Lilly pads

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fishaholictaz
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Lilly pads

Post by fishaholictaz » Fri Apr 04, 2008 10:53 pm

If you fish a body of water that has a lillypad flat or two get out there now and note on a map or piece of paper where all the structures are now that get covered in the warmer months.(ex; deeper channels,logs,gravel or any other places that are going to offer bass extra cover or comfort!)
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SilverLakeBoy
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RE:Lilly pads

Post by SilverLakeBoy » Sun Apr 06, 2008 9:35 pm

a lot of lakes dont lower anyways. Silver lake my main lake has a lot of pads but it gets lower in the summer and high in the fall, winter, and spring. so i do what you say in the summer time:alien: its for sure a good thing to do. i always look for new structure and stuff when im out anywhere and note it down or mark it.

thanks, Casey
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clam man
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RE:Lilly pads

Post by clam man » Mon Apr 07, 2008 2:40 pm

Great idea.

I took my boat out for a test ride yesterday, and noted some of that stuff. I will go back on a clearer day and note the structure though.

I also saw a turtle slip off of a log, which surprised me considerably, because I didn't think deer lake (island county) had any. Does anyone know if they are bad for the fishery?

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bpm2000
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RE:Lilly pads

Post by bpm2000 » Mon Apr 07, 2008 3:08 pm

turtles are more of a sign of a healthy body of water than any threat to the fishery IMO. Not like we have any big snappers here.
Last edited by Anonymous on Mon Apr 07, 2008 3:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Fisherman_max
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RE:Lilly pads

Post by Fisherman_max » Mon Apr 07, 2008 7:13 pm

bpm2000 wrote:turtles are more of a sign of a healthy body of water than any threat to the fishery IMO. Not like we have any big snappers here.

funny you should talk about SNAPPERS.

alligator snappers and other varieties of snapping turtles are released into our waters regularely because people buy them when they are little as pets and then they get big and people release them. a very large (30lb) snapping turtle was pulled out of round lake in clark county a couple years back by a fisherman that thought he got snagged. its not to far-fetched to have snapping turtles in our favorite fisheries. most of the turtles we see are the red-eared sliders that i think are native but i could be wrong. they have little to no effect on a fisheries quality, they eat little minnows and the like so maybe they even help by eating stunted perch which can make a fisherman angry. (at least me)
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eustace
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RE:Lilly pads

Post by eustace » Tue Apr 08, 2008 10:14 am

Red ear sliders and painteds are opertunistic, more like scavengers and weeding out the week, sick and cleaning up the dead.
Well its not called Catching!

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bpm2000
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RE:Lilly pads

Post by bpm2000 » Tue Apr 08, 2008 10:58 am

Fisherman_max wrote:
bpm2000 wrote:turtles are more of a sign of a healthy body of water than any threat to the fishery IMO. Not like we have any big snappers here.

funny you should talk about SNAPPERS.

alligator snappers and other varieties of snapping turtles are released into our waters regularely because people buy them when they are little as pets and then they get big and people release them. a very large (30lb) snapping turtle was pulled out of round lake in clark county a couple years back by a fisherman that thought he got snagged. its not to far-fetched to have snapping turtles in our favorite fisheries. most of the turtles we see are the red-eared sliders that i think are native but i could be wrong. they have little to no effect on a fisheries quality, they eat little minnows and the like so maybe they even help by eating stunted perch which can make a fisherman angry. (at least me)
man i do not want to run into a snapper anywhere around here!

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Fisherman_max
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RE:Lilly pads

Post by Fisherman_max » Wed Apr 09, 2008 9:29 am

yea i am surprised nobody lost their toes while they were swimming/wading.:pale:
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SilverLakeBoy
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RE:Lilly pads

Post by SilverLakeBoy » Wed Apr 09, 2008 5:27 pm

ha ha thats a good one man!

Casey
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"Never Give Up!" Mike Iaconelli

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