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Barren 9/28
Got out today and did battle with the wind. A friend and I kept 27 fishing deep brush piles and it seemed the deeper the brush the bigger the fish. We fished some that were in 30' of water, and some in 14' of water but the deeper the brush the more the fish seemed to gravitate to them, and the larger. We burnt thru ever minnow of 5 dozen, and still made it off the lake before the rains set in. Not sure how many throw backs we had. Awesome day!
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I noticed your boat was gone when I passed your house today.
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It was busy :biggrin Man that felt good rattling those bush piles.
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Guess no more thermocline now then?
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Slabseeker1 .... those COE charts are a little outdated, plus they show the O2 levels to be too low for fish survival :yikes (<5mg/L) ... for any length of time, anyway. Luckily they are taken at the dams, so they're not indicative of the overall condition of the lake.
This chart probably shows why the O2 levels are so low .... not much change in water levels, and not much new water (rain) added to the lake in Sept:
http://lrl-apps.lrl.usace.army.mil/w...ts/gif/brr.jpg
But, your chart does show a consistent temp down to the 20-25' depth range, before dropping to any degree. I'm not sure that's indicative of a thermocline, or the slow degradation of one, but it definitely shows that "turnover" is still a ways off.
Green River Lake COE charts are very similar to the Barren River Lake COE charts of the same time frame (mid Sept) ... as far as temps/O2 depths and the lack of any substantial Sept rainfall.
(no disrespect intended, just adding some info to the discussion)