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#1 |
BassFishin.Com Member
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We have had a couple nights of rain here in Philadelphia, and the water has been really moving and muddy. Is this not good for fishing? and Why?
thanks! |
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#2 |
BassFishin.Com Member
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It can be good or bad. If the lake that your fishing is fed by a creek or spring the place where the clear water coming in is a major hot spot. The fish hang on the edge of the mud and ambush anything that goes into the clear water form the muddy water. Normaly the fishing will not be as good, because of reduced visibility, but you can still catch fish on heavy vibration lures like colorado blade spinnerbaits. This works especialy well for lakes that are normally a bit muddy, because the fish is used to using its lateral line to detect prey.
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#3 |
BassFishin.Com Member
Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 96
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keep tryin find whats workin
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Santa Rosa, CA |
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#4 |
BassFishin.Com Member
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find places where there are bluffs on the water after teh rain, many insects and critters fall off these bluffs and into the water. Throwing worms can be productive, and if the water is muddy, use something with a big profile. Topwaters also work well after the rain.
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#5 |
BassFishin.Com Member
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If the water is rising follow it up to the newly flooded cover and start chunkin spinnerbaits and jigs.
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#6 |
BassFishin.Com Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Manteca,Ca.
Posts: 826
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Throw on a Night Crawler and Do it anyway! A worm-on-a-hook will never fail you ;D
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Manteca High Freshman Football V.O.L. Champions 2007 "Pain is Temporary, Pride is Forever." |
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#7 |
BassFishin.Com Super Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Markham, Ontario, CANADA
Posts: 1,901
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How Bass React To Muddy Water: We mistakenly picture bass as creature at the mercy of their environment. Being cold blooded, bass are affected by water temperature. But as successful predators, bass have learned to adapt and survive in a variety of conditions, including muddy water. Of the many myths concerning bass behavior in muddy water, the most prevalent is that bass leave a muddy environment to find clear water. This implies a mass migration to a clear-running tributary. Bass generally don’t move far in clear water. When visibility is limited, they move even less. How would a bass in muddy water in the middle of the lake know the water was clear a distance away near the dam? When water turns muddy, bass have options. 1. They move shallower. This occurs in reservoirs and rivers. Even smallmouths acclimated to deep-lying structure move shallower when their habitat turns to chocolate milk. Fish can see better in shallow water. One to three feet isn’t too shallow for bass in muddy water. 2. They move closer to objects. Bass in clear water roam from a home base such as a sunken tree or rock pile to find prey. In muddy water, visibility is reduced, so bass tend to hold close to objects. They seek the security of a dock, brushpile, or boulder, perhaps using the object as a reference point. Present lures as close as possible to cover. 3. They move out of increased current. Muddy water and high flow usually coincide. Largemouths in particular don’t prefer fast water. They hold in slack-water pockets, backflows, or behind objects that break current. Smallmouths are at home in rivers, but they also avoid heavy current. Look for them in sloughs or downstream from cover objects. 4. They use other senses in addition to sight. A bass has to see a lure before striking it. Vision is their primary sense even in muddy water, but the lateral line, which can sense vibrations over 10 feet away, becomes more important as visual range is reduced. Bass also use their inner ear to sense sound produced even farther away. Smell is also important in muddy water.
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