Features from May 2022
- Nicknamed “reef donkeys” for their size and power, amberjack like to stay around any hard structure in water at least 150 feet deep.
- Though it’s not looked at with the same fondness by anglers who are more familiar with Grenada and Sardis, Enid Lake is chock full of crappie.
- Flathead catfish exist in many reservoirs and small lakes across the state of Mississippi, but seem to do better in areas with moving water.
- For even for the best anglers, targeting trophy trout takes time, determination, perseverance, skill and more than a smidgen of luck.
- This is the time of year when fishing the grass beds in your favorite lake can bring bass out of their hiding places and into your livewell.
Columns - May 2022
- Not only are catfish fun and relatively easy to catch, but they also make for excellent table fare. Try out this Catfish Piccata recipe.
- Hand fishing has a long tradition in Mississippi and is still practiced by anglers that want to add extra excitement to their catfishing.
- NetBait’s B Bugs have a leg, or tail, up on other beaver-style soft plastics. They are more buoyant than similar products.
- In May, the bass at Ross Barnett Reservoir will be over the spawn, and you can catch large numbers of them.
Outdoor Updates - May 2022
- Eugene Cronley of Brandon caught a …
- Payton Harris joined his fiancée Katherine Shell on April 9 for a hunt in Franklin County to kill a 310-pound hog.
- Lucy Bland, a 75-year-old grandmother from Collinsville, killed her first gobbler on her very first turkey hunt in Newton County on March 24.
- Paul Saltaformaggio killed a red phase gobbler in Amite County on land owned by his father. The gobbler sported two beards and sharp spurs.
- Whether you want to catch big fish in saltwater, or catfish, crappie or bass in freshwater, our writers can point you in the right direction.
- Mississippi’s Red Snapper season will open for private recreational anglers and state for-hire vessels at 12:01 a.m. on Friday, May 27, 2022.
- Pelahatchie's Carl Wolfe killed this four-bearded gobbler on a hunt with his cousin, Greg Shoemaker, on March 27 in Newton County.
Field Notes - May 2022
- Springtime squirrels aren’t always easy to shoot. They are frisky, on the move and hunters are faced with the greening of the forest.
- As crappie move from shallower water to deeper water, fishing their hideouts with the right tactics at the lake you’re fishing is the trick.
- If you’re looking to buy recreational property this year, it’s important to know how the rural real estate market is doing.