Larrick- I don't have any photos but I believe all crawdads in all lakes change colors thorughout the year.
The most common color live crawdad I have seen are olive and red or maroon. I have seen them when they are a baby blue color but I don't recall ever seeing one in the summer that was that color. I think a mistake folks make when determinin the color of crawdads is looking at the dead ones in there livewells. All crustacions turn a different color after they are dead.
Mike Bess working his second job!
Thanks. Josh I've heard a lot about you from Joe.
Google Signal Crawdad. That will give you many pictures.
I know a handful of guys named Joe. Which Joe would that be?
Larrick said:
Thanks. Josh I've heard a lot about you from Joe.
I've seen crawfish with a deep green back and orange belly, light grey back with a chart/orange belly, and deep red with black here and there. These are all out of east side lakes and res. I prefer to fish the hot mustard color from Rapala to imitate craws, works well for me.
Joe Mama
Josh Potter said:
I know a handful of guys named Joe. Which Joe would that be?
Larrick said:Thanks. Josh I've heard a lot about you from Joe.
How many more tournament beatings does it take to shut your hole?
Chad Simon said:
Mike Bess working his second job!
Got Damn that is one hell of a crawfish, doesnt that classify as a lobster at that point?
Good info here. One thing to remember, crawdads can imitate their surroundings. If you can duplicate the colors you might find on the bottom, you could/should be pretty much on.
Posted by Tom Melowitz on September 7, 2019 at 2:45pm
Posted by Eric Urstad on April 3, 2019 at 7:38pm
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