so I brought it in. The dealer held it in his tanks so the biologists could get if for their studies.
This coloration mattered not at all to the species of fish that fed on them, notably cod and striped bass.
Having said that. I'd still try to match the coloration of the local crawdads. That one extra fish it might catch could be a trophy.
If memory serves me correctly, there could be one reason to choose a color that I haven't seen here yet.
Like I said, it has been many years ago that I read an article concerning the color change some species went through when they had shed their older and harder shells. The article continued on to discuss how bass were wired to recognize this color phase as an opportunity as the softer shelled crawdads were somehow easier to catch.
Now I haven't run across any article lately that discussed this topic, so maybe it is just an old wives tale. But if it were true, then I would consider trying to discover what coloration your local species had during this stage of the crawdad's life. This would seem to be the color that would trigger the best response.
Cast a soft craw into a small mouth stream and they will hit it as soon as it hits the water. How do they know? What do they see?. I know there is a difference in the colors and shades of coloration between a hard craw and a soft craw. But at times it has seemed to me that the bass see this while the bait is still in the air. I have had days when 3 or 4 smallmouth are waiting for that bait to hit the water. One old friend always said the soft ones are shinier. Whatever it was he could see it too because when we picked craws at night he never picked up a hard one. I tried to catch every craw I found.
People should try dropping a crawfish trap in their home lake or river if they're curious about the critters that live in the depths.
I started doing this as a kid when I would wade the Mississippi River and it's tribs for smallies, and I would use the craws for bait on Lindy Rigs. There is NOTHING that can trigger a bite like a live crawfish. I used the Frabill Crawfish Trap baited with a can of cat food that I stabbed up with a screwdriver. The buoy I tied to mine floated away last year, but I had some fun before it did. I found that the craws in the weedy little lakes around here were mostly green with hints of blue and purple, drastically different in shape, color, and size from what's in the rivers.
These sometimes go on closeout at the end of the year in local retailers.
http://www.sportsmanswarehouse.com/sportsmans/Frabill-Crawfish-Trap/productDetail/Minnows-and-Crawfish-Traps/prod72046/cat101118
NOTE: Check local regs before doing this.
If you google crawfish colors for your state, you often get a state university website that has pics of the species common to your area. Most craws in most areas are a shade of brown most of the time. But lots of them also have accent colors (orange, red, bright blue, etc) during certain times of year. Surest method? Turn over a few rocks before you put the boat in.
Here's a monkey wrench regarding color. In the case of most, if not all critters, their coloration serves at least two purposes, one to attract those of the opposite sex, the other to make themselves less visible to predators. It's why most fish are dark on the top and light on the bottom.
Other colorations would make them more vulnerable to predators. There may be times when going against the grain, such as the pink color, work better.
The moral to this story is that if the old tried and true, going by the book ain't working, throw out the book and do something "radical", presentation and colorwise.
Color expression in crawfish is regulated largely by special pigment containing cells (chromatophores) located beneath the exoskeleton, and color is normally a function of two factors, developmental stage and the environment. Most crawfish species are generally greenish or brownish as immature animals and begin to take on the characteristic colors as the approach maturity. Color manifestations is intensified in sexually mature individuals. The aquatic environment and diet also influence color.
Individual specimens of crawfish vary in color from the normal population. Color variants are almost endless with respect to degree and/or pattern of expression.
LSU Ag Center > Crawfish > Biology & Stocking > Color Variations in the Red Swamp Crawfish
Nothing beats catching a little critter in the lake you're fishing. And really, you want to catch a vulnerable, freshly molted crab. Those are the ones the fish want - less work. Up here, "soft shells" often have quite a bit of blue in them.
QuoteLooking over every Dad on that first page, I'd pick this one.... A nice little small-clawed female
in about a 2 1/2" size... nose hooked, and live lined
Whoo Hooo ! Live dads are SOOOO much fun
Fish
looks like a huddle bug!
I played in ditches and creeks my whole life growing up here and i never saw a crayfish in my state that wasn't a deep red color with some black on it, but I've thrown jigs and craw worms of all colors (mostly black and blue and other shades of earth tones) with great success. I'm with Raul though, it's all about matching behavior. Now that doesn't mean I'm gonna go out and start throwing turquoise/pink jigs and craws.