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Old 09-19-06, 09:17 AM   #1
BassQualifier
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Default Cooler Temps - Dying Grass

Since fall is upon us, I was wondering at which water temperature grass beds like hydrilla and milfoil start dying off and make the bass move to other cover like wood or rocks. I've read that when the water temps get cooler, the grass dies and starts taking up all the oxygen and the bass are forced to find more oxygenated cover in surrounding areas. Is this true?

It is still warm here, around 80 or so, so when might I expect to see the grass beds starting to die off this fall? Thanks.
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Old 09-19-06, 09:26 AM   #2
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water temps in the low 70s here and we have seen some redness or brownish tint to the tops of the hydrilla beds, most of it is still alive, so I am guessing the rest will die off soon once we hit the 60s..about 67 degrees the bass turn on around ohio(water temp)
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Old 09-19-06, 11:53 AM   #3
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Default Temp may not be the question?

Temp may not be the question. I have seen hydrilla in 65 degree water bright and green. Sunlight penetration and amount of sunlight available each day sets the die off stage. Just like leaves on a tree. Think about it.

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Old 09-19-06, 01:05 PM   #4
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And some of it survives no matter what. It just goes dormant like your lawn, but I know on G'ville you can find the bottoms of hydrilla beds in january.
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Old 09-19-06, 01:22 PM   #5
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where i live it is already in the 60 to 75s so the grass is dieing off but yes i read that to that when the grass dies off it takes more oxygen so the bass have to find more oxygen
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Old 09-19-06, 03:49 PM   #6
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Wow. I wish I lived somewhere colder. Today, with the heat index, the high was 92.
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Old 09-20-06, 12:00 AM   #7
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Flbassman,
no you don't.

You will be plenty happy to live in Florida in a couple months, and I'll wish I was there. And I supposedly live in the deep south!
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Old 09-20-06, 09:57 AM   #8
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40ish here tonight, come on up! rofl
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Old 09-20-06, 05:10 PM   #9
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Hey we are experiencing a cold front right now. We only had a high of 80 something. At 6 am it was 74 out. If this keeps up the bass will be ready to play.
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Old 09-20-06, 05:16 PM   #10
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Yup, came through last night. Today was beautiful!
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Old 09-20-06, 09:45 PM   #11
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Caught a nice one in about 6 feet of water, stuck in the hydrilla last time out. This (IMO), is the time to fish hydrilla. I use a soft plastics, t-rigged, with a heavy weight, so it will get down fast.
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Old 09-21-06, 11:41 AM   #12
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Yeah that cold front is really here rotflmao, it's 85 degrees right now, but it was around 57 degrees this AM. I was loving it this morning, then it cranked right back up. Of course this weekend's forcast is again upper 80, lower 90 for me. When I came off of Wildcat Lake this past saturday at 5pm, the water temp(surface) was 88 degrees. It's gonna take quite a few "COLDFRONTS" to get it back down into the seventies.

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Old 09-21-06, 03:58 PM   #13
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Welcome to florida liz ACtually though, it'll cool off pretty good come late october, but it can still swing. Two years back, Day before christmas was in the 70's, and christmas eve evening was in the low 40's, raining and dropping fast. Was a clear 27 Christmas morning....
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Old 09-22-06, 09:37 AM   #14
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Thanks for the great responses! I have always been a bit unsure as to when the grass starts to die off, but that is good advice Captmike as far as the sunlight is concerned. As a general rule of thumb, at what month for your area would you consider the grass to be dying off? Considering it is a typical season. Thanks!
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Old 09-22-06, 03:33 PM   #15
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Default On the Potomac

A typical season for the grass is emergence in Northern bays around April and disconection from ground root about the end of Sept. But fishing here is year round unless we ice over. That has happened maybe six times in the last 30 years. We have a year round LGMouth season (no closures) in tidal waters and an adjusted Spring season. We have several types of SAV (sumerged aquatic vegatation) here. Hydrilla is the main SAV but we also have milfoil, eel grass, elephant grass, water cress and some coontail(year round). So while the hydrilla dies off and creates huge mats that float back and forth with each tide the root structure remains and many other grasses as well..

The Potomac for all it's years of being poluted and a festering sewage runoff is now a gin clear river thanks to an invasive hydrilla.

ALL PRAISE THE HYDRILLA>>>>>

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Old 09-22-06, 11:15 PM   #16
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Where are you from qualifier?
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Old 09-24-06, 01:19 PM   #17
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I've found that even though the grass may be dying, the bass will still us it.
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