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Re: Fayette Fish Kill [Re: BillS2006] #14470439 09/07/22 04:38 PM
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Low O2 level maybe.....


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Re: Fayette Fish Kill [Re: BillS2006] #14471342 09/08/22 03:06 PM
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If we have any of the lakes we fish which are within 250 miles roll over, is usually in the later part of spring, early summer. More related to our first rain after a long time of no run-off water shed from rain or snow.

Like already mentioned it's murks up the lake and it will be from the upper end, more colored water body, to the more clear lower end. You will smell the lake as well, and with those two things from upper to lower ends is a dead give away, and of course the nasty smell.

We usually only see the scaled fish die, not the skinned. The bigger trophy fish show up later in the kill off as well. I just hate to see this. The really alarming part of this when I was a young boy, I lived on PK and had the lake out the back door, we would have the lake roll over like this, but didn't have the fish kill. Now the better fishing tanked for about a month.

Only my opinion here, it's the sediment run-off from the fields that have had the chemicals used on them. We did see the lake murky, big thing was a big run-off had to have happen and it was not just the upper end of the lake where the river enters the lake, it also was the lower end that usually won't happen with a small rain from an extended time of no run-off. Then of course the smell was the final key to ID the roll over. We just didn't see a fish kill off.
Bad things going on now as opposed to the 60's... Hate to hear that from your lakes experiencing the surface water colder than the deep warm water causing this whole thing.

Re: Fayette Fish Kill [Re: BillS2006] #14471833 09/08/22 09:24 PM
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How long will a fish kill like this effect things? I would assume if caused by turnover, surviving fish are lethargic and not feeding normally.

I was planning to go tomorrow and was trying now to decide whether to audible to Somerville... or Conroe... or stick to my original plans.

David


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Re: Fayette Fish Kill [Re: FishinAg02] #14471850 09/08/22 09:38 PM
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Originally Posted by FishinAg02
How long will a fish kill like this effect things? I would assume if caused by turnover, surviving fish are lethargic and not feeding normally.

I was planning to go tomorrow and was trying now to decide whether to audible to Somerville... or Conroe... or stick to my original plans.

David


While they won't be jumping in the boat, fishing should be good. It's been a week already.


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Re: Fayette Fish Kill [Re: BillS2006] #14472111 09/09/22 02:03 AM
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You can still catch some, one thing here is if your after certain species. Some are affected more than others. As I mentioned above, the fish that have skin aren't affected at all.

The other part of this will be the end of the lake you choose to fish. The upper end will start to recover sooner than the lower end. The end of the lake where the majority of the water comes into it would be the best choice this soon into the roll over. There are places you can catch fish though anywhere, just some places better than others, and if your going after certain fish that have scales...

The bait fish are what get all screwed up too if you can find the bait fish the scaled fish will be close by. This is a good time to watch for the flocks of seagulls hitting the water, now they will be a couple maybe on one fish that might be in the process of dying, that is not what your wanting, you find a flock of birds hitting the water there will be bait there as well as those that eat them. The flock all just sitting in the water all in one area, there is bait there too, just not shallow, they will usually be right on the bottom if 20' or less.

It's still fishing regardless of what your after lol, we don't call it catching till we actually find them and do just that. Just may want to try to tip the scale in your favor, and do things differently than you usually do. It won't be bad, unless you get tunnel vision and get all focused on the same way you do things when the lake is not doing this huge transition.

Re: Fayette Fish Kill [Re: BillS2006] #14472570 09/09/22 04:08 PM
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Next year should be back to good. Just my opinion.

Re: Fayette Fish Kill [Re: BillS2006] #14473101 09/10/22 12:32 AM
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Man soon as the Temps start coming down in the fall, the lake will just settle right in its normal groove. It will establish the first Thermocline which is about the 20' mark in lakes here in Texas.

That will get the lake well established and the cooler Temps will get the mercy parts in the water column to settle out and the fall pattern will be on. I have seen this roll overs many times and this is how it works still, the different stuff going these days is our fish kill. That is really terrible too.

There for a while we had this golden algae hitting certain lakes, it also was coming down certain rivers and washing into the lakes. It decimated the fish population, least the fish that again have scales. The one thing different it killed all the biggest fish we have released over and over to establish these true trophy fish.

The smaller fish delt with the golden algae way better than the bigger fish did. Even the bigger bait fish was being killed too. Then those of us that was in these lakes fishing and seeing all of It, we trailer up and go home. You didn't bleach out the bilge and livewells and bait tank, you being heartbroken over seeing all those truly trophy fish dead and dying, we go to a different lake. You could very easily start the golden algae in that lake if you had much water in them or maybe weeds on your trailer. It's some really bad stuff...

Least with the lake rolling over, your not going to contaminate a different lake with this dirty and nasty smelling water. I still spray bleach in all my bait tanks and/or live wells and the bilge. It's not expensive but is a pita, but I have seen some of this truly evil crud happen and I try to faithfully do my part anyway.

So you guys down there that fish this lake hang in there, it will settle down and you will get the fall bite and an even better winter bite

Re: Fayette Fish Kill [Re: BillS2006] #14476718 09/13/22 09:19 PM
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This is a small power plant lake with no true active creeks. It gets run off from the surrounding area, but not really from creeks like a typical TX lake. Fayette definitely has areas that are more impacted by a turnover than other areas. There was a definitive green color delineation during the turnover the last few years and the fishing was always better in the cleaner water. Historically, the turnover is early October, but Fayette seems to catch significant rain from time to time and will have this impact. 2019 was a brutal year for fishing after the turnover. Our numbers went way day. Pete documents it well: https://www.fayettecountyguidefishing.com/lake-fayette/

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