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when bank fishing the minnesota river where would i wasnt to cast for catfish and what types of rigs and bait should i use

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Bank fishing for catfish on the Minnesota River: your game plan 🎣

  • Where to cast (early winter season tips): Look for structure that holds warmer water and deep water pockets. Target:

    • Deep holes and channel bends where the current slows and water pools up, creating a comfortable bed for cats.
    • Undercut banks, fallen trees, and brush along shore – these are catfish magnets in cold water.
    • Edges of current seams and any drop-offs adjacent to current; even small cuts or man-made features like pilings or wing dams can hold fish.
    • Slow, backwater pockets or slack-water eddies that stay a touch warmer than the main flow.
    • Cast a bit upstream or across the current and let your bait drift into the slower water on the inside of bends.
  • Rigs (reliable, simple for bank anglers): Two classic options work well on river banks for catfish.

    • Slip-Sinker Rig (bottom rig): great for keeping bait on the bottom where most catfish hug in winter.
      • Thread on a few ounces of weight (2–4 oz typical, bigger if current is strong), add a bead and a barrel swivel, then a 12–24 in leader to a circle or openly hooked hook (size 2/0–6/0 depending on bait).
      • Bait on the hook: cut bait (shad, sucker, or chubs) or chicken liver. Let the weight keep the rig near the bottom.
    • Santee Cooper Rig (two-hook bottom rig): handy if you’re banking with a little more bait coverage.
      • Use a weight (1–2 oz is common in moderate flows), then two short leaders ending in two hooks. Bait each hook (commonly cut bait or big nightcrawlers) to cover both sides of the current seam.
  • Bait suggestions (winter-friendly):

    • Cut bait (shad, sucker, or other river species) is consistently productive.
    • Stink bait or dip bait works well when water is murky and cold.
    • Chicken liver or shrimp can be effective for channel cats and bullheads in slower water.
    • Nightcrawlers for bullheads if you’re fishing calmer pockets.
    • If legal and available, live minnows can pull bigger cats, but check local regs first.
  • Tackle setup and presentation:

    • Line: 20–40 lb test line on the main line gives you enough surge to pull a cold fish out of cover. Use a 12–24 in leader to a circle hook (~2/0–6/0 depending on bait).
    • Bank-friendly rod setup: medium-heavy rod with a penetrating reel; one rod is common, two if you’ve got the space and partner to watch lines.
    • Sinker choice: use 2–4 oz (more in strong currents). Keep bait on or near bottom.
    • Presentation: cast to likely cover spots, let the bait settle, and watch for subtle ticks or a steady weight drift. In cold water, you’ll often get slower, patient bites—bump set if you feel a tilt or a drag.
  • Weather note (early winter): Water is cold, bites are slower, and cats hug the deeper, warmer pockets. Stay patient, keep lines tight, and be ready to adjust: if a spot’s not producing, shift 10–20 yards to the next likely hole.

  • Quick reference vids to sharpen your rigs and tips:

    • Best Catfish Rig!!! (Works for bank, river, and lakes) Text
    • Five CATFISH Tips I Wish I’d Known Text
    • The BEST Catfish Rigs For BANK Fishing!! Text
  • Quick gear picks (general, river-friendly):

Stay steady, stay warm, and good luck out there—the Minnesota River holds some real bruisers in winter. You’ve got this! 🐟💪

Category: general

General·2 months ago·FishGPT Basic AI

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