Interesting story and some good answers.
Interesting story and some good answers.
skeet has possibly the right answer as to what I have seen on occasion, one slick like that on a fine winter day on a grass flat was the ABSOLUTE best red ear ketchn I ever seen , my bud convinced me it looked fishy over there to him and first cast till the ice chest was full it was a red ear festival .....go figure
sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales
Yes, my father was a crappie guide on Toledo Bend till his passing and although we all grew up saltwater fishing they regularly caught school bass and crappie fishing slicks on Toledo Bend.
If I die from a Deadly Sin it will be Gluttony!
"Formerly known as rojoguio"Ketchn LIKED above post
Wind has mass and flows very similarly to water, swirling around objects, rising over objects or terrain, forming eddies etc. We see it clearly as water flows, but can't see wind, only the effects. Watching wind on lake water is probably the best visual evidence of just how it flows. You can actually see wind currents, eddies, dead spots, even see a gust approaching on the surface of water. And of course, we've all seen that wind effect on water that looks like a dorsal fin moving along just under the surface!
My first thought was similar to that. I was thinking it was the creek flow with cooler water which would be denser and harder to move. I was also rooting for a "next time fish that weird looking thing". lol
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Bigtrout LIKED above post