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Lake turnover explained
When the upper water column temperatures go down in the fall the upper water column falls , the lower column replaces the upper and this causes the effect known as "lake turnover".
this is a simple version of the process and to be sure it varies greatly in some places.
Some lakes smell terrible when it occurs and almost all of them lose clarity to the point of it looking almost like muddy water .
the fishing often gets tough and in some spots it seems to shut them down completely, one thing for certain when it occurs , I have yet to see a great bite , but all is not lost , fish can still be had.
most lakes will recover in about 2 weeks or so and in the meantime, dont worry yourself much about it , some fool will still be out there hammering them .....:Rofl
Case in point , they would ONLY bite 5 different colors at the lake we visited yesterday during its biannual turnover ....:Rofl
and then ya"ll almost thunk this would be an information post ......
KABOOM is the word btw ....:crazy:
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That is the simplest and best explanation of turn over that I've heard in a long long time. Good job on the non-informational post. [emoji846]
Sent from my SM-G960U using Crappie.com Fishing mobile app
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Good post Ketchn. I really saw this first hand when I was in eastern Washington state with the Air Force. Deer lake in particular. The purged up vegetation did smell awful and we had a base lake that was unusable for swimming. I don’t fish lakes around here but I’m sure it happens .
Bob
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Welcome post, I never gave it much thought before. Until last trip to The Rez, fishing these tidal rivers, I have not experienced it. Water color was way off and I really was scratching my head as to why. Thank you.
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Thank you for reaffirming what I thought all along.
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am not sure if it is this way elsewhere , but we have several lakes locally in the midst of it as I type this , it really doesn't stop the bite , but it does make it tougher to really hurt them