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Sinclair July 10th
Sinclair, with its coal fired power plant moving water in and out, and
a pumpback system at Oconee up the river from Sinclair where they generate power during the day and pump water back at night, keeps the water constantly moving at Sinclair and there is little change in temps - no thermocline. Strange lake, really. Water goes up and down two feet or so every day. A club 26 Bassmasters fished the same day we did - I need to find out how they did. Van Kennedy, Steve's dad, is a long time member of that club. Van has made the Classic twice thru the Federation system and is a great deep water fisherman. I think he was the one I saw sitting way off the bank where I have no idea what he was fishing - don't think there is a hump there, maybe the main river channel. He stayed there a long time. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Sinclair July 10th
"Ronnie" wrote in message
... Sinclair, with its coal fired power plant moving water in and out, and a pumpback system at Oconee up the river from Sinclair where they generate power during the day and pump water back at night, keeps the water constantly moving at Sinclair and there is little change in temps - no thermocline. Strange lake, really. Water goes up and down two feet or so every day. A club 26 Bassmasters fished the same day we did - I need to find out how they did. Van Kennedy, Steve's dad, is a long time member of that club. Van has made the Classic twice thru the Federation system and is a great deep water fisherman. I think he was the one I saw sitting way off the bank where I have no idea what he was fishing - don't think there is a hump there, maybe the main river channel. He stayed there a long time. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com Ronnie, I pretty much fish a river system and have similar problems, but even then there is usually a depth or range where there is a definable temperature change. Not everywhere, but often enough. Even in the main river. You can't read it on your graph from the micro organisms concentrated on it like you can on a big stable lake, but if you go for a swim you can sure feel it. Pockets, eddies, and even deep cuts. Also, in deeper backwaters the flow in and out tends to be the top several feet of water, but the bottom several feet moves less. Minn Kota used to make a cheap temp gage that runs on AAA battery. The probe has several feet of wire. You can tape the probe to your push pole or a big weight on a piece of line and can get accurate temp readings at different depths in different areas when you are prefishing to see if there are any semi stable temp changes. No guarantees, but IMO the more you know the better your intuition. A different approach might also be to find features your fish may key on when the water is rising or falling. Delta and tidal river fisherman really reli on this. But because the river where I fish fluctuates due to farm demand downriver it can fish similarly. I learned that from a Ca Delta pro I took out here one day. Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com Director www.YumaProAm.com Group FAQ www.ROFB.net |
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