My last tournament is on Nov 20th, wanna join the club Randy?
--
Warren
http://www.warrenwolk.com
Http://www.tri-statebassmasters.com
2004 NJ B.A.S.S. Federation State Champions
"alwaysfishking" wrote in message
...
Man wish I could figure that out, very small lakes and very limited to
areas with deep water, you would think it would be easy pickings, but with
snow on the ground this morning(not much) the temps are just ugly(air and
water)..29 degrees(air) 38 degrees(water) at the shoreline
sigh............
"RichZ" wrote in message
...
go-bassn wrote:
how big are these lakes? I've never heard of any of them.
Twin is, as the name implies, 2 connected lakes. It's in the extrem NW
corner of the sate. East Twin is about 500 acres. Deep and gin clear. The
only lake in CT with a verified Zebra mussel population. Used to be the
anchor of CT's kokanee salmon program. Until someone introduced alewives
into it. The sawbellies out competed the kokanee for plankton and
destroyed that fishery. But they made it a trophy brown trout and bass
lake. West Twin is about 300 acres, but it's really two little lakes --
round pond and long pond. The vast majority of the good weights yesterday
came from round pond in west twin, although the big fish of the tourney
came from east twin.
Amos is over toward the SE corner, and if memory serves, isn't 200 acres.
There's no better time for big fish in these smaller natural lakes in the
northeast than November. When the weeds start to die off in earnest and
the fish make their seasonal movements from the expansive food shelves to
the basin, all you gotta do is know one or two transition breaks, and
wait for another biggy to come by.