Might ought to get approval and permission before you sink anything
Might ought to get approval and permission before you sink anything
I have spent most my life fishing........the rest I wasted.
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SpeckledSlab LIKED above postLowellhturner thanked you for this post
Most places illegal to sink metal . Not a good choice of materials
Ok cars properly positioned after cleaning properly would be Awesome
Old cars make perfect fish habitat. The fire department has sunk a pick up truck in the lake I fish to practice under water rescues. It also made a good crappie hotel.
We are all born ignorant but one must work really hard to remain stupid. -Ben Franklin
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Any day I'm fishing is a good day, regardless of what I catch.
Lowellhturner LIKED above post
They sink ships, old drilling rigs, barges, and cars-trucks for artificial reefs. I don't see why your fence post wouldn't work as long as it's not a navigational hazard.
You know me, I'm always ready for a road trip. Chip Newest member of Traveling Team Overalls
have several times used both rebar and bent fence posts in a solidly secured bucket bottom with 2 legs on 1 side bent at 90 degrees to help pin attractors on steep breaks with little current and/ or wave action, dropped with the bent legs on the deeper side. on riprap this usually worked very well but not so much on gravel/ dirt slopes. most on these types of bottom eventually settled deeper but were/ still are excellent winter/ early spring spots.
I would only consider driving them into the lakebed during "major" drawdowns to guarantee that they will never be hit by a boat motor. I actually have a friend that put in 3 in a row and he suspended a couple saplings horizontally up off the lake floor. It looked cool during the next drawdown. But anything metal is a big concern for boat damage so use common sense when and where you use them.
CATCH A BIG-UNSpeckledSlab LIKED above post