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Sinking artificial tree for crappie

Posted on 12/20/25 at 3:02 pm
Posted by ChrisN
Alexandria, LA
Member since Oct 2014
264 posts
Posted on 12/20/25 at 3:02 pm
Anybody ever sink an artificial Christmas tree for crappie?

Thinking about dropping ours after this year instead of trashing it. Curious how well they hold up and if fish actually use them. Did you weight them with concrete or blocks? Strip anything off first?

If you’ve done it before, post pics or any recommendations on depth/placement.
Posted by saintsfan1977
Arkansas, from Cajun country
Member since Jun 2010
9960 posts
Posted on 12/20/25 at 3:16 pm to
Yes fish will use them. I'd buy a little bucket of lard and once empty use it as a concrete mold. Don't need a 5 gallon bucket of concrete to sink a tree.
Posted by KemoSabe65
70605
Member since Mar 2018
6435 posts
Posted on 12/20/25 at 3:57 pm to
Leave ornaments on to make it more festive
Posted by SoFla Tideroller
South Florida
Member since Apr 2010
39197 posts
Posted on 12/20/25 at 4:05 pm to
And lights...
Posted by aTmTexas Dillo
East Texas Lake
Member since Sep 2018
22762 posts
Posted on 12/20/25 at 4:51 pm to
quote:

Leave ornaments on to make it more festive


I wouldn't do that. The crappie will take the place of the ornaments. I see a lot of brush piles on LS. They are usually decorated.
Posted by Out da box
Member since Feb 2018
771 posts
Posted on 12/20/25 at 8:53 pm to
Old plastic bucket and bag of concrete. Make concrete in bucket, place tree in it, let set overnight.
Place in pond.
You can also use cane…
Posted by CHEDBALLZ
South Central LA
Member since Dec 2009
23104 posts
Posted on 12/20/25 at 9:47 pm to
You need to make sure the tree doesn't come apart. Might have to run a sheet metal screw where the sections come together where they attach in the trunk.

Then, you want it to float upside down. Tie a cinder block to the top and a crab trap float to base and throw it over board.
Posted by sabbertooth
A Distant Planet
Member since Sep 2006
6064 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 9:57 am to
quote:

And lights...


Especially when you plug them in.
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
86506 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 11:44 am to
quote:

Then, you want it to float upside down
Yes
Posted by Beessnax
Member since Nov 2015
10819 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 12:32 pm to
quote:

you want it to float upside down


I have never thought about that but it makes sense. That's a good idea
Posted by Taxman2010
In The Woods
Member since Jan 2022
590 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 12:41 pm to
I have tried trees and pvc. The trees were far more productive than the pvc.
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora
Member since Sep 2012
73349 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 2:57 pm to
quote:

I have tried trees and pvc. The trees were far more productive than the pvc.


I have found PVC to only attract fish in water that is otherwise devoid of any cover at all. There were some PVC type ones in a private lake I fish, they occasionally held fish. I sank 3 Christmas trees at three varying depths and those became the hot spots and nothing hung around the pre-existing PVC structures anymore.
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora
Member since Sep 2012
73349 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 3:05 pm to
quote:

Then, you want it to float upside down. Tie a cinder block to the top and a crab trap float to base and throw it over board.


For an artificial tree that might work, but for a real tree, this just seems like it would snap off earlier and drift away somewhere else.
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
86506 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 5:26 pm to
One of my best spots in a local lake is a bunch of PVC. The lake is loaded with timber, tops and hydrilla.
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora
Member since Sep 2012
73349 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 5:45 pm to
quote:

One of my best spots in a local lake is a bunch of PVC. The lake is loaded with timber, tops and hydrilla.


I guess mileage varies!
Posted by Taxman2010
In The Woods
Member since Jan 2022
590 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 6:03 pm to
We used drop a lot of PVC and could typically pull a few off. There are some areas on the lake where an incredible amount of trees have been dropped and they seem to produce more. You can sit on top of some of the tree piles for hours and catch fish. Never had that experience with the pvc.
Posted by Spankum
Miss-sippi
Member since Jan 2007
60635 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 9:36 pm to
Man, I wouldn’t sink an artificial Christmas tree…that might disintegrate and kill a bunch of fish. Drive through any neighborhood the week after Christmas and you can collect all of the real trees you want.
Posted by Capt ST
High Plains
Member since Aug 2011
13500 posts
Posted on 12/21/25 at 10:05 pm to
There’s a bunch of the PVC ones exposed where I was duck hunting this weekend. The PVC reefs just looked sterile to me. The brush piles others built nearby out of trees looked way better in my opinion, but I’m not a fish.
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
62748 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 7:54 am to
quote:

I'd buy a little bucket of lard and once empty use it as a concrete mold.


Cinder blocks work, too.
Posted by AwgustaDawg
CSRA
Member since Jan 2023
13419 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 9:05 am to
Cinder block is the most efficient cost effective anchor for crappie condos. They will beat your boat up though. You can get them for $1 a piece on marketplace around me occasionally.


I suspect an artificial tree will work but I also would bet it becomes a blob of algae in less than a year without much attraction for fish because its just a blob of algae. Normal dead christmas trees will become such a blob in about a year and a half on most lakes. They are too thick to allow good water flow and simply grow over with algae. Its noticeable on live scope....just a cone shaped blob of something devoid of life. Small hardwood trees cut green and sunk are the best and easiest in my experience. Longest lasting is cane in my experience and they also attract fish like crazy for years and years. The only reason I say small hardwood trees are easier is because you can tie a concrete block to a 10 foot tall sweetgum tree and put half a pool noodle in the top of it and its easy to dump over the side and will hold fish for years....cane has to be tied together and concrete poured and its just a whole thing.

I build bass condos out of sawmil slabs. Basically a multi-layered pallet about 2-3 feet tall and and about 4 feet square to a side. They are a BITCH to deploy but I put them on main lake points in 10-20 feet of water, weighted down with a concrete block...and bass LOVE them. Catfish also. You live scope those things and they are always loaded up with fish....when there is some current there are always feeding fish on them.
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