
Hybrids and Sandbass and Stripers are a blast to catch. We catch them when going after Walleye quite often. In fact I try to avoid them if I'm on a serious Walleye mission. In the evening they will start surfacing, killing shad. They tend to thrash the shad with their sharp gills, and then go down and pick up on the wounded ones.
With the advance of sidescan and livescope, finding the schools midday has became much easier. We can drop a spoon on them and jig up and down.
We will use live shad on Skiatook and Keystone lake. I'm looking forward to chasing them more this year with all this new technology.
On Skiatook lake the limit is 5 Hybrids which only 2 can be over 20 in long and unlimited Sandbass. Skiatook has very few Stripers. On Keystone lake you are allowed 5 Stripers, 20 Hybirds which 5 can be over 20 in and unlimited Sandbass. My boat limit is 50 fish per trip.
With the advance of sidescan and livescope, finding the schools midday has became much easier. We can drop a spoon on them and jig up and down.
We will use live shad on Skiatook and Keystone lake. I'm looking forward to chasing them more this year with all this new technology.
On Skiatook lake the limit is 5 Hybrids which only 2 can be over 20 in long and unlimited Sandbass. Skiatook has very few Stripers. On Keystone lake you are allowed 5 Stripers, 20 Hybirds which 5 can be over 20 in and unlimited Sandbass. My boat limit is 50 fish per trip.