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A fellow was studying Bob Richard's color chart
(http://secretweaponlures.com/swtip04.htm) and wrote to ask how to define the different categories. I thought that was a pretty good question. Bob describes five degrees of water clarity: muddy, heavy stained, light stain, clear, and crystal clear. These are subjective terms, intended only to give an idea of the colors of lures that present the best target in various water conditions. One man's "stained" is another man's "dingy." I might call water "murky" that someone else peers at in disgust and snorts "muddy." A color chart is useful to someone starting out, but eventually I think most anglers stop consciously categorizing water and develop a sense or feel for what colors of lures will be most and least visible by just observing their lures in the water. I advised the person to lower his rod tip to the water surface with a white spinnerbait tied on, let out line until he could no longer see the bait, and then raise his rod tip to estimate how deep that was. Here are my own personal definitions for the five categories on Bob's color chart: Description Visible to Muddy.............................0 - 1/2 foot Very Stained (Murky).......1/2 - 2 feet Stained............................2 - 4 feet Clear...............................4 to 10 feet Crystal Clear....................More than 10 feet The recommendations one reads on our site are based on the observations and conclusions drawn by Bob Rickard over a lifetime of fishing everything from muddy run-off to gin-clear rivers of Missouri. Other anglers' advice may differ. Well known bass pro and biologist Larry Nixon uses six categories. Here are his (from Field & Stream) http://www.fieldandstream.com/fields...339125,00.html Category Visibility Muddy....................0 to 3 inches Dingy.....................3 inches to 1 foot Stained..................1 to 2 feet Moderate................2 to 4 feet Clear......................4 to 8 feet Ultraclear................8 to 20 feet or more The _Field & Stream_ article offers his advice on lure selection for each category. Here's another good article on choosing lure color based on water clarity, reprinted from _Honey Hole_ magazine: http://www.bassresource.com/beginner...selection.html Chocolate-brown, muddy water is the result of suspended sediments. In our region of the country, phytoplankton gives stained water its green color. In other regions, like the tannic-rich Okeefenokee Swamp, Lake Okeechobee, and many northern lakes, water might acquire a tea-colored humic stain from peat, tannin, or other products of vegetation decay. Even though one might be able to see a white spinnerbait 4, 6, or more feet deep, the color of the stain in the water determines which lure colors will be most visible. That might explain why Firetiger Perch is such a productive spinnerbait color on Boom Lake, but in this area chartreuse/white/blue seems to be in greatest demand. For those of you preparing to tackle Boom's peat-stained waters, here is an article on fishing colored water from a north country author: http://www.muskiecentral.com/lumb_colored_water.shtml. That article by Dave Lumb first appeared in _Pike and Predators_ magazine. Joe |
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